Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 2 days ago
Icons of Change International Awards 2026

Eric Robert Reguly
European Bureau Chief
The Globe and Mail
Rome, Italy

Senior roles within the Financial Post (New York and London bureaus), The Times of London, and Alberta Report
Co-winning a National Newspaper Award (2010), multiple National Magazine Award wins and nominations, the Hyman Solomon Award for Excellence in Public Policy Journalism (2007), and SABEW awards

SDG Focus: Goal 16 – Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions
Changemaker for Investigative Journalism, Economic Accountability, War Reporting, and Democratic Transparency (Europe)

Eric Robert Reguly is one of Canada’s most respected and influential foreign correspondents, whose distinguished four-decade career exemplifies the highest standards of ethical journalism, rigorous investigative reporting, and public accountability in an era of geopolitical complexity and institutional fragility.

As European Bureau Chief for The Globe and Mail since 2014, based in Rome, Eric covers more than 30 countries across Southern Europe, North Africa, and parts of the Middle East. His reporting portfolio spans high-stakes economic and financial crises, the Eurozone debt crisis, bank bailouts, the rise and fall of oligarchs, UN climate summits, the Arab Spring, multiple NATO summits, papal transitions, and — since late 2022 — the war in Ukraine. His work combines sharp economic analysis with compelling on-the-ground war and political coverage, delivering critical insights to Canadian and global audiences.

A second-generation journalist and son of legendary Canadian investigative reporter Robert Reguly, Eric has carved his own legacy through fearless, deeply sourced reporting. He previously served as The Globe and Mail’s chief business and economics columnist in Toronto and held senior roles with the Financial Post (New York and London bureaus), The Times of London, and Alberta Report. His distinguished body of work includes co-winning a National Newspaper Award (2010), multiple National Magazine Award wins and nominations, the Hyman Solomon Award for Excellence in Public Policy Journalism (2007), and SABEW awards for commentary and long-form feature writing.

Eric is the author of the acclaimed book Ghosts of War: Chasing My Father’s Legend Through Vietnam (2022), a powerful exploration of war, journalism, and legacy. He has contributed to several other books and regularly appears as a commentator on Canadian and international media platforms. He has also served as Chairman of the Special Prizes Committee for Prix Italia and remains actively engaged in media excellence initiatives.

Through decades of uncompromising journalism, Eric Reguly has held power to account, illuminated complex global crises, exposed institutional failures, and strengthened public understanding of critical issues — directly reinforcing democratic values, transparency, and the rule of law.

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:00Hello, I'm Eric Reguli. I'm the European Bureau Chief of Canada's national newspaper, The Globe and Mail.
00:08I'm honored and flattered to have won the Icons of Change Award.
00:14My understanding is that this award is for, not specifically for my SDG writing, though I've done a lot of
00:21that, but for body of work over the years.
00:24My job in Europe, I'm based in Rome, is to cover environment, business, economics, finance, politics, and even wars in
00:35North Africa and the Middle East.
00:38I've been spending a lot of time in the Middle East covering the wars on Lebanon.
00:42I've also been covering the Gaza War, though I've not been into Gaza since a year before the war started.
00:50If there's one concept in my reporting career in the last, say, decade or decade and a half, it has
00:58been environmental writing, though.
01:01I've covered four COPS, Conference of the Parties, in various parts of the world.
01:09I write a lot about the environment and how it affects business, how it affects human development.
01:18The theme has been a constant.
01:22Last year, for example, I wrote about Donald Trump's efforts to boost undersea mining, which I'm totally against.
01:32Undersea mining is to get rare earth metals such as cobalts so it can be used to, in effect, finance
01:41the energy revolution.
01:43But the energy revolution now means electric vehicles and AI centers.
01:49So I don't think the destruction of the oceans is a risk worth taking.
01:57Recently, I've been writing about the war on Iran and the environmental implications of that.
02:02If there's one aspect of this war that is positive, it is that high energy prices, as much as they
02:10hurt the poor and the middle class, they are giving a new impetus on renewable energy, on clean energy.
02:18Electric vehicle sales are soaring at the moment.
02:22And I do hope that this trend continues because we have to wean ourselves off oil and gas.
02:32And this war has shown that we've done that.
02:35Again, thank you for this honor.
02:37And if any of you ever come to Rome, I'm happy to meet you all.
Comments

Recommended