
Nova Scotia's ambitious ‘Wind West' offshore energy plan wins support with conditions
Turbines operate at the Block Island Wind Farm, Dec. 7, 2023, off the coast of Block Island, R.I. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-Julia Nikhinson
HALIFAX — Two leading environmental groups are giving a thumbs up to Nova Scotia's ambitious plan to dramatically expand its fledgling offshore wind energy industry.
But both groups were quick to add caveats.
On Monday, Premier Tim Houston said the province's plan to license enough offshore wind farms to produce five megawatts of electricity would be increased eightfold to 40 megawatts, well beyond the 2.4 megawatts Nova Scotia needs. He called on Ottawa to help cover the costs of his new Wind West project, saying the excess electricity could be used to supply 27 per cent of Canada's total demand.
'Nova Scotia is on the edge of a clean energy breakthrough,' the Progressive Conservative premier said in an online video, adding the province is poised to become an 'energy superpower.'
Gretchen Fitzgerald, executive director of Sierra Club Canada, said the premier's bold plan, which includes building transmission lines across the country, represents an exciting opportunity for the province.
'It could be a game-changer for the region and for Canada,' she said in an interview from Ottawa. 'But it needs to be done correctly and with consultations.'
Fitzgerald said the Nova Scotia and Canadian governments must focus on securing long-term benefits from the nascent offshore wind industry because they did a poor job on that front when dealing with the offshore oil and gas sector.
'We have to make sure that we are not selling out what is a massive resource for less benefit than communities should have,' Fitzgerald said, adding that Nova Scotia continues to suffer from a high rate of energy poverty. In May of this year, utility affordability expert Roger Colton produced a report showing that 43 per cent of Nova Scotians were struggling to pay their energy bills — the highest proportion in Canada.
While Fitzgerald applauded Houston's clean energy plan, she criticized what she described as the premier's populist penchant for taking decisive action before consulting with experts and the public.
'Moving from a couple hundred turbines to thousands in the next decade needs to be done in a staged way so we learn how to do this right,' she said, adding Houston appears to have adopted a ''move-fast-and-break-things mentality.'
'(That) can lead to unacceptable harm to sensitive ocean life,' she said. 'From a community benefits and acceptance point of view, breaking trust can be the biggest barrier to getting to good climate solutions.'
In October 2023, the Public Policy Forum released a study saying Sable Island Bank, an ocean area about 180 kilometres south of Nova Scotia, is among the world's best locations for wind energy generation.
'It and several other similarly endowed areas off the coast of Atlantic Canada hold the potential to place the region among the leading global hubs of offshore wind-powered energy development,' says the report from the independent non-profit think tank.
It goes on to say that as the world shifts from a dependence on fossil fuels to forms of energy that do not emit climate-changing greenhouse gases, Atlantic Canada is facing 'a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity ... to recover an economic vitality comparable to the Age of Sail — fittingly built again on the power of wind at sea.'
The report says the installation of 15 gigawatts of offshore wind generation would create about 30,000 direct jobs annually.
Despite the hype, the industry must also earn acceptance from Nova Scotia's fishing industry, which in 2023 contributed $2.5 billion to the province's economy and employed 19,000 people.
In Halifax, a spokesman for the Ecology Action Centre called on the provincial government to build public trust, especially with coastal communities.
'There really needs to be a priority on stakeholder engagement for all ocean users,' said senior energy co-ordinator Thomas Arnason McNeil.
'We're going to need to prioritize ecological safeguards and preserve the existing livelihoods that we have. That includes the fishing industry. That's half the economy in Nova Scotia.'
Still, he said the province's big push for clean energy is on the right track, especially when it comes to building out its electricity grid to better connect with the rest of the country.
If done right, the payoff would be enormous, Arnason McNeil said.
'We're talking serious job creation here and a lot of revenue potentially,' he said. 'The bottom line is that you have to do this right. (But) the prize at the end of the road is monumental in terms of the benefits.'
A call for bids to build enough offshore turbines to generate five gigawatts of electricity is expected as early as this year.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 8, 2025.
Michael MacDonald, The Canadian Press
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
29 minutes ago
- CTV News
Lufa Farms partners with Walmart to grow and sell greenhouse produce
With Walmart Canada, Montreal's Lufa Farms will grow produce under a 127,000 square foot greenhouse roof. Lufa Farms partners with Walmart to grow and sell greenhouse produce A partnership involving Lufa Farms is giving buying local a whole new meaning. 'We want to use free space in the cities where the people are and live,' says Lionel Trombert, Lufa Farms vice-president of finance. With Walmart Canada, the food company is taking produce from local to hyperlocal under one 127,000 square foot greenhouse roof. 'Whatever is being grown here is being picked and harvested at night and given to our customers either through the Lufa websites and, in this case, through the Walmart kiosk downstairs on a fresh basis every morning,' Trombert says. From cucumbers to peppers, it's the first time Lufa Farms produce is being sold through a retailer. This is also the first time that Walmart Canada is selling produce from its own roof. On top of filling a demand to buy locally, the partnership is a solution that offers sustainability. Lufa Farms greenhouse Lufa Farms is teaming up with Walmart to grow produce under a 127,000 square foot greenhouse roof. (Anastasia Dextrene/CTV) 'Land and water have become scarce resources and hydroponic systems usually typically consumes only about 5 to 10 per cent of the water of a land farm,' says Trombert. Their site at Marché Central is pesticide-free and you won't find soil or dirt. Instead, you'll find a hydraulic system that's responsible for producing four tonnes of crops each day. The location was chosen as the perfect basis for the project's roots, due to its size and proximity to neighbourhoods. Walmart Canada market leader Jacinthe Langevin says the company purchased more than $3.8 billion worth of products from 460 Quebec retailers last year. 'We are so proud to add Lufa Farms officially to that list,' she said. The hope is that the project will keep growing. 'There's an ask from customers and we've experienced that when we first sold those products ... we sold out almost every day,' Langevin told CTV.


CTV News
31 minutes ago
- CTV News
CTV QP: Boosting Canada's economy with domestic trade
Watch Internal Trade Minister Chrystia Freeland speaks about the significance of domestic trade and the impact it will have on Canada's economy.


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Ontario anti-encampment law punishes the homeless, avoids long-term solutions: critics
Social Sharing A new provincial law that aims to clear encampments from public spaces does not address the root causes behind homelessness and punishes people who have no access to affordable shelter, critics say. The Safer Municipalities Act, which passed last Tuesday in the Ontario legislature, gives municipalities and police "enhanced tools they need to end encampments and clean up our parks and public spaces," according to a provincial news release from April. But the Association of Municipalities of Ontario (AMO), which represents all 444 municipalities in the province, says the law does not provide longer-term, permanent solutions for homelessness — an issue municipalities across the province have described as a top concern in recent years. "It doesn't really focus at all on the root causes of homelessness ... the lack of deeply affordable housing, the lack of mental health and addictions services at the levels that we need them, as well as some of these basic issues around income support," said Lindsay Jones, the AMO's director of policy and government relations. Under the legislation, the province will spend $50 million to help create 1,239 additional housing units, and $20 million to create 971 additional shelter and temporary accommodation spaces. It will also put $5.5 million toward the Canada-Ontario Housing Benefit to "immediately free-up emergency shelter spaces for people living in encampments" by helping around 1,000 people living in shelters move into longer-term housing, the news release said. WATCH | Ford first introduced the legislation in December: 'Enough is enough': Ford details legislation aimed at dismantling homeless encampments 6 months ago Duration 2:02 While Jones called the spending encouraging, she said its "a drop in the bucket" compared to the nearly $2 billion the AMO estimates is needed to end encampments in Ontario. More than 80,000 people in Ontario were homeless last year, according to an AMO report. The association previously found there were about 1,400 encampments across the province in 2023. CBC Toronto has reached out to the province for comment. Law misdiagnoses problem: community worker Jones said the Safer Municipalities Act is particularly focused on enforcement. The law strengthens penalties for people who "deliberately and continually break the law by adding the new aggravating factors of continuous trespassing and the likelihood to reoffend," the provincial news release said. People convicted of a trespass offence may face a fine of up to $10,000, according to the bill. The legislation also allows police officers to issue a ticket or arrest people who do not comply with an order to stop using illegal substances in public and to leave the public place. People found guilty of violating the legislation may face fines of up to $10,000 or up to six months in prison. The province will explore "judicial approaches" that provide rehabilitation as an alternative to jail time for minor or non-violent drug crimes, the provincial news release said. When Ontario Premier Doug Ford first introduced the Safer Municipalities Act in December, he said encampments "are taking over public spaces, with illegal drug use happening out in the open, creating huge safety risks for people and communities." "Enough is enough, this has to stop and it will stop," Ford added. But Diane Chan McNally, a community worker in Toronto who works with people who live in encampments, says the Safer Municipalities Act is punishing those who have no access to affordable housing. "We're misdiagnosing the actual problem. We're suggesting that the issue is people using drugs in public when the issue is actually that people have nowhere affordable for them to live," she said. McNally said there is a stereotype that people who live in encampments are heavy drug users involved in criminal activity. The reality is that "every kind of person" lives in encampments because they cannot afford housing, she said. The people she has worked with include an 84-year-old woman who started living in an encampment after her spouse died and she could no longer afford housing. WATCH | Ford has said he is prepared to use notwithstanding clause to clear encampments: Is eviction the answer to Ontario's homeless encampment problem? | Canada Tonight 6 months ago Duration 12:38 The Ontario government plans to crack down on homeless encampments through new legislation, with Premier Doug Ford even pledging to use the notwithstanding clause if necessary. But is the dismantling of the encampments and eviction of their residents a long-term solution? Diana Chan McNally, community worker and advocate, and Cam Guthrie, one of the 12 mayors that asked Ford to use the notwithstanding clause to remove encampments from public spaces, discuss more. Many people who live in encampments are concerned they will be targeted under the new legislation regardless of whether they use drugs or not, McNally said. Catherine McKenney, NDP MPP for Ottawa Centre, said the legislation could also fuel a cycle where people who have been imprisoned will struggle to get housing once they're released because they have a criminal record, McKenney said. "Prison beds are not housing," McKenney said. Law could violate people's rights, CCLA says The legislation may also infringe on the rights of people who are trying to seek shelter, said Harini Sivalingam, director of the equality program at Canadian Civil Liberties Association. In Ontario, there is strong case law — meaning law based on previous judicial decisions — that establishes people have a right to seek shelter when there are no available shelter options for them overnight, she said. "'The government can't deprive them of that right by evicting them overnight when they have nowhere else they can go for safety and security," Sivalingam said. Last year, before the act was introduced, Ford pledged to use the notwithstanding clause that would override the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms if the courts were to "interfere" with the legislation. He made the pledge in a letter to 12 mayors who asked him to use the clause to clear encampments. In April's provincial news release, 16 mayors across the province indicated their support for the Safer Municipalities Act. Community groups and advocates in the province are exploring legal avenues to stop the enforcement of the Safer Municipalities Act, Sivalingam said.