logo
Federal minister signs off on province's Boat Harbour cleanup plan

Federal minister signs off on province's Boat Harbour cleanup plan

CBC28-01-2025

The Nova Scotia government has a green light from Ottawa for its $425-million plan to remediate Boat Harbour, but it comes with a long list of conditions that includes continuing to look for another site to store contaminated sludge in the long term.
Federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault issued his decision last Friday following an environmental assessment by the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada, work that began almost six years ago for the cleanup of the body of water near Pictou Landing First Nation that for decades received effluent from the Northern Pulp mill.
In his decision, Guilbeault wrote that he determined the project by Build Nova Scotia "is not likely to cause significant adverse environmental effects."
Under terms of the approval, an existing on-site hazardous waste containment facility would be vertically expanded, increasing its capacity from 220,000 cubic metres to almost 1.1 million cubic metres.
Before that work can go ahead, however, officials at Build Nova Scotia — a provincial agency previously known as Nova Scotia Lands — must satisfy a variety of conditions including but not limited to:
Communications planning.
First Nations consultation.
Protection of fish and fish habitat.
Protection of migratory birds.
Preservation of health and socio-economic conditions of Indigenous people.
Retention of an independent environmental monitor and Indigenous monitors "to observe, record, and report on the implementation of the conditions" throughout the process.
An advisory committee also has to be established to examine alternative locations for the sludge removed from Boat Harbour.
Considering alternative storage sites
The committee is a nod to ongoing concerns and opposition from the neighbouring Pictou Landing First Nation, whose chief and council do not want the sludge that's removed from the former tidal estuary kept in the area.
Guilbeault's order says Build Nova Scotia shall invite Pictou Landing members to act as co-leads on the advisory body and provide whatever resources are required as they consider alternative sites.
"If an alternative location cannot be found within one year, the advisory committee can continue its work for 10 years or until both parties agree in writing to terminate, whichever comes first," he wrote. The committee could also be re-established at a later date.
The minister said Build Nova Scotia must "design and construct the containment cell in a manner such that the waste can be removed and the containment cell can be decommissioned" if another viable site is identified and approved.
Challenges such as the cost and traffic entailed to truck the sludge elsewhere, along with potential environmental risks, all contributed to the plan Build Nova Scotia ultimately submitted.
Province reviewing conditions
Officials with Pictou Landing First Nation did not respond to a request for comment on Monday.
A spokesperson for Build Nova Scotia said in a statement that the agency would take time to review the conditions to determine what it means for implementation of the project.
"We'll be able to speak to the decision once we have completed our review," Beverley Ware said in the statement.
Ware said eight years of studies and evaluation have gone into the project and the current timeline for the remediation and construction phase is four to seven years once the contract is awarded.
"That time frame is dependent upon the successful proponent's submission and that proponent's approach to sequencing project activities and overall scheduling. The current budget estimate is $425 million."
Company considers another option
The cleanup project follows the shutdown of the former Northern Pulp mill at Abercrombie Point in 2020.
The company ceased production when it failed to get approval from the province for a new effluent treatment facility ahead of a legislated closure date for effluent being treated at Boat Harbour.
The work by Build Nova Scotia is intended to restore Boat Harbour to the tidal estuary it was before the pulp mill was first established in the area in the 1960s.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Chris Selley: Earth to Liberals — First Nations are not an anti-development monolith
Chris Selley: Earth to Liberals — First Nations are not an anti-development monolith

National Post

time2 hours ago

  • National Post

Chris Selley: Earth to Liberals — First Nations are not an anti-development monolith

Sean Fraser — the federal Liberals' supposed master communicator who did a bad job as immigration minister, and then a bad job as housing minister, and then said he wasn't running again to spend time with his family, and then opportunistically changed his mind and was rewarded with the justice and attorney general portfolio — laid his first dog's egg of the Mark Carney era this week. Article content Article content Fraser said Indigenous groups don't have a 'complete veto' over natural-resource projects or any other government decisions — but that wasn't the turd in question, because it was absolutely true. Article content Article content The turd came later, apparently after getting his ears boxed by Assembly of First Nations National Chief Cindy Woodhouse: Fraser disavowed his entirely truthful statement. Article content 'I think even accepting the premise of the question that was put to me (about a 'veto') really made people feel like there may be an attempt by the government to work unilaterally, not in partnership (with First Nations),' Fraser told reporters in a public apology. 'Despite innocent intentions, I think my comments actually caused hurt and potentially eroded a very precarious trust that has been built up over many years to respect the rights of Indigenous people in this country,' he said. Article content Coming up on 500 years since Jacques Cartier first set foot here and named it Canada, and 150-plus years after the Crown concluded the first treaties with First Nations, and with President Donald Trump suddenly bringing our crippling dependence on the United States into very sharp focus, if we can't even speak the plain truth to each other in plain language, we might be in even bigger trouble than we realized. Article content Article content But I think we can speak the plain truth to each other in plain language, so long as we rightly marginalize fringe and unreasonable voices. While apologizing for speaking the truth, Fraser also accurately pointed to 'a frankly dangerous trope that paints a false picture of Indigenous peoples as being anti-development.' Article content Article content Media mostly portrayed the Ktunaxa Nation case, which wound up at the Supreme Court in 2017, as a matter of Indigenous people opposing the proposed Jumbo ski resort in eastern British Columbia on religious grounds: They felt the development would chase a spirit bear from their traditional lands. Receiving much less attention was the fact that the equally interested local Shuswap Nation supported the project, believing their concerns had been properly addressed and being eager to reap the financial benefits.

The quiet killing of the Canadian giantess forests and urgent reminder to push the climate change agenda
The quiet killing of the Canadian giantess forests and urgent reminder to push the climate change agenda

Canada Standard

time7 hours ago

  • Canada Standard

The quiet killing of the Canadian giantess forests and urgent reminder to push the climate change agenda

On Friday, almost the entire country is under an Environment Canada air quality warning as wildfires continue to rage across the Prairies. As world leaders prepare to gather in Alberta in Kananaskis for the G7 summit next week, some activist groups across Canada say they are planning protests. The Group of G7 is consisting of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States. But as of Saturday afternoon, there were 59 fires burning in the province, with 23 of them classified as out of control. Since mid-May more than 580,000 hectares have burned in Alberta so far. A wildfire burning in northern Alberta is not only threatening the homes of hundreds of residents in various communities, but also major oil and gas companies with operations in the area. Security officials at the G7 leaders summit in Kananaskis say plans are in place, including the possibility of evacuations, if wildfires become a serious threat. Kananaskis, located at the foothills and front ranges of the Rocky Mountains. Its western edge borders Banff National Park and the Alberta-B.C. boundary. More than 30,000 people in the prairies have been forced to leave their homes due to the numerous fires that have broken out in recent days. According to government data, the fires are caused by campfires of humans. But, several environmental groups are denouncing the oil companies' practices of extracting tar sands. In fact, Alberta's oil companies have been draining the prairies for decades. Despite promises from industry and government to reduce water use in oil sands operations and restore wetlands that have been mined to a depth of more than 200 meters, the delta's ecosystem of the Athabasca River declined. It will become irreversible if oil companies actually triple their production in Alberta, as they have announced, by 2030. Extracting oil from the tar sands requires enormous quantities of water. For every barrel of oil produced, at least 2.6 barrels of water must be extracted from the Athabasca River or local groundwater. For so-called "in situ" operations, which use steam to separate the oil from the sand underground and then pump the bitumen to the surface, freshwater consumption is less, but still significant. The Alberta Energy Regulator (AER) forecasts that production of crude bitumen-the thick, sticky oil found in Alberta's oil sands region-will reach four million barrels per day in 2033, up from 3.4 million barrels per day last year. If we do the math, that's more or less 10 million barrels of freshwater water per day being pumped to produce the petrolium. The quiet killing of the Canadian giantess forests and its various animal species is the urgent reminder for the Canadian population to push the climate change agenda. During the G7 summit, environmentalists, anti-imperialist coalitions and Indigenous advocates, among many other groups most raise their voices. They must demand that Mark Carney, the Canadian Prime minister, legislate quickly to stop the devastation of the canadian forest even at the risk of displeasing some governments in Western Canada. ( Pressenza, Montreal ) Source: Pressenza

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store