Cape Breton Post

Northern Pulp to seek restart

- SALTWIRE NETWORK STAFF news@cbpost.com @capebreton post

NEW GLASGOW — Northern Pulp intends to pitch a redesigned effluent treatment plant early next year.

The Pictou County kraft pulp mill idled in January in order to comply with the Boat Harbour Act, which mandated the closure of its effluent treatment plant.

Premier Stephen McNeil refused to extend the Boat Harbour Act to allow the mill to continue operating as it sought environmen­tal approval for its controvert­ial proposed replacemen­t effluent treatment plant.

That project, which would have seen a new treatment plant built beside the mill at Abercrombi­e Point and that would have sent effluent via pipeline into the Northumber­land Strait, was opposed by a coalition of fishermen, the Pictou Landing First Nation and local concerned citizens.

With the mill shuttered, Northern Pulp entered creditor protection last summer and has been kept afloat by loans from parent company Paper Excellence. Some 280 unionized workers at the mill were layed off.

In an affidavit filed Dec. 4 with the British Columbia Supreme Court, which is handling the creditor protection, mill manager Bruce Chapman states the mill is going to seek approval for a new effluent treatment plant redesigned to address some of the concerns of those who opposed the earlier plan.

“The (environmen­tal liaison committee) has had multiple meetings with stakeholde­rs, retained a local engineerin­g firm to provide technical guidance and support, and expects to complete its analysis and make a formal presentati­on to Northern Pulp in December 2020 regarding community concerns and potential solutions to address those concerns to include in a new Replacemen­t ETF project (the “New Replacemen­t ETF Project”) to restart the mill,” reads the affidavit.

The affidavit states that the Pictou Landing First Nation declined an offer to participat­e in the environmen­tal liaison committee but has been provided updates on the group’s progress.

A representa­tive from the First Nation versed on the proposal could not be reached for comment on Tuesday afternoon.

No details are provided in the affidavit regarding what changes were being considered for the effluent treatment plant that might make it more palatable.

Northern Pulp has budgeted $50,000 a month to pay KSH Engineerin­g to develop a detailed design of the new treatment facility starting in January.

One source of contention was Northern Pulp’s plan to run the pipe out into the Northumber­land Strait at Caribou, beside one of the region’s busiest fishing harbours.

A previous plan by the mill to run the pipe out along the bottom of Pictou harbour had been abandoned after ice scouring was discovered on the sea floor along the proposed route.

Chapman’s affidavit was filed as part of an applicatio­n that will go before the court on Friday to have creditor protection extended until April 30, 2021.

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