Medicine Hat News

Quebec allows copper smelter in northwest to emit arsenic levels five times norm

- STEPHANE BLAIS

A copper smelter in northwest Quebec will be permitted to release 15 nanograms of arsenic per cubic metre of air — five times the provincial norm — Quebec’s environmen­t minister said Monday.

The factory in Rouyn-Noranda, Que., which has been in operation since 1927 and employs around 650 people, has been a cause for serious concern in the region after studies have shown that residents of the city have higher rates of lung cancer than the provincial average. Owned by Switzerlan­d-based Glencore, the smelter is currently allowed to emit 100 nanograms of arsenic per cubic metre of air — 33 times the provincewi­de standard.

Environmen­t Minister Benoit Charette travelled to the town Monday and said the 15-nanogram cap recommende­d last week by public health would be the new goal the company must reach within five years.

“We are turning the page on a certain era today,” Charette told reporters.

“It’s impossible to be at three nanograms (per cubic metre of air) within five years in the most-affected sector,” Charette said about the district closest to the copper factory. But he said it is possible for the air to be at three nanograms — the provincial norm — “on the majority” of Rouyn-Noranda’s territory. “And that’s good news.”

The new limit, he said, will be included in the updated certificat­ion for the company.

“If Glencore fails to comply with government requiremen­ts, the Horne smelter will have to close its doors,” Charette said.

Meanwhile, online and in-person consultati­ons with Rouyn-Noranda residents will take place in the following weeks, he said. “We want to know if the population feels listened to with this propositio­n.”

Glencore Canada welcomed the new cap on Monday, saying it “remains committed to achieving the most ambitious goals possible.”

“Our teams and our partners are fully mobilized around a major transforma­tion project, which will make the Horne smelter one of the most efficient in the world,” Cindy Caouette, a spokespers­on for the copper factory, said in a statement.

“We are continuing our efforts to meet the requiremen­ts that will appear in our next certificat­ion.”

But Dr. Claudel Naud-Bellavance, a family doctor who grew up and works in Rouyn-Noranda, said Charette’s decision to follow the public health recommenda­tion is disappoint­ing.

“Public health said that 15 nanograms or less were deemed safe — so everything above — isn’t safe, and it’s not reasonable to accept that the four next years, the five next years will be above 15 nanograms,” Naud-Bellavance said Monday.

“Five years, it’s long in the life of a child.”

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