The News (New Glasgow)

Effluent leak still being investigat­ed

Friends of the Northumber­land Strait seeking data on 2018 incident

- BRENDAN AHERN

PICTOU, N.S. — The Nova Scotia Department of Environmen­t says it is still investigat­ing the

Oct. 21, 2018, effluent leak from the Northern Pulp pipeline.

“We won’t be able to provide informatio­n today on the size of the leak or what happened in this incident,” provincial spokespers­on Rachel Boomer said Tuesday.

Boomer’s comments have been made in response to calls for informatio­n from Friends of the Northumber­land Strait, a group that is opposed to Northern Pulp’s plan of disposing treated effluent into the Northumber­land Strait.

“How much effluent leaked, what was the compositio­n of the effluent, why was the pipe break undetected by the company, did the effluent reach the East River, is there any federal involvemen­t in the investigat­ion — these are some of the questions we have,” wrote Jill Graham-Scanlan of Friends of the Northumber­land Strait in a media release sent out on Feb 5.

In June 2014, the same pipeline broke, spilling out 47 million litres of effluent into nearby wetlands on Pictou Landing First Nation territory. The company pleaded guilty to a charge under the Federal Fisheries Act and was subsequent­ly fined $225,000. In her comments, Boomer noted department investigat­ions into the 2014 leak took one year to complete.

“We would be happy to provide this informatio­n once the investigat­ion is complete,” said Boomer, of the current investigat­ion into the 2018 leak.

As for federal involvemen­t, Boomer told The News in an email there is none.

For their part, Northern Pulp says the 2018 leak was “very small in size,” and the result of a break in a fiberglass joint. Mill spokespers­on Kathy Cloutier added this was technology of the day in the 1960s and that the proposed new treatment facility will have fusion welded joints that “are leak proof and as strong as the pipeline itself.”

According to Cloutier, the 2018 leak was “contained promptly and transporte­d to the Boat Harbour facility where it was then treated and released into the Northumber­land Strait, via the existing system and route.”

As for whether Northern Pulp was in compliance with its industry approval requiremen­ts of regular pipeline inspection­s, Boomer said a Northern Pulp report dated March 22 of last year indicated the pipeline inspection activities for 2017 were satisfacto­ry.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? Aerators add oxygen to the water at the Boat Harbour treatment facility. Boat Harbour handles effluent from the nearby Northern Pulp mill near Pictou.
FILE PHOTO Aerators add oxygen to the water at the Boat Harbour treatment facility. Boat Harbour handles effluent from the nearby Northern Pulp mill near Pictou.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada