The Province

Indigenous values will determine nuclear future

First Nations weigh in on waste storage

- COLIN PERKEL

Indigenous people in the shadow of one of the world’s largest nuclear reactors are adamant their values will underpin their decision on whether to approve a proposed multibilli­on-dollar storage bunker for radioactiv­e waste — a process that could take at least another year to play out.

Armed with commitment­s from both the Canadian government and proponents of the Deep Geologic Repository to await their buy-in, the Saugeen Ojibway Nation say they will take their time to reach an informed opinion.

“Our values and who we are as a people and our connection to the lands and the waters are in many ways more important than the technical aspects of this,” Randall Kahgee, a former chief and now lead adviser to the First Nations on nuclear issues, said in an interview.

“This is not just a simple project. This is a forever project. It requires our people to think beyond seven generation­s, which is typically how we plan and think about these things.”

The Ontario Power Generation project, currently estimated to cost $2.4 billion, would see a bunker built at the Bruce nuclear power plant near Kincardine, Ont., close to the Lake Huron shoreline. Hundreds of thousands of cubic metres of low and intermedia­te radioactiv­e waste — now stored at the site above ground — would be buried 680 metres deep.

The Saugeen Ojibway Nation comprises about 5,000 members of the Saugeen First Nation and the Chippewas of Nawash Unceded First Nation. They have long complained about being shut out of decisions related to the plant.

“We were never part of shaping those decisions,” Kahgee said. “We certainly have not benefited in the same way that others have. It’s the kind of classic example we see historical­ly, where our people are often left on the outside looking in on their own territory while others reap the benefits.”

The waste storage plan, pushed by OPG as perfectly safe but opposed by politician­s and scores of communitie­s in Canada and the U.S. as an eco disaster in the making, won tentative approval from an environmen­tal review panel in May, 2015. Since then, both the previous Conservati­ve and current Liberal government­s have delayed making the politicall­y fraught final decision.

Most recently, federal Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna asked the utility in August to come back again with more informatio­n — this time on how the project may affect area First Nations.

“OPG continues to be engaged in respectful dialogue with SON, as it has been since 2004, and is seeking further informatio­n on those effects as well as the timeline for the SON community process,” said Neal Kelly with OPG. “Once OPG has that informatio­n, we will submit the updated analysis to the Canadian Environmen­tal Assessment Agency.”

Steps toward a consensus among affected First Nations are underway. Members turned out to a conference over four days in September and October that Kahgee dubbed “Nuclear 101.” The aim was to explain nuclear basics: radiation, levels of waste toxicity, and how best to store waste that remains dangerous for centuries.

“These are complex issues that will take time for our people to address. If this was simply about money or beads and trinkets, that conversati­on would have happened long ago.”

 ?? — BRUCE POWER ?? The Bruce Power site on the Lake Huron shore. Local First Nations say their values will underpin their decision on whether to approve a proposed multibilli­on-dollar undergroun­d storage bunker for radioactiv­e waste.
— BRUCE POWER The Bruce Power site on the Lake Huron shore. Local First Nations say their values will underpin their decision on whether to approve a proposed multibilli­on-dollar undergroun­d storage bunker for radioactiv­e waste.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada