The Telegram (St. John's)

P.E.I. premier battles Nova Scotia mill’s plan to pump effluent into Strait

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CHARLOTTET­OWN — Prince Edward Island’s premier has come out against a Nova Scotia pulp mill’s plan to pump effluent into the Northumber­land Strait. Wade Maclauchla­n has voiced his disapprova­l of Northern Pulp’s proposal in a letter to Nova Scotia Premier Stephen Mcneil and to federal Environmen­t Minister Catherine Mckenna. Maclauchla­n says he shares concerns by Nova Scotia and P.E.I. fishermen that an outflow pipe could have “unintended consequenc­es for our commercial fishery and aquacultur­e industries” in the strait.

“An effluent pipe that would allow as much as 75,000 cubic metres of fresh warm water to be directed daily into the Northumber­land Strait is not a project that our government will support as proposed,” he wrote in the letter, released Tuesday by his office.

The Pictou, N.S., mill — which is across the strait from eastern P.E.I. — has been told by the Nova Scotia government to replace its effluent treatment plant by 2020.

The company announced plans for a new plant last month and is to submit an environmen­tal assessment to Nova Scotia’s Environmen­t Department this summer. According to Northern Pulp’s plan, the effluent would be treated at a new facility near the mill using a system that would meet all federal environmen­tal standards for suspended solids and oxygen depletion.

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