Toronto Star

Company under investigat­ion to get $100M from province

Nova Chemicals being probed over allegation­s it didn’t properly report chemical leak

- EMMA MCINTOSH STAFF REPORTER

SARNIA— The province is giving a $100-million grant to a Sarnia-area petrochemi­cal company that’s under investigat­ion by Ontario’s environmen­t ministry.

Alberta-based Nova Chemicals, which operates three plants in the Sarnia region, is being investigat­ed over allegation­s it didn’t properly report a Nov. 8 incident at its site in Corunna, south of Sarnia, where a chemical leak forced employees to evacuate.

“We’ve asked the company if there are any incidents that were to be reported and the informatio­n we have received is there were none,” said Minister of Economic Developmen­t and Growth Brad Duguid, when asked by reporters if he was aware of the investigat­ion.

“That doesn’t mean there weren’t any issues — that just (means) there weren’t any that should have been reported.

“The money won’t flow if there’s any outstandin­g compliance issues,” Duguid added.

The announceme­nt appears to be bright news for the Sarnia area, where thousands are employed in a thriving petrochemi­cal industry. At the grant announceme­nt in Sarnia on Friday, Nova said it would invest $2 billion to build a new plant in the area and upgrade one of its existing facilities.

The plant, first proposed in 2011, will have about 150 workers and result in about 1,400 indirect jobs, the company said.

Last month, a Star investigat­ion found that since 2010, more than $2.6 billion in public money has flowed to dozens of companies that had repeated or significan­t violations of environmen­tal rules designed to keep the public safe.

Those companies were fined, in to- tal, about $15 million.

Critics note that, in effect, taxpayers paid their fines and, in many cases, the companies continued to pollute. Nova was not among the companies examined in the Star investigat­ion.

Aseparate joint investigat­ion by the Star, Global News, National Observer, the Michener Awards Foundation and journalism schools at Ryerson and Concordia universiti­es also revealed a troubling pattern of secrecy and potentiall­y toxic leaks in the Sarnia area. There are 57 polluters within 25 kilometres of the city registered with the Canadian and U.S. government­s.

The investigat­ion also raised questions about whether companies and the provincial government are properly warning residents of Sarnia and the nearby First Nations community of Aamjiwnaan­g when potentiall­y toxic substances are leaked.

The environmen­t ministry has confirmed with the joint investigat­ion that it is looking into the Nov. 8 leak, when an internal alarm for hydrogen sulphide went off. The chemical, which has a rotten egg odour, can paralyze the human sense of smell and cause death at high concentrat­ions.

In a statement on its website regarding the Nov. 8 leak, Nova said its air-monitoring protocols showed no “off-site impact.”

Nova employees, speaking to the joint investigat­ion on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal, also allege the company didn’t report a second leak in October involving benzene, known to cause cancer, during an outage.

Nova’s regional manufactur­ing director, Tom Thompson, said the company did detect “trace levels” of the chemical during the outage.

Though the employees said plant workers were hospitaliz­ed due to the alleged leak in October, Thompson said that wasn’t the case, and refused to answer further questions.

An environmen­t ministry spokespers­on said Nova didn’t report any such incident in October, and that its staff has contacted the company for more informatio­n.

Duguid said the economic developmen­t ministry will check to ensure Nova is complying with all environmen­tal, health and workplace safety standards, and the grant should serve as an incentive. “They’ve been in compliance throughout many times in the past,” he said.

“There are sometimes interactio­ns with the ministry of the environmen­t that take place and we expect Nova, as they do, and all of our companies, to comply when the MOE identifies that there’s something they need to comply with.” With files from Carolyn Jarvis, Global News, and David Bruser and Jesse McLean, Star reporters

“We’ve asked the company if there are any incidents that were to be reported and the informatio­n we have received is there were none.” BRAD DUGUID MINISTER OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMEN­T AND GROWTH

 ??  ?? The Star found over $2.6 billion in public money went to companies that violated environmen­tal rules.
The Star found over $2.6 billion in public money went to companies that violated environmen­tal rules.

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