Toronto Star

When Ellen Page talks pulp mills, it’s personal

- HALEY RYAN STARMETRO HALIFAX With files from Yvette d’Entremont and The Canadian Press

HALIFAX— Ellen Page needs more than 280 characters to talk about Northern Pulp.

The Hollywood actress from Halifax has taken to Twitter in recent weeks to criticize the Northern Pulp mill’s plan to pump 62 million litres of treated waste, or effluent, each day directly into the Northumber­land Strait between Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island.

The plan has been loudly contested by environmen­talists, local fishermen, the P.E.I. government and Indigenous residents of Pictou Landing First Nation near the Abercrombi­e, N.S. plant.

In response to environmen­tal concerns around the proposed effluent pipeline, a spokespers­on for mill owner Paper Excellence Canada said via email that treated effluent is “non-toxic.” Since the bleached kraft pulp mill started in 1967, effluent has been flowing into the Northumber­land Strait with “both our fisheries and forest industries coexisting,” Kathy Cloutier wrote.

Page said she’s so passionate about the situation because it strikes her as a “microcosm” of all kinds of issues around the environmen­t, public money going to large private companies and the fact that, for most Nova Scotians, the depth of this history hasn’t been shared with us.

“I actually think a lot of people, particular­ly people with certain privileges, don’t understand,” Page said in an exclusive interview with StarMetro this week as she drove through São Paulo en route to the airport.

“At this point, it’s insanity because we know what’s happening with our climate. We’ve been told what’s going to happen by 2030, 2040. And if you’re in a place of power, a politician and have that control, you need to step up right now.”

Fishermen have been blocking the mill’s survey boats from scouting for a potential pipe location since this spring. Just this week, Paper Excellence Canada filed court documents seeking an injunction against fishermen who have blocked those vessels.

Page, an award-winning actress known for her roles in films like Juno, Inception and Flatliners, said she had recently “devoured” Joan Baxter’s The Mill: Fifty Years of Pulp and Protest. She said it gives vital context on the Northern Pulp issue. “I felt … compelled to do what I can because I do have the privilege of a platform,” Page said.

“I hope that I can help share the informatio­n — and then needless to say make sure that First Nations people that are a part of resistance, fishermen ... are really the ones we’re focusing on.”

Right now, the effluent is treated in a basin system where effluent flows through a pipe from the mill to Boat Harbour and then to Boat Harbour Basin, iPolitics reported in October. There, it mixes with other fresh water rivers and streams that flow in there. It is retained for up to 30 days before being discharged into the saltwater at the Pictou Landing shoreline.

Now that the mill is losing Boat Harbour as an effluent destinatio­n — the 2015 Boat Harbour Act set Jan. 31, 2020 as the cut-off date — it has to go some- where, hence the debate around the possible new pipeline into the strait.

The Nova Scotia government will handle remediatio­n of the Boat Harbour cleanup, which has a budget of about $133 million.

For years, Indigenous leaders like Pictou Landing Chief Andrea Paul have been trying to raise awareness about odours and health issues in their community, which they say stem from the effluent that’s flowed into Boat Harbour since 1967.

In a victim impact statement in provincial court, Paul said a Northern Pulp pipeline leak in 2014 that spilled millions of litres of waste on Mi’kmaw burial grounds at Indian Cross Point “triggered anger and fear, which can only be understood as part of the decades-long environmen­tal degradatio­n of our territory.”

The mill employs about 300 people. While Page said she “absolutely” cares about people’s livelihood­s, she’s especially concerned with “having healthy, good jobs in Nova Scotia instead of giving hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars to this massive corporatio­n.

“We’re at a point in this world where, it’s like enough is enough, and Nova Scotia should be a climate leader. We have so many amazing, positive things that can be used in terms of those resources — and those are the jobs,” Page said.

Besides the Boat Harbour remediatio­n, the province has long provided loans and funding to the mill. The Canadian Press reported in 2013 that Nova Scotia provided more than $20 million in loans and refinancin­g for upgrades and equipment to reduce air pollution.

That number included a $14.7-million repayable loan, a $2.5-million forgivable loan and refinancin­g for a $5.4-million loan from 2009. The company was set to spend $5 million of its own money on upgrades.

Last week, a Nova Scotia Supreme Court ruled that the province must consult with Pictou Landing First Nation about how public money is provided to Northern Pulp for an effluent treatment plant — if at all.

On behalf of Paper Excellence Canada, Cloutier said there are 131 kraft mills operating in North America, 20 per cent of which operate Activated Sludge Treatment systems (the new system Northern Pulp will operate) while 80 per cent operate Aerated Stabilizat­ion Basin systems (the existing system that has treated effluent flowing into the strait for over 50 years).

In North America, Cloutier said, “no other treatment process is used to treat kraft mill effluent.” Northern Pulp has thoroughly investigat­ed treatment options, she said, and they must include away to discharge into water in order for the mill to operate.

“It is not a question of cost; it is one of available technology. Industry attempts at zero-effluent technology in kraft mills have failed,” Cloutier said.

The new Activated Sludge Treatment system will see no untreated effluent leave the mill property. That is a “significan­t improvemen­t” to the current system, she argued. She wrote that Activated Sludge Treatment systems are used worldwide for treating industrial and domestic waste and are similar to municipal waste water treatment systems.

The company also says various regulated emissions, such as the amount of organic material and suspended solids in the effluent, would be well within federally regulated limits.

However, Page said building a new pipeline sending effluent into the ocean is “just crazy.”

Even though Page said she’d known generally about the mill growing up in Nova Scotia (and “played a lot of soccer in Pictou”), Baxter’s book opened her mind to the environmen­tal impacts in Boat Harbour and to the government’s reluctance “to do anything.”

When asked what message she had for the provincial government, Page said “they need to just listen to the science” and care for their constituen­ts in Pictou.

Page’s tweets and support for the #nopipe movement have reached Pictou Landing where she is “highly regarded,” Brian Hebert, the First Nation’s lawyer, said in an interview.

“It certainly has increased the profile, and the band is certainly aware of it and they’re very appreciati­ve,” he said.

“If you’re in a place of power, a politician and have that control, you need to step up right now.” ELLEN PAGE ACTRESS

 ?? MIKE PONT GETTY IMAGES ?? Ellen Page has been outspoken in her efforts to stop Northern Pulp’s plan to pump effluent into the Northumber­land Strait.
MIKE PONT GETTY IMAGES Ellen Page has been outspoken in her efforts to stop Northern Pulp’s plan to pump effluent into the Northumber­land Strait.
 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Fishermen have been blocking the Northern Pulp mill's survey boats from scouting for a potential pipe location since this spring.
ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS Fishermen have been blocking the Northern Pulp mill's survey boats from scouting for a potential pipe location since this spring.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada