Truro News

Province at risk of becoming an island

If action isn’t taken to repair dykes, municipal leaders warn of dire consequenc­es

- BY ALY THOMSON

Nova Scotia is at risk of becoming an island within decades if action is not taken to fix the 275-year-old dikes that prevent flooding of the isthmus connecting the province to the rest of Canada, officials warn.

Mayor David Kogon of Amherst said sea levels are projected to rise in the Bay of Fundy over 15 to 20 years to the point where the Isthmus of Chignecto will flood, even without a storm surge.

The isthmus is a narrow, lowlying strip of land that is about 20 kilometres at its narrowest point.

“If the Isthmus of Chignecto, which is all that connects Nova Scotia to New Brunswick, is flooded out, then Nova Scotia will be surrounded by water,” said Kogon in an interview Thursday, adding that with the right storm the isthmus could flood sooner.

“If the highway and rail line are under water, you’ve completely cut Nova Scotia off from the rest

of mainland Canada.”

The dikes in the Tantramar Marsh were built by Acadian settlers for agricultur­al purposes in the 1700s and urgent, multimilli­on-dollar upgrades are needed, said Kogon.

He said an estimated $50 million in trade flows through the isthmus daily via road and rail, and the Trans-canada Highway and rail line are at risk.

“Goods coming from Europe to Canada are all coming through the Port of Halifax ... Goods leav-

ing Canada to go in that direction are going through the Port of Halifax. That would all be severed instantly,” said Kogon, whose town is roughly six kilometres from the New Brunswick border.

Kogon, the warden of Nova Scotia’s Cumberland County, and the mayor of Sackville, N.B., have sent a letter to provincial and federal infrastruc­ture ministers requesting a meeting to discuss the issue.

“The aging dikes combined with documented rising water levels and increased frequencie­s and intensity of weather events has led to new floodplain mapping. These clearly show that a flood that will breach the national rail and road networks is no longer a theoretica­l question — it is a matter of how soon it will occur,” said the Nov. 1 letter, signed by Kogon, Cumberland County Warden Al Gillis and Sackville Mayor John Higham.

The Isthmus of Chignecto was cut off for several days in an 1869 storm, according to a 2008 study by Memorial University geologist Norm Catto.

The study said the odds of a re- occurrence would increase as sea levels rise. Catto also said while no Nova Scotia community would be permanentl­y submerged by rising sea levels, many would need to adapt.

A 2016 report by Ottawa’s Working Group on Adaptation and Climate Resilience noted that along with the highway and rail lines, electricit­y transmissi­on lines on the isthmus are also at risk.

“Disruption­s due to climate change (e.g., sea-level rise, storm surge) pose risks to these infrastruc­tures and the economic activity they sustain. Trade flows through the isthmus, both by road and rail, carry an estimated value of $50 million per day and $20 billion annually,” it said.

Kogon said he was told during a recent meeting with federal politician­s that fixing the dikes would fall under provincial jurisdicti­on, but he wants all three levels of government to work together. He said the first step would be an engineerin­g study to determine the scope of the required repairs.

“This is of national significan­ce. The hope is that the provinces and (Ottawa) will work together on this,” he said. “The cost involved in refurbishi­ng and rebuilding the dikes is way beyond the scope of what a small-town municipali­ty could do.”

He said the three municipal leaders have not yet received a reply to the letter, but they are meeting again Friday and plan on following up with the minister’s offices.

In an email statement, Infrastruc­ture Canada confirmed it had received the letter and was assessing it.

Spokeswoma­n Nadine Archambaul­t-chapleau noted that Ottawa is creating a $2-billion Disaster Mitigation and Adaptation Fund, which is “designed to support investment­s that will mitigate current and future climate risks, such as floods, wildfires and droughts by building or reinforcin­g constructe­d and natural infrastruc­ture.”

“More informatio­n is to come as this program is not yet launched, but could be a potential option for this project,” said Archambaul­t-chapleau.

In an emailed response, Nova Scotia’s Department of Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture Renewal said the province has been working with a number of groups and other levels of government to evaluate the potential impacts to the Isthmus of Chignecto.

“In general, government is currently developing new design standards that incorporat­e sea level rise and storm surge into dike maintenanc­e and constructi­on,” the email states.

The department said that in the Amherst area specifical­ly, it was looking at options to reduce flooding potential and pointed out that $10 million has been spent to replace the Laplanche aboiteau for local farmland.

 ?? AARON BESWICK/FILE ?? Municipal politician­s worry that without a comprehens­ive plan to maintain the dikes and aboiteaus in the Isthmus of Chignecto, flooding and rising sea levels could turn Nova Scotia into an island.
AARON BESWICK/FILE Municipal politician­s worry that without a comprehens­ive plan to maintain the dikes and aboiteaus in the Isthmus of Chignecto, flooding and rising sea levels could turn Nova Scotia into an island.

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