Windsor Star

Nuclear fuel burial plan vague: Ottawa

- COLIN PERKEL

A report affirming the shoreline of Lake Huron as the best place to bury radioactiv­e waste failed to provide informatio­n the government had requested, federal environmen­tal authoritie­s say.

In a detailed letter and document sent to Ontario Power Generation, the Canadian Environmen­tal Assessment Agency criticizes the utility’s report as inadequate and asks it to try again — much to the delight of project opponents.

The impugned OPG report came after Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna asked the utility in February last year for informatio­n on, among other things, the feasibilit­y of burying the low or moderately radioactiv­e waste elsewhere.

In response, OPG insisted the Bruce nuclear plant near Kincardine was the best location for its proposed deep geological repository — a massive undergroun­d rock bunker about 1.2 kilometres from Lake Huron. Among other things, OPG said in its report in December that it would be cost-prohibitiv­e and more dangerous to truck the hazardous waste elsewhere.

Critics, however, were quick to argue the analysis was simplistic, saying OPG had done no in-depth studies of other sites. The assessment agency appears to have agreed.

In a 15-page request for informatio­n, the federal agency calls OPG’s analysis of other sites vague and superficia­l. The utility should have “objectivel­y and rigorously” analyzed potential problems with other locations — from constructi­on of the repository to its ultimate closure, the document states.

“These alternativ­e locations should be reasonable, conceivabl­e, and realistic within the context of developing a deep geologic repository,” according to the informatio­n request. “Candidate locations should be developed to a point where meaningful evaluation­s of the concepts can be made.”

Among other things, the agency faults OPG for using inconsiste­nt terminolog­y and approach in discussing potentiall­y harmful environmen­tal impacts. It notes the report makes no mention of hazards related to other locations beyond the potential for crashes while trucking the waste to them, and asks for informatio­n on using trains to move the waste.

The document also contains substantiv­e requests for informatio­n on the potential effects on the Great Lakes and the water supply — an issue of huge concern to project opponents.

The agency also takes issue with OPG’s assertion that choosing another location could potentiall­y add billions to the project — or possibly save money — saying a detailed discussion of the wide range in cost estimates is needed.

OPG spokesman Kevin Powers said the request was an “expected” part of the process related mainly to “clarificat­ion and elaboratio­n” of a few elements of the proposed project. The utility, which has previously responded to 585 requests for additional informatio­n, would produce a timeline in the coming days for responding to the 23 new requests, Powers said.

What does seem clear is that McKenna’s decision on the deep geological repository, now slated for late this year or early next, will be pushed back. Either way, opponents are thrilled.

“They have done a good job of taking OPG to task,” said Jill Taylor with the group SOS Great Lakes. “The featherwei­ght quality of the OPG report and the many errors and misreprese­ntations have started to come to roost for OPG.”

Scores of Great Lakes communitie­s have passed resolution­s or otherwise expressed opposition to the proposed repository, currently estimated to cost about $2.4 billion. The plan calls for about 200,000 cubic metres of low and intermedia­te nuclear waste to be stored in bedrock up to 680 metres undergroun­d starting in 2026.

 ?? MIKE HENSEN ?? OPG proposes burying nuclear fuel bundles such as these in a rock bunker about 1.2 kilometres from Lake Huron.
MIKE HENSEN OPG proposes burying nuclear fuel bundles such as these in a rock bunker about 1.2 kilometres from Lake Huron.

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