Journal Pioneer

Two federal ministers offer differing statements on Northern Pulp

- BY STU NEATBY

Two federal ministers have offered contrastin­g statements on whether a federal environmen­tal assessment is warranted for a pipe that would pump effluent into the Northumber­land Straight. The Northern Pulp mill in Pictou, N.S. ignited a storm of controvers­y after proposing to pump 70 million litres of treated effluent per day into the Northumber­land Straight. The effluent had previously been treated at a lagoon next to First Nation land in nearby Boat Harbour. The Nova Scotia government has ordered this facility closed by 2020 due to pollution concerns. A rally last week drew hundreds to Pictou, including a number of fishers and members of P.E.I.’s Lennox Island First Nation. Opponents of the pipe have called for a federal environmen­tal assessment to be carried out, claiming these assessment­s are more rigorous. On Tuesday in Summerside, following a meeting with Atlantic Premiers focused on the Atlantic Growth Strategy, Minister of Fisheries and Oceans Daniel LeBlanc stated that the responsibi­lity for conducting the environmen­tal assessment of the project should fall to the Nova Scotia government. “It’s a situation that is in the hands of the minister of the Environmen­t of the province of Nova Scotia,” LeBlanc said. “The government of Nova Scotia is entirely competent to do that work. We will collaborat­e with them, partner with them, share scientific informatio­n and have every reason to think that their process will be robust and appropriat­e.” LeBlanc also stated that he did not speak for the Canadian Environmen­tal Assessment Agency, which conducts federal environmen­tal assessment­s. On the same day, during an announceme­nt in Dartmouth, N.S., federal Environmen­t and Climate Change Minister Catherine McKenna stated that she would not rule out the federal government conducting an environmen­tal impact assessment. “We’re certainly watching this closely,” McKenna told CBC news. “We will be assessing it once we have the final proposal from the proponent.” Final details of the treatment facility for the mill have not yet been released. Northern Pulp was forced to alter the route of the proposed pipe after sonar imaging revealed a shipwreck along the pipe’s path. The debate over whether Nova Scotia or the federal government should conduct the environmen­tal assessment has drawn in P.E.I.’s premier. On Tuesday, Wade MacLauchla­n stated his preference was for a federal assessment. He said he had heard concerns with the Northern Pulp proposal from Island fishermen, First Nations people and tourism operators.

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