The Casket

Letter to editor

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Northern Pulp's proposal “to dump 62 million litres per day of treated waste into the rich fishing grounds of the Northumber­land Strait,” as referenced in Premier: 'No easy solution here' (The Chronicle Herald, Dec. 27), is not any kind of a solution; it would be an environmen­tal calamity.

That particular body of tidal water, the warmest summer water temperatur­e in Eastern Canada and a tourism mecca; coming ashore on three provinces; the site of a prolific shellfish and lobster industry and emptying on both of its ends directly into the Gulf of

St. Lawrence, has its own life that we must protect.

I sadly believe Premier Stephen Mcneil and the Liberal Party of Nova Scotia will find some way to weasel out of their environmen­tal due diligence to current and future generation­s of Nova Scotians, New Brunswicke­rs and Prince Edward Islanders, and will surrender to Paper Excellence, the owners of Northern Pulp, that in turn is owned by an Indonesian agri-business conglomera­te, which is owned by one the Indonesia's richest men.

It does not matter an iota if the effluent is treated or not; it is not sea water. That effluent is a poisonous-waste concoction that I firmly believe will be cause irreversib­le environmen­tal destructio­n to the Northumber­land Strait and its inhabitant­s.

As was stated to me years ago; “You can't take the milk out of the tea” and common sense tells us that you can’t take Northern

Pulp’s waste effluent out of the Northumber­land Strait or the Gulf of St. Lawrence and probably the Atlantic Ocean - but you can prevent it from entering those waters.

Ray Bates, Guysboroug­h

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