Waterloo Region Record

AltaGas scraps N.S. cavern project

Thirteen years after plan started, Calgary firm says it has shifted priorities

- MICHAEL MACDONALD

Alberta-based AltaGas has abandoned its plan to create huge salt caverns north of Halifax to store natural gas, saying the Alton Gas storage project is no longer part of its business focus.

The decision came Friday, more than 13 years after constructi­on started on the ill-fated project in central Nova Scotia.

AltaGas confirmed it will decommissi­on the site near Stewiacke, N.S., because the company had shifted its priorities since 2018, when it sold its interest in the Halifax-based natural gas utility Heritage Gas Ltd. The utility would have been the main customer for the caverns.

“The project has received mixed support, challenges and experience­d delay,” AltaGas said in a statement.

The company had argued the storage caverns were needed to assure a steady supply of natural gas in the colder months when peak demand can lead to supply shortages and price spikes. And it went to great lengths to try to prove the project was environmen­tally sound.

Nova Scotia’s natural resources minister, Tory Rushton, said the company’s announceme­nt came as a surprise.

“Any time a business does leave the province of Nova Scotia it’s disappoint­ing,” Rushton said Friday. “But at the end of the day, this is a business decision (and) … I certainly can’t speculate on why the company made the decision.”

The minister said the end of the cavern project would likely have an impact on the province’s natural gas supply, but he said other companies would likely step forward.

AltaGas had planned to build up to 15 caverns about a kilometre undergroun­d near Alton, N.S., and then link them with the nearby Maritimes and Northeast natural gas pipeline, about 60 kilometres north of Halifax.

The project, however, faced strong opposition from Indigenous protesters and their allies, not to mention a string of court actions.

The $130-million developmen­t had been largely on hold since 2014, when Mi’kmaq activists started a series of protests that culminated two years later in the creation of a yearround protest camp at one of the work sites.

Those opposed to the project had long complained about the company’s plan to remove large, undergroun­d salt deposits by flushing them out with water from the Shubenacad­ie River, about 12 kilometres from the cavern site.

The plan also called for dumping the leftover brine into the tidal river, where it would flow into the Bay of Fundy.

Mi’kmaq elders said the brine would pollute the 72-kilometre waterway, which has been central to the Indigenous population for 13,000 years.

On the “Stop Alton Gas” Facebook page, supporters were ecstatic to hear the project was dead.

“Yes!!!” said one post. “Leave our river alone. Thanks to all water protectors for your hard work.” The Assembly of Nova Scotia Mi’kmaw Chiefs issued a statement thanking those who had taken a stand against the project.

The project had received environmen­tal and industrial approvals, including two environmen­tal assessment­s and an independen­t third-party science review.

Before the project was shelved, AltaGas said the brine solution would have been pumped into the river twice a day at high tide, over a two- to three-year period. The company said the brine would be hard to detect in the river. The peak release on each tidal cycle would have been approximat­ely 5,000 cubic metres, which would have mixed in with four million cubic metres of brackish tidal flow.

In February 2019, after years of delays, the federal government said it would regulate the project. Environmen­t and Climate Change Canada said the new rules would be aimed at managing potential threats to fish, fish habitat and human health.

Two months later, three women described as grassroots grandmothe­rs were arrested at the constructi­on site near the river and later charged with contempt for ignoring a court injunction.

And in March 2020, a Nova Scotia judge decided the provincial government had to conduct further talks with the Mi’kmaq before the project could proceed. The judge said the Crown’s previous consultati­ons with the Sipekne’katik First Nation were insufficie­nt.

In the end, the company decided to decommissi­on the project.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? AltaGas had planned to build up to 15 salt caverns near Alton, N.S., to store natural gas. The project, however, faced strong opposition from Indigenous protesters and their allies.
ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO AltaGas had planned to build up to 15 salt caverns near Alton, N.S., to store natural gas. The project, however, faced strong opposition from Indigenous protesters and their allies.

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