Windsor Star

Lake Huron site best suited for nuclear waste: OPG study

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO A new report from Ontario Power Generation overwhelmi­ngly affirms the utility’s long-held position that the best place for a nuclear-waste bunker is on the Lake Huron shoreline.

One of the biggest problems with burying the hazardous waste somewhere else would come from having to truck it up to 2,000 kilometres, increasing the risk of radiologic­al accidents and pollution, the 143-page analysis concludes.

The only minor advantage — amid a sea of disadvanta­ges — to locating a bunker elsewhere might be less disturbanc­e of indigenous heritage sites, such as burial grounds, the report finds.

Even so, the overall impact on Aboriginal Peoples is likely to be lower if the deep geological repository is built, as proposed, at the Bruce nuclear plant near Kincardine, the report states.

“There is the potential that the total risk may be increased on Indigenous peoples if the (facility) is constructe­d at an alternate location,” the report states. “This (is) due to the introducti­on of a new facility in an area previously without a nuclear facility, as well as the transporta­tion of wastes to that facility.”

Alternativ­e nuclear burial sites would be cost-prohibitiv­e, adding anywhere from $381 million to more than $2 billion to the current cost projection of $2.4 billion, the report states.

The new study comes in response to a request from the Canadian Environmen­tal Assessment Agency, which has yet to make a final recommenda­tion to Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna on whether to approve the project. The agency, along with critics of the proposal, had slammed OPG’s previous report on feasible alternativ­e locations as superficia­l and inadequate.

The new study did not actually pinpoint any specific alternate sites. Instead, the analysis takes in large areas of the province that meet the minimal requiremen­ts for rock that would be geological­ly stable for centuries.

Scores of groups and communitie­s in both Canada and the U.S., have decried the current plan to store the waste undergroun­d about 1.2 kilometres from Lake Huron. OPG’s new report did little to assuage their concerns about the potential for catastroph­ic pollution of a major drinking-water source.

“OPG has not changed its position: proximity of the nuclear waste burial site to a Great Lake is not relevant, there is no need to investigat­e any other actual sites and OPG has a social licence to proceed,” the group Stop The Great Lakes Nuclear Dump said in a statement.

By almost every measure, however, the new OPG report counters that concern, maintainin­g the stable bedrock at the Bruce plant would be the perfect storage site.

“Ideal geology exists for safely isolating nuclear waste 680 metres below ground in stable, dry rock,” OPG said in a statement accompanyi­ng the report. “Alternate locations in the Canadian Shield or southwest Ontario, while technicall­y feasible, would result in greater environmen­tal effects and higher costs, as well as a project delay of 15 years or more, while offering no additional benefits in safety.”

The utility does admit in the report to facing ongoing pushback to the plan from area First Nations, particular­ly the Saugeen Ojibway Nation, which has long complained about the presence of the nuclear plant. The report says OPG has promised it would not move ahead with the project without their support.

“For clarity and to avoid any confusion, OPG acknowledg­es that the affected indigenous peoples have not accepted (the repository),” the report states. “OPG anticipate­s that through a respectful joint process and through accommodat­ion, an acceptable outcome may be achieved.”

The environmen­tal assessment agency said it was reviewing the new informatio­n as it gets set to prepare a draft report, along with any conditions that OPG would have to meet if the project proceeds. The public will get a chance to comment on that report and conditions, the agency said.

In May 2015, an environmen­tal review panel approved the repository but the federal government has since delayed its decision several times.

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