Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Federal Government Moves To Ban Asbestos By 2018

The Canadian Press, 15 Dec, 2016 01:03 PM
  • Federal Government Moves To Ban Asbestos By 2018
OTTAWA — After years in which thousands of Canadians were diagnosed annually with deadly, asbestos-related cancers, the federal government is finally moving to ban all products containing asbestos by 2018.
 
The announcement Thursday by four Liberal cabinet ministers includes the manufacture, use, import and export of asbestos in common items such as building materials and brake pads.
 
There will also be new workplace health and safety rules, changes to the building code and an expanded inventory of public buildings that contain asbestos.
 
Canada has also been one of the last international holdouts in agreeing to list asbestos as a hazardous material under the Rotterdam Convention, a highly controversial position that federal Science Minister Kirsty Duncan says the government is now reconsidering.
 
"Today is the first step to ban asbestos — its manufacture, its export, its import — and we hope to do this, we will do this, by 2018," Duncan said.
 
Even minute amounts of asbestos fibres can cause lung cancer or deadly mesothelioma, an aggressive cancer.
 
This year, about 2,300 new cases were diagnosed across the country, continuing a trend that the Canadian Cancer Society says it hopes has peaked following decades of heavy asbestos use.
 
"We were hoping to see it starting to decline this year," Gabriel Miller of the cancer society said in an interview.
 
"It hasn't happened yet, so hopefully we have peaked but that still means, for years to come, at or about the level we're at now."
 
The last Canadian asbestos mines in Quebec closed in late 2011. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Bank Of Canada Releases Short List Of Women To Be Featured On Next Bank Note

Bank Of Canada Releases Short List Of Women To Be Featured On Next Bank Note
OTTAWA — Two activists, a poet, an engineer and an athlete are on the short list of five women whose image could appear on the next new series of Canadian bank notes due out in 2018.

Bank Of Canada Releases Short List Of Women To Be Featured On Next Bank Note

RCMP Reaches Agreement With China To Combat Flow Of Fentanyl To Canada

RCMP Reaches Agreement With China To Combat Flow Of Fentanyl To Canada
The RCMP says it has reached an agreement with China to try and stop the flow of illicit fentanyl into Canada.

RCMP Reaches Agreement With China To Combat Flow Of Fentanyl To Canada

Province Invests $2 Million For New Housing Project In Burnaby

BURNABY – People with developmental disabilities in Burnaby will soon have access to nine new units of affordable housing.

Province Invests $2 Million For New Housing Project In Burnaby

Premiers Look To Push Trudeau On Health Care Spending In December

Premiers Look To Push Trudeau On Health Care Spending In December
OTTAWA — Northwest Territories Premier Bob McLeod says the provinces and territories are pushing to make health care spending a priority when they sit down next month with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Premiers Look To Push Trudeau On Health Care Spending In December

Ten Nova Scotia Doctors Probed For Unusual Prescribing Of Addictive Opioids

Ten Nova Scotia Doctors Probed For Unusual Prescribing Of Addictive Opioids
HALIFAX — Ten Nova Scotia doctors are being investigated for irregularities in their prescribing practices for highly addictive opioids.

Ten Nova Scotia Doctors Probed For Unusual Prescribing Of Addictive Opioids

Manitoba RCMP To Carry Fentanyl Antidote Nasal Spray To Prevent Overdoses

WINNIPEG — Manitoba RCMP officers are now carrying naloxone kits to deal with the increase in opioid drug use.

Manitoba RCMP To Carry Fentanyl Antidote Nasal Spray To Prevent Overdoses