Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Petition Opposing Ontario Nuclear Waste Plan Sent To Federal Government

The Canadian Press, 21 Jan, 2016 12:23 PM
    TORONTO — A group opposed to a plan to bury nuclear waste near Lake Huron says it has sent a petition with more than 90,000 signatures to federal Environment Minister Catherine McKenna.
     
    Beverly Fernandez of Stop the Great Lakes Nuclear Dump says the petition — which would have required 6,754 pages to print — had 92,251 signatures and more than 31,000 comments when it was emailed to McKenna earlier this week.
     
    Ontario Power Generation wants to bury hundreds of thousands of cubic metres of waste from nuclear plants about 680 metres underground at the Bruce Power generating station near Kincardine, Ont., about 1.2 kilometres from Lake Huron.
     
    OPG has said the waste would not include highly radioactive spent fuel, but would consist of "low-level" waste such as ashes from incinerated mop heads, paper towels and floor sweepings, and "intermediate waste" — discarded parts from the reactor core.
     
    Fernandez says more than 180 resolutions have been passed on both sides of the Canada-U.S. border condemning the plan, and she claims the resolutions represent about 22 million people.
     
    A Canadian environmental assessment released last May concluded the OPG plan was the best way to deal with the waste, and found little risk to the lake. Former environment minister Leona Aglukkaq had promised to make a decision by last Dec. 2, but the new Liberal government has put it off to March 1.
     
    McKenna did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the petition.
     
    An OPG spokesman said that the government "should follow the science."
     
     
    The advisory panel said it should be built, "and be built now, and that it won't affect the lake," Neal Kelly, an OPG spokesman, said Thursday.
     
    The 430-page environmental assessment report concluded "the relative position of the proposed project within the spectrum of risks to the Great Lakes is a minor one, albeit one that demands strict attention and regulation."
     
    Fernandez said Stop The Great Lakes Nuclear Dump believes nuclear waste should not be buried anywhere in the Great Lakes Basin.
     
    "Protection of the Great Lakes from buried radioactive waste is responsible stewardship, and is of national and international importance," the group said in a release.
     
    Proponents argue the rock is geologically stable and would provide a hermetic seal to prevent any radioactivity reaching Lake Huron from the proposed deep geological repository or DGR.
     
    Last year's environmental report also rejected a major concern of those opposed to the plan: that the repository could also become home to the dangerous high-level waste such as the spent nuclear fuel that powers the reactors.
     
    "A used fuel repository would have distinctive design requirements different than the DGR and would require a separate environmental assessment and licence application," the report stated.
     
    The report concluded the "international consensus" was that burying the waste is preferable to storing it above ground, as OPG has done for decades, because the repository would be less vulnerable to natural and human-caused disasters.
     
    And it urged burying the waste as quickly as possible.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Science World to Host Award-Winning Bartenders at Science of Cocktail Event!

    Science World to Host Award-Winning Bartenders at Science of Cocktail Event!

    Think molecular mixology, snappy suits and dazzling dresses. For one night only, the Science of C...

    Science World to Host Award-Winning Bartenders at Science of Cocktail Event!

    Newfoundland Man Found Not Guilty In Soccer Stabbing Heard Voice: 'Get That Kid'

    Newfoundland Man Found Not Guilty In Soccer Stabbing Heard Voice: 'Get That Kid'
    Layman heard the phantom instruction moments before plunging a 25-centimetre blade into the boy's neck and chest, Judge Colin Flynn read from his decision in provincial court.

    Newfoundland Man Found Not Guilty In Soccer Stabbing Heard Voice: 'Get That Kid'

    Possible Ikea Return To Halifax Prompts Twitter Buzz From Those Who Miss Shop

    Possible Ikea Return To Halifax Prompts Twitter Buzz From Those Who Miss Shop
    kea Canada said its president, Stefan Sjostrand, will join the city's mayor, Mike Savage, Friday for a news conference.

    Possible Ikea Return To Halifax Prompts Twitter Buzz From Those Who Miss Shop

    B.C. High Court Upholds Manslaughter Convictions For Two Men In Kelowna Father's Death

    B.C. High Court Upholds Manslaughter Convictions For Two Men In Kelowna Father's Death
    Matthew McRae and Anson Schell were sentenced to three-and-a-half years and three-years respectively for their part in the slaying of Dain Phillips during a feud in Kelowna in June, 2011.

    B.C. High Court Upholds Manslaughter Convictions For Two Men In Kelowna Father's Death

    Stephen Harper Relations With Supreme Court Not Especially Antagonistic, Study Finds

    Stephen Harper Relations With Supreme Court Not Especially Antagonistic, Study Finds
    The popular view that the relationship between the Conservative government under Stephen Harper and the Supreme Court of Canada was especially hostile appears to be misguided, a new study concludes.

    Stephen Harper Relations With Supreme Court Not Especially Antagonistic, Study Finds

    $50 Million Upgrade Approved For Busy US-Canadian Border Crossing

    $50 Million Upgrade Approved For Busy US-Canadian Border Crossing
    A busy US-Canada border crossing has been approved for a US$50-million upgrade meant to shorten wait times.

    $50 Million Upgrade Approved For Busy US-Canadian Border Crossing