Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Decision On Storing Ontario Nuclear Waste Delayed Again For More Study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Feb, 2016 12:18 PM
    TORONTO — The federal government has again delayed a decision on Ontario Power Generation's plan to bury nuclear waste at the Bruce Nuclear site near Lake Huron.
     
    OPG says the federal government has said it won't make a decision as planned on March 1 and says Environment Minister Catherine McKenna has instead has requested three studies.
     
    The utility says Ottawa wants an updated analysis of potential combined environmental effects of the site, an updated list of OPG's commitments to mitigate any identified effects, and a study into the environmental effects of alternate sites.
     
    OPG says it maintains that a deep geologic repository is the right answer for Ontario's low and intermediate level waste, and that the Kincardine, Ont., site is the right location.
     
    The proposed facility would store about 200-thousand cubic metres of low and intermediate level waste from more than 40 years operating Ontario's nuclear stations.
     
    OPG says it would permanently isolate and contain the waste 680 metres underground, ensuring protection of the water and the environment.
     
    Stop the Great Lakes Nuclear Dump — a group opposed to the project — last month sent a 92-thousand-signature petition outlining its concerns to McKenna.
     
    And a group spokeswoman said more than 180 resolutions have been passed on both sides of the Canada-U.S. border condemning the plan.
     
    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.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Arrival Of Syrian Refugees In Montreal A 'Real Christmas Present' To Reunited Family

    Arrival Of Syrian Refugees In Montreal A 'Real Christmas Present' To Reunited Family
    MONTREAL — The arrival of a second federal government planeload of Syrian refugees in Montreal Saturday night was "a real Christmas present" for one Syrian man who was reunited with family he hasn't seen in eight years.

    Arrival Of Syrian Refugees In Montreal A 'Real Christmas Present' To Reunited Family

    Ontario Urged To Fund Anti-human Trafficking Task Force And Help Rape Victims

    Ontario Urged To Fund Anti-human Trafficking Task Force And Help Rape Victims
    The report by a provincial legislative committee is calling on the Liberal government to increase funding for the justice system and create a co-ordinated, province-wide strategy.

    Ontario Urged To Fund Anti-human Trafficking Task Force And Help Rape Victims

    Old Convent In Rural Nova Scotia Ready To Welcome Family Of Syrian Refugees

    Old Convent In Rural Nova Scotia Ready To Welcome Family Of Syrian Refugees
    ST. ANDREWS, N.S. — The old convent in rural St. Andrews, N.S., had been for sale for more than a year when the Sisters of St. Martha concluded that fate or something more powerful was telling them the big, empty home had a higher purpose.

    Old Convent In Rural Nova Scotia Ready To Welcome Family Of Syrian Refugees

    85-Year-Old Delta Woman Dies Following Collision In Marked Crosswalk

    85-Year-Old Delta Woman Dies Following Collision In Marked Crosswalk
    A vehicle turning left (near the 1200 block of 56th Street) struck an 85-year-old woman passing through a marked crosswalk.

    85-Year-Old Delta Woman Dies Following Collision In Marked Crosswalk

    Ferry Cancellations, Blackouts As Winter Storm Lashes B.C. South Coast

    Ferry Cancellations, Blackouts As Winter Storm Lashes B.C. South Coast
    Environment Canada has issued wind warnings for all of Vancouver Island as well as Metro Vancouver, the Sunshine Coast, Fraser Valley and Howe Sound.

    Ferry Cancellations, Blackouts As Winter Storm Lashes B.C. South Coast

    BC Hydro Misled Utilities Commission On Information-technology Costs: NDP

    BC Hydro Misled Utilities Commission On Information-technology Costs: NDP
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's hydro utility intentionally misled a regulatory agency over the spending of hundreds of millions of dollars on information technology, says the New Democrat opposition.

    BC Hydro Misled Utilities Commission On Information-technology Costs: NDP