Thursday, February 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Ontario Landowners Sign Deal With Agency Looking To Store Used Nuclear Fuel

The Canadian Press, 24 Jan, 2020 10:07 PM

    TORONTO - Landowners in a rural Ontario municipality about two hours northwest of Toronto have signed an agreement that will allow authorities to soon start doing site tests for a proposed facility to store high-level nuclear waste.

     

    The agreement with the Nuclear Waste Management Organization leaves South Bruce as one of two possible sites for a deep geological repository, along with an area near Ignace in northern Ontario.

     

    Darren Ireland, a local farmer, said in a statement on Friday that the project "has the potential to bring long-term benefits to the area."

     

    About three-million highly radioactive used fuel bundles from reactors are currently stored at existing nuclear generating stations in Canada, including at the Bruce Nuclear Generating Station on the shores of Lake Huron near Kincardine, Ont.

     

    Authorities have long contended the current storage system is not sustainable and have been searching for a permanent solution, with the aim of finding a single site for storage by 2023.

     

    The proposed repository is separate from a proposed massive underground bunker for low and intermediate radioactive waste at the Bruce plant near Kincardine. That multibillion-dollar project has drawn fierce opposition both in Canada and the U.S. because of its proximity to Lake Huron.

     

    Although Ontario Power Generation insists its studies show the underground facility would safely contain waste that remains hazardous for thousands of years, the project has been stalled for years awaiting federal government approval. One condition Ottawa has set is for Indigenous groups in the area to give their blessing, which has not happened.

     

    The Nuclear Waste Management Organization has similarly been searching for a place to store used nuclear fuel, which is far more toxic. The organization said Friday it now has deals in place for about 526 hectares of land northwest of Teeswater, Ont., although Indigenous groups have yet to support the project.

     

    The deals with landowners include a combination of option and purchase arrangements to allow the waste organization to do studies while allowing landowners to keep using their land, the organization said.

     

    If the site is ultimately selected to host the repository, the organization would buy the optioned land. It would also then look to acquite more land in the area to form a site of about 607 hectares.

     

    Mahrez Ben Belfadhel, a vice-president with the waste management organization, said they were pleased landowners were on board, and called identification of the South Bruce site an important milestone.

     

    "With agreements in place and access to land in South Bruce, we expect to begin studies such as borehole drilling and baseline environmental monitoring in the coming months to assess the suitability of the area," Ben Belfadhel said in a release.

     

    The Bruce County municipality of South Bruce, south of Walkerton, Ont., has about 5,600 residents. Its main centres are the villages of Mildmay and Teeswater. The organization also said the adjacent township of Huron-Kinloss, Ont., would no longer be considered a potential host for the project.

     

    The waste organization was set up at the direction of the federal government in 2002 by Ontario Power Generation, N.B. Power and Hydro-Quebec. The three producers and Atomic Energy of Canada Limited, a federal Crown corporation, fund its operations.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Questions Surrounding Cause Of Plane Crash Stir Fear, Confusion Among Mourners

    Mounting questions surrounding the circumstances of a plane crash outside Tehran that left no survivors fuelled confusion and fear Thursday among those grieving the deaths of dozens of passengers bound for Canada.

    Questions Surrounding Cause Of Plane Crash Stir Fear, Confusion Among Mourners

    A Look At Some Of The Victims Of The Iran Plane Crash Who Had Roots In Canada

    Dozens of people with ties to Canada were among the 176 who were killed when Ukraine International Airlines Flight PS752 crashed after takeoff near Tehran, Iran, on Wednesday.

    A Look At Some Of The Victims Of The Iran Plane Crash Who Had Roots In Canada

    Saskatchewan Wants To Prevent Sex Offenders From Changing Names

    Saskatchewan Wants To Prevent Sex Offenders From Changing Names
    The Saskatchewan government is working to ban released sex offenders from changing their names.

    Saskatchewan Wants To Prevent Sex Offenders From Changing Names

    Intelligence Says Iranian Missile Downed Airliner, Perhaps By Mistake: Justin Trudeau

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says intelligence from multiple sources indicates that an Iranian missile downed the Ukraine International Airlines flight that crashed near Tehran on Wednesday.

    Intelligence Says Iranian Missile Downed Airliner, Perhaps By Mistake: Justin Trudeau

    July Inquest To Examine 2016 Death Of B.C. Man Shot By Police In Nanaimo

    July Inquest To Examine 2016 Death Of B.C. Man Shot By Police In Nanaimo
     The British Columbia Coroners Service says an inquest will be held into the police shooting death of Craig Ford.

    July Inquest To Examine 2016 Death Of B.C. Man Shot By Police In Nanaimo

    First Nation Waits On Logging Road At Centre Of Pipeline Dispute In Northern B.C.

    First Nation Waits On Logging Road At Centre Of Pipeline Dispute In Northern B.C.
    Thirty-nine kilometres down a snow covered logging road, four men chop wood and work to erect a canvas wall tent in a pullout area

    First Nation Waits On Logging Road At Centre Of Pipeline Dispute In Northern B.C.