Wednesday, February 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Union Alleges Kitimat Smelter Emissions Turn Residents Into 'Guinea Pigs'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Mar, 2015 01:26 PM
    VICTORIA — The provincial government is allowing Kitimat, B.C., residents to become pollution guinea pigs, said a lawyer for aluminium smelter union workers who launched court action on Tuesday.
     
    Court documents filed by Unifor Local 2301 claim the province permitted Rio Tinto Alcan Inc. to undertake its $3.3 billion smelter modernization in Kitimat without requiring the company to take measures to reduce harmful sulphur dioxide emissions.
     
    The petition seeks to set aside the government's approval under the Environmental Management Act on the grounds of failure to consider expert advice on pollution-reduction measures, including installing scrubbers to prevent adverse effects on human health.
     
    "The Oct. 7, 2014 (approval) specified that Rio Tinto need not mitigate risks to human health arising from the increase in daily emissions of (sulphur dioxide) until 2019 and perhaps not even then," stated the 19-page court petition.
     
    Unifor's lawyer Jason Gratl said sulphur dioxide causes respiratory and heart problems and daily emissions from the Kitimat smelter will increase from 27 tonnes to 42 tonnes.
     
    The modernization project, set for completion later this spring, is estimated to increase the smelter’s current aluminum production capacity by more than 48 per cent to about 420,000 tonnes per year.
     
    Gratl said the project includes several pollution-reduction measures, but despite reports about the harmful effects sulphur dioxide can have on people, Rio Tinto was permitted to complete the project without sulphur-dioxide scrubbers.
     
    "The approach taken in the Lower Mainland and the Kitimat air shed could not be more diametrically opposed," he said. "In Vancouver, a precautionary approach is taken that shows respect for human health. In Kitimat, the residents appear to be used as guinea pigs to determine what the upper and lower end of sulphur dioxide emissions might be."
     
    The petition names the Ministry of Attorney General, Minister of Environment and Rio Tinto Alcan Inc. Neither Rio Tinto nor the B.C. government could not be immediately reached for comment.
     
    Last July, the Environment Ministry released an independent, government-funded report that concluded with proper management Kitimat's air, water, land and residents can handle prospective oil, gas and aluminum industry expansions in the area.
     
    Environment Minister Mary Polak said then that as long as companies use world-leading emission standards, sulphur and nitrogen oxide levels will be significantly reduced and industrial expansion can be managed.
     
    She said the report found low environmental impacts associated with nitrogen dioxide levels, but some increased levels of sulphur dioxide soil contamination and the potential danger of acidification in seven of the area's more than 300 lakes.
     
    SkeenaWild Conservation Trust, an environmental organization concerned about wild salmon, released a report in the fall of 2013 that estimated three proposed Kitimat liquefied natural gas plants will burn 2.5 times more natural gas than is consumed in Metro Vancouver annually.
     
    Scientists and environmentalists have expressed concerns about the ability of emissions to disperse in the Kitimat area due to its location in a tunnel-like valley, near Douglas Channel, and off the north coast.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Wrinkle Develops In Tory Plan To Fast-track Veterans Into Civil Service

    New Wrinkle Develops In Tory Plan To Fast-track Veterans Into Civil Service
    OTTAWA — Another wrinkle has developed in the Harper government's push to give veterans preferred status for federal jobs: for many reservists, not all of their military pension counts towards their eventual civil service retirement.

    New Wrinkle Develops In Tory Plan To Fast-track Veterans Into Civil Service

    Matsqui Prison In Abbotsford Under Lockdown After Inmate Stabbed

    Matsqui Prison In Abbotsford Under Lockdown After Inmate Stabbed
    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — A federal prison in Abbotsford, B.C., was placed under lockdown after an inmate was stabbed on Friday.

    Matsqui Prison In Abbotsford Under Lockdown After Inmate Stabbed

    Two Men Seriously Injured In Abbotsford Fight; One Shot, One Stabbed

    Two Men Seriously Injured In Abbotsford Fight; One Shot, One Stabbed
    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — Two men are in hospital with serious injuries after a brawl in Abbotsford, B.C. Police say one man was shot and the other was stabbed.

    Two Men Seriously Injured In Abbotsford Fight; One Shot, One Stabbed

    B.C. Transit Police Announce End To Agreement With Canada Border Service

    B.C. Transit Police Announce End To Agreement With Canada Border Service
    VANCOUVER — Metro Vancouver Transit Police are changing the way officers deal with undocumented migrants during fare checks over the case of a Mexican woman who hanged herself while awaiting deportation.

    B.C. Transit Police Announce End To Agreement With Canada Border Service

    RCMP Divers Recover Body Of Alberta Man From Columbia River In B.C.

    RCMP Divers Recover Body Of Alberta Man From Columbia River In B.C.
    GOLDEN, B.C. — Members of an RCMP dive team have recovered the body of a missing 27-year-old Alberta man from the Columbia River in  eastern British Columbia.

    RCMP Divers Recover Body Of Alberta Man From Columbia River In B.C.

    B.C. Man Who Nearly Killed Mom With Toddler Complains About Lawyer

    B.C. Man Who Nearly Killed Mom With Toddler Complains About Lawyer
    KELOWNA, B.C. — A B.C. man who nearly killed a young mother while her toddler was nearby expressed no remorse when he spoke at his dangerous-offender hearing.

    B.C. Man Who Nearly Killed Mom With Toddler Complains About Lawyer