Nova Scotia withholds approval, seeks more information on pulp mill plan
HALIFAX — The fate of thousands of jobs in Nova Scotia’s forestry sector remains uncertain after the province’s environment minister chose to withhold approval of a pulp mill’s controversial proposal to pump 85 million litres of treated effluent daily into the Northumberland Strait.
Gordon Wilson said the province doesn’t have enough information to determine if Northern Pulp’s project will harm the environment, and the company can’t move forward until it files a full environmental assessment report.
The minister said the new information is required to properly assess the company’s plans for a new effluent treatment plant and a 15-kilometre pipeline near Pictou, N.S., which have met with stiff opposition from the Pictou Landing First Nation, environmental groups and fishermen from across the Maritimes.
“While there has been some good work done here, I have concluded that I need more science-based evidence, more information before me to properly assess the potential risks to air, water, fish and human health,” Wilson told a news conference Tuesday.