Nova Scotia launches cleanup process for Boat Harbour wastewater lagoons
HALIFAX — Nova Scotia’s environment minister has released new details of the long-awaited cleanup of Boat Harbour, calling the toxic lagoon one of the worst examples of environmental racism in the province and possibly the country.
Iain Rankin said Friday the cleanup of the Northern Pulp mill’s wastewater site, on the edge of a First Nations reserve, will be Nova Scotia’s biggest industrial remediation since the Sydney Tar Ponds.
“I don’t think we can overstate the importance of this project,” he said. “There are a lot of unknowns in terms of what contaminants have been in there. We’re going back 50 years so some of the material was untreated.”
Boat Harbour was a picturesque bay off the Northumberland Strait adjacent to the Mi’kmaq community of Pictou Landing First Nation until the pulp mill opened in the 1960s.