Maude Barlow Statement on Nuclear Waste Storage

“Burying nuclear waste hundreds of meters from Lake Huron is a catastrophe waiting to happen. These and other extreme energy projects such as fracking, tar sands oil pipelines and shipments are putting the Great Lakes in peril. I have traveled to all corners of the Great Lakes Basin and have spoken to people from all walks of life about their love of the lakes. The Great Lakes are a lived Commons and must be shared, protected, carefully managed and enjoyed by all who live around them from generation to generation. We have a responsibility to future generations to stop projects that could harm their drinking water. The waters of the Great Lakes are a public trust and governments have the responsibility to safeguard them for the common good and not allow them to be appropriated for private gain. Minister Catherine McKenna has a momentous decision to make in the coming weeks and I hope she shows communities around the Basin that the Trudeau government is serious about its renewed commitment to protect the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River Basin.”

Maude Barlow is the National Chairperson of the Council of Canadians and chairs the board of Washington-based Food and Water Watch. She is a board member of the San Francisco–based International Forum on Globalization and a Councillor with the Hamburg-based World Future Council.

Maude is the recipient of twelve honorary doctorates as well as many awards, including the 2005 Right Livelihood Award (known as the “Alternative Nobel”), the 2005 Lannan Foundation Cultural Freedom Fellowship Award, the Citation of Lifetime Achievement at the 2008 Canadian Environment Awards, the 2009 Earth Day Canada Outstanding Environmental Achievement Award, the 2009 Planet in Focus Eco Hero Award, and the 2011 EarthCare Award, the highest international honour of the Sierra Club (US).

In 2008/2009, she served as Senior Advisor on Water to the 63rd President of the United Nations General Assembly and was a leader in the campaign to have water recognized as a human right by the UN. She is also the author of dozens of reports, as well as 17 books, including her latest, Blue Future: Protecting Water For People And The Planet Forever.

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2015 PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD: 98% OF PEOPLE ARE OPPOSED TO THE BURIAL OF NUCLEAR WASTE IN THE GREAT LAKES BASIN.

In January 2017, the Ontario Power Generation stated, "the public doesn’t really care about the proposal for the deep geologic repository (DGR)." This statement was made despite the fact that numerous organizations and individuals have spoken up against the proposed. DGR project.

Between 2012 and 2014, members of the public were allowed to submit comments on OPG’s DGR plan to the Joint Review Panel (JRP), the body tasked with assessing the project under the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act which ultimately gave the project a stamp of approval in spring 2015.

From our experience working with the JRP, we know that the process was biased in favour of OPG from the start. As we have written elsewhere, the JRP allowed OPG to proceed with their plan despite huge problems and omissions in OPG’s case. Additionally, of the well over 500 comments submitted by individuals, environmental organizations, citizens’ groups, city councils of huge cities, and Indigenous organizations, among others, an astounding 98% were opposed to the project. Here are some examples from that 98%:

“The Chippewas of Georgina Island First Nation strongly opposes the OPG-Deep Geological Repository Project. Water is our Mother Earth’s life blood. We are and always will fight to protect Water. To permit the burial of Radioactive Nuclear Waste right beside our Great Lakes goes against everything we believe in and is a crime against humanity.”

Chippewas of Georgina Island First Nation

 

“It is our responsibility, as citizens of the “Great Lakes State,” to be vigilant in protecting our most valuable natural resource --- our clean water. With an economy, reputation and livelihood that are all dependent on the health of the Great Lakes, it would not be prudent or wise to construct this underground nuclear storage facility that puts radioactive waste less than a mile from Lake Huron.”

Michigan League of Conservation Voters

 

“In order to protect the Great Lakes and its tributaries, Toronto City Council urge that neither this proposed nuclear waste repository near Kincardine, Ontario, nor any other underground nuclear waste repository, be constructed in the Great Lakes Basin, in Canada, or in the United States.”

Toronto City Council

The results of public consultation undertaken by the JRP are a strong indication that OPG lacks “social license” for the DGR project. Given that the current government has committed to more transparent, accountable environmental regulation, we hope that Environment Minister Catherine McKenna considers the strong, negative response to OPG’s plan in her future decisions regarding the DGR.

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SOS Great Lakes Comments on OPG's Additional Information

After considering the Joint Review Panel Environmental Assessment Report for the Deep Geologic Repository for Low and Intermediate Level Waste, the Honourable Catherine McKenna requested additional information before making her environmental assessment decision. 

OPG had 11 months to respond to the Minister's request. In December 2016, they submitted their report. (To read the full report, click here.)

In January 2017, the CEAA "invite[d] the public, Indigenous groups, and governments to review and comment on the additional information [submitted by OPG]". 

On March 6, 2017, SOS Great Lakes submitted a thorough investigation of OPG's additional information.

The Submission: 

Our Submission to the Minister is comprised of commentary in chapter format relating each of the three primary questions sent to OPG by the Minister in February 2016. Each of our chapters has been written by one of our members. We have been assisted in our submission by Mr. John Jackson, hired through the CEAA Participant Funding Program, to prepare commentary on OPGs Cumulative Effects Analysis.

The topics discussed include: commentary on OPG’s Study of Alternate Locations, the Cumulative Effects Analysis of the DGR for L&ILW in Kincardine, in combination with 3 potential APM used fuel DGRs in the one of the communities of Huron- Kinloss, South Bruce, and Central Huron, and the OPG Mitigation Measures Report.

OPG Has Submitted a Flawed Environmental Assessment. In December 2016,

OPG has presented a deeply flawed addition to its deeply flawed Environmental Impact Statement. We urge the Minister to reject the EA for OPGs Deep Geologic Repository and to reject the licensing of the DGR at Kincardine.

To read the full submission, click here. 

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Ontario Power Generation’s Report of Findings of a Public Attitudes Poll Towards the Proposed Nuclear Waste Dump on Lake Huron

Executive Summary

A review of sampling, methodology, and reporting of the Ontario Power Generation Report of the Deep Geologic Repository Study by the Gandalf Group shows:

  • the entire poll, from sampling, through question design, to reporting is highly irregular;
  • most questions are loaded with false or misleading assumptions designed to skew the response in favour of the DGR;
  • there is no evidence to support OPG’s claim that the majority of people are in favour of building a DGR on Lake Huron;
  • the only substantive finding supported by evidence shows most Ontarians (64%) believe the DGR poses a threat to public drinking water and to the health of the Lake.

If this study is to be believed, the data supports only one conclusion about Ontario public opinion on OPG’s proposed nuclear waste dump: it may be okay to build a DGR somewhere in Ontario, but not near Lake Huron.
These views are discussed under the above headings in this report.

 

OPG’s public opinion poll of attitudes about the dgr, from sampling through question design to reporting, is highly irregular.

Accuracy and clarity in design of the questions are important elements in attempting to accurately gauge public opinion. If the questions asked are ambiguous or unnecessarily complex, the results of the study are likely to be erroneous.

The wording of the questions posed in this study often omit essential facts and lack clarity.

After establishing a baseline of attitudes about nuclear waste in the first part of the survey, respondents were then presented with a series of statements which reflect OPG’s response to critical statements by opponents of the project. These statements reflect only a small part of the actual criticism and often ignore the main objections expressed by opponents.

For example, Question 38 C:

Do you strongly agree, somewhat agree, somewhat disagree or strongly disagree with the following statement:

We can’t be confident that Kincardine is a good location for the Deep Geologic Repository because OPG didn’t look at other locations.

Opponents of the project object to the Lake Huron site of the proposed DGR for three main reasons: it is too close to the source of drinking water for 40 million people; the geology of the site is questionable and unproven; and, in selecting the site, OPG ignored Canadian Environmental Law which requires the proponents to examine multiple locations and to provide detailed alternatives to regulatory authorities.

Clearer statements to test public opinion of the site location issue would be:

Since Canada’s Environmental Laws require careful examination of alternative sites, OPG should be required to conduct detailed examination of alternative sites.

Or,

Because 40 million people rely on the Great Lakes for drinking water and since every nuclear waste DGR in the world has failed, building a DGR 1.2 km from the shore of Lake Huron presents unacceptable risks to society, and the environment.

The difference between these statements and those posed by OPG, is that all the information in these statements is factual, provable and true, while OPG’s statements are largely half true, untrue or unsubstantiated statements favouring the DGR. After listening to these statements, respondents were then asked similar questions to the earlier ones.

Naturally their responses between the first set of questions and the second set of questions, changed dramatically. For example, consider Questions 38B and 50A.

Questions 38B asks:

Do you strongly agree, somewhat agree, somewhat disagree or strongly disagree with this argument:

Other Deep Geologic Repositories have failed in other countries, so the science can’t be trusted.

More than half, 56%, of respondents strongly agree or agree with this statement. Among females, 70% of respondents believe it poses a threat. Imagine what the answers would have been if the statement was more accurately phrased as:

Every attempt at burying nuclear waste in a DGR in the world has failed, so OPG’s plans for a DGR can’t be trusted.

Later on, in Question 50A, respondents were asked whether they agreed with the following statement:

Deep Geologic Repositories have safely stored waste around the world including in the United States, Sweden, Germany, Korea and Finland.

This question did not even specify that the waste was nuclear waste.  Because of the intense testing that goes into the wording of survey questions, we do not believe this to be a typo.

While OPG continuously uses these countries as examples of effective DGRs, it is so misleading as to be false. ASSE Germany successfully stored nuclear waste for 30 years,  until it started to leak. Now it presents a growing monumental environmental and health disaster throughout the region and appears to be unstoppable. Carlsbad New Mexico operated safely until it caught on fire. Sweden’s experience was going well until the containers started to fail much sooner than anticipated. France’s test underground research laboratory built in similar geology to OPG’s proposed DGR was progressing well until it collapsed killing workers, and so on. But this information was not presented to respondents.

Even the next statement, Question 50B, is carefully ambiguous but still inaccurate:

Experts from around the world, including the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency agree that this Deep Geologic Repository will protect the environment from nuclear waste.

It is true that some international experts support the DGR. It is equally true that some international experts, particularly those with experience, believe DGRs to be unsafe. While the U.S. EPA has asked questions about the DGR, they have not expressed an opinion that the proposed DGR will be safe.

In all, some 45 statements about the science, geology, safety, danger to the Lake, transportation risks, alternate sites, and community acceptance were all of little or no evidentiary value because they inevitably contained misleading or false assumptions or statements.

 

There is no evidence to support OPG’s claim that the majority of people are in favour of building a DGR on Lake Huron

We have reviewed the Gandalf poll in detail and we can find not a single question which supports OPG’s claim that a majority of the Ontario public support the idea of building a nuclear waste DGR on the shore of Lake Huron. In fact, the findings of this survey clearly and definitively oppose this project.

The only question remotely relevant to OPG’s claim of public support is the response to Question 70.

The question says:

Again, after hearing all of this information, would you say that you strongly support, somewhat support, somewhat oppose, or strongly oppose the proposed Deep Geologic Repository being built in Kincardine, Ontario?

Responses to the question would indicate support or strong support (71%) for the proposed Deep Geologic Repository being built in Kincardine, if it actually represented a random sample of the Ontario public, which, as explained below, it does not.  

Quite apart from the fact that the DGR is being built not in Kincardine but on the shoreline of Lake Huron, this response in no way reflects public opinion in Ontario towards the DGR.  By their own admission, a very large number of Ontarians are unaware of the proposed project.

The only dubious claim of support that OPG can make from this study is that of the 805 people who responded to this telephone survey, 71%, or 572 people support the DGR after being exposed to a number of inaccurate or untrue statements about the DGR provided by OPG. This claim is not supported by the data.

While they claim their sampling method is representative of public opinion with a reliability of 95%, they do not offer detailed information of their sampling methodology. The industry norm is to provide full details of all methodology which they do not. Furthermore, 805 people is a very small sample and their regional analysis, because of margins of error that are in the mid to high teens, are not reliable measures.

 

the only substantive finding supported by evidence shows most Ontarians (64%) believe the DGR poses a threat to public drinking water and to the health  of the lake.

 

Early on in the study, respondents were asked a number of questions about their views on nuclear energy, their knowledge of nuclear waste management and their opinion about DGRs. In question 26 some respondents were asked:

And based on what you know, would you say that you strongly support, somewhat support, somewhat oppose, or strongly oppose a Deep Geological Repository being built in Ontario to store the waste produced by Ontario's nuclear generation of electricity?

Responses showed 59% of those who were asked the question, approve a DGR being built in Ontario. This is the only question that probes public opinion of the DGR and shows support, in the entire survey.

Let’s look at what it actually supports and how much support is really there.

The question was only asked of those who said they knew something about DGRs (56% of respondents) even though most of those people admittedly knew little. In professional terms, it is called unaided awareness.  Among pollsters, unaided awareness carries a lot of weight because it means people are aware of the information being tested. Normally, the level of unaided awareness would be probed. Pollsters would normally attempt to separate those who said they are aware from those who actually are aware. In this study, there were no attempts to verify unaided awareness. If respondents said they had heard of DGRs they were considered knowledgeable.

Notice that the wording of this question fails to provide a specific location for the DGR.  This is not support for the Lake Huron DGR. It is support for a DGR somewhere in Ontario.

Question 26 was asked to the 56% of respondents who said they were aware of DGRs.  Only 33% of all respondents, expressed support for a DGR somewhere in Ontario. According to the actual data in this study, aside from the 266 respondents who approve of a DGR somewhere in Ontario, there is no evidence in this study that a single person in Ontario actually supports construction of a DGR on Lake Huron.

Whatever support OPG reports from this study is manufactured from highly biased, unsubstantiated and inaccurate statements fed to respondents.

Moreover the responses from those manufactured statements cannot be projected to reflect the opinion of the Ontario public. Again, to be clear, all respondents were asked a series of questions. Then all respondents were asked about their support for a series of statements, almost all of which were unsubstantiated, inaccurate or ambiguous. From these latter responses based on questionable information, OPG erroneously claims strong support for the DGR on the shore of Lake Huron.

This claim is not only unsupportable by the evidence in the study, but it is preposterous and false. While the respondents, some 805 people from Ontario, were presented with some questionable information and as a result, changed their opinions about the DGR, those results cannot possibly be projected to represent the views of the Ontario public because the information used to manufacture those views, has not been presented to or accepted by the Ontario public.

In the final analysis, there are only two questions relevant to the DGR whose responses can be considered a reflection of the broader public opinion.

Question 26, asked to 56% of respondents:  

And based on what you know, would you say that you strongly support, somewhat support, somewhat oppose, or strongly oppose a Deep Geological Repository being built in Ontario to store the waste produced by Ontario's nuclear generation of electricity?

 

Roughly 33% of respondents showed support for a DGR somewhere in Ontario.

Question 38A asked all respondents:

Do you strongly agree, somewhat agree, somewhat disagree or strongly disagree with this argument?

The DGR will be built 1.2 km away from Lake Huron, it will pose a threat to our drinking water and to the health of the Lake.

About two thirds of Ontarians  (64%) believe a DGR built 1.2 kms away from Lake Huron will pose a threat to drinking water and the health of the Lake.

If this study is to be believed, the data supports only one conclusion of Ontario public opinion on OPG’s proposed nuclear waste dump: It may be okay to build a DGR somewhere in Ontario to store nuclear waste, but not near Lake Huron.

 

To view the original Gandalf Survey click here. 

To view a PDF of the analysis, click here

 

WRITE TO YOUR MP NOW AND SHARE THIS STORY. CLICK HERE TO ACCESS OUR CAMPAIGN

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Video Launch: Great Lakes Threatened With Radioactive Waste - SOS Great Lakes

Right now, there is a plan to bury nuclear waste on the shore of Lake Huron. A plan that could result in the pollution of the largest basin in the world for 100, 000 years, the Great Lakes Basin.

Ontario Power Generation (OPG) is a Canadian power company that plans to bury up to 400, 000 cubic metres of radioactive nuclear waste less than 1 km from Lake Huron. This means building a nuclear waste dump on the shore of the Great Lakes, a source of drinking water for 40 million people in Canada and the United States. 


We are SOS Great Lakes. We are challenging OPG’s dump. 


We are among more than 100 organizations, 100 communities and 150 000 people in Canada and the U.S. who want Catherine McKenna, the Canadian Minister of the Environment and Climate Change, to say NO to the dump. 

We believe that if the 40 million people who rely on the Great Lakes for drinking water knew about this highly risky and needless threat to the Great Lakes, they would never allow it to happen.

We can’t reach those people by ourselves. Join us. Share this story. 

Your lakes, your choice. 


Read about 8 reasons to stop the DGR: http://www.sosgreatlakes.org/8-reason...

Follow SOS Great Lakes for updates: http://www.sosgreatlakes.org/tell-you...

Reach out to your government: http://www.sosgreatlakes.org/government/

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January 9, 2016 - OPEN LETTER TO THE HONOURABLE CATHERINE MCKENNA - REGARDING THE OPG DECEMBER 2016 RESPONSE ON THE DGR 1, KINCARDINE, ONTARIO.

January 9th, 2017

Honourable Catherine McKenna

Minister of Environment and Climate Change

House of Commons

Ottawa   ON   K1A 0A6

 

OPEN LETTER TO THE HONOURABLE CATHERINE MCKENNA - REGARDING THE OPG DECEMBER 2016 RESPONSE ON THE DGR 1, KINCARDINE, ONTARIO.  

 

Dear Minister McKenna:

  1. It is time for the Canadian government to do its job and enforce the Environmental Assessment Act. This is at least the fifth time OPG has been asked to identify specific alternate sites and they have again refused to do so, as they have done every time. Their entire proposal should be rejected now.

  2. The opportunity for public input on the OPG Response is wholly inadequate. OPG has had 11 months since your first letter to answer your questions and you have given us 30 days to respond to over 500 pages of material. This is unfair to the public and to the government if you truly want meaningful public input.

  3. You continue to dodge multiple additional errors. For at least 5 years before your appointment, the Harper Government allowed OPG to flagrantly violate the CEAA in multiple ways by refusing, in its EA, to address or seek: 1.) Alternate Sites, 2.) Alternate Means, 3.) Evidence-Based Science, 4.) Critical Health and Safety Issues, 5.) Need/Cost, 6.) International Obligations, - all mandatory requirements of CEAA. Since your appointment, you have been advised of two additional issues:  7.) Bias of the JRP, and 8.) OPG’S deception of the Public about the issue of Community Acceptance. This includes our documentation regarding how OPG was aided in these errors by seriously inadequate regulation by CNSC and the CEAA/CNSC created JRP.

You have chosen to ask OPG for further information re: Issue 1.) Alternate Sites, and important related questions: cumulative effects and mitigation. You have been silent on the other seven issues, thereby creating, rightly or wrongly, a public impression that you are only going to address Issue 1.). This, in turn, has created the further impression that if OPG succeeds on Issue 1.), the remaining seven issues remain unaddressed. If this is wrong, please tell us so. The public is entitled to know whether you have an intention of doing anything about the errors by OPG, CNSC and the JRP with respect Issues 2.) through 8.) as they apply going forward.

When you have acted on Issue 1.), OPG has repeatedly defied you, by re-writing your questions rather than answering them, - precisely what OPG did to the JRP. This has created the public impression, again rightly or wrongly, that the Government of Canada is reluctant to stand up to OPG. This impression is re-enforced by a proposed public consultation process that disadvantages anyone opposed to OPG.
 

We remain committed to working with you in the review of the OPG response that was recently submitted, but are increasingly concerned that this process will not address the outstanding issues that remain or present a fair forum for public input based on the published information regarding the process.  We respectfully urge you to seriously consider our concerns.

 

Yours very truly,

Jill Taylor, President

SOS Great Lakes

On behalf of the Board of Directors

 

With copies to:

 

The Right Honourable Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada

The Honourable Kathleen Wynne, Premier of Ontario

The Honourable James Carr, Minister of Natural Resources

The Honourable Stephane Dion, Minister of Foreign Affairs

The Honourable Kirsty Duncan, Minister of Science

The Honourable Ralph Goodale, Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness

The Honourable Dominic LeBlanc, Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard

The Honourable Jane Philpott, Minister of Health

The Honourable Glenn Thibeault, Minister of Energy

The Honourable Eric Hoskins, Minister of Health and Long Term Care

The Honourable David Orazietti, Minister of Community Safety and Correctional Services

The Honourable Glen R. Murray, Minister of the Environment and Climate Change

The Honourable Kathryn McGarry, Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry

Marlo Raynolds, Chief of Staff, Environment and Climate Change Canada

Ron Hallman, President, Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency

To view a PDF of this document, click here



 

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