Tag Archives: Shubenacadie River

Slow-Motion Showdown Continues on Banks of Shubenacadie River

Mi’kmaq activists Dorene Bernard, right, and Ducie Howe stand on the shores of the Shubenacadie River. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)

Alton Natural Gas Storage LP’s plan to build natural gas storage caverns meets resistance

On the muddy banks of Nova Scotia’s Shubenacadie River, Dorene Bernard is listening for sounds that will let her know the historic waterway is about to change direction.

“The wind will pick up, and you’ll start hearing the water and waves coming,” the Mi’kmaq activist says as she walks through the tall grass, carrying a large fan made from an eagle’s wing.

The Shubenacadie is a 72-kilometre tidal river that cuts through the middle of Nova Scotia and flows into the Bay of Fundy. But when the world’s highest tides rise in the bay, salt water flows up the river for almost half its length, creating a wave — or tidal bore — that pushes against the river’s current.

Protesters at the Shubenacadie River say despite what AltaGas said in their release on Friday, very little work on the project has taken place in the last month. (Shawn Maloney)

It’s an unusual natural phenomenon that draws tourists from around the world. It has also helped support the Mi’kmaq for more than 13,000 years.

“This is a major highway, a major artery for our people,” says Bernard, a social worker, academic and member of the Sipekne’katik First Nation in nearby Indian Brook, N.S.

“Our ancestors are buried along here … It has a very significant historical, spiritual and cultural relevance to who we are.”

Plan to pump brine into river

Before the bore arrives, the river is like glass on this humid, windless day.

However, Bernard is mindful that another change is coming for the river and her people.

For the past 12 years, a Calgary-based company has been planning to pump water from the river to an underground site 12 kilometres away, where it will be used to flush out salt deposits, creating huge caverns that will eventually store natural gas.

A sign marks the entrance to Mi’kmaq encampment near the Shubenacadie River, a 72-kilometre tidal river that cuts through the middle of Nova Scotia and flows into the Bay of Fundy, in Fort Ellis, N.S. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)

AltaGas says the leftover brine solution will be pumped into the river, twice a day at high tide, over a two- to three-year period.

The initial plan is to create two caverns about a kilometre underground. But the company has said it may need as many as 15 caverns, which would be linked to the nearby Maritimes and Northeast natural gas pipeline, about 60 kilometres north of Halifax.

The storage is needed by an AltaGas subsidiary, Heritage Gas, which sells natural gas in the Halifax area and a few other Nova Scotia communities. It says it wants to stockpile its product during the colder months to protect its customers from price shocks when demand spikes.

Drilling for the first two caverns has been completed.

$130M project largely on hold

After years of consultations, legal wrangling and scientific monitoring, the company’s Nova Scotia-based subsidiary, Alton Natural Gas Storage LP, has said it plans to start the brining process some time later this year.

Bernard says her people are not going to let that happen.

The $130-million project has been largely on hold since 2014 when Mi’kmaq activists started a series of protests that culminated two years later in the creation of a year-round protest camp at the work site northwest of Stewiacke.

Felix Bernard walks near a Mi’kmaq encampment along the Shubenacadie River. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)

“We’re not going to let anyone destroy our water,” Bernard said in a recent interview, declining to elaborate on what will happen if police or security guards try to reclaim the site.

“The impacts will be huge. You can’t just put something in your vein and think it’s not going to affect your whole body.”

She says the company has consulted with Indigenous leaders, but she insists it has done a poor job of reaching out to the Mi’kmaq people, particularly those who are members of her First Nation.

“There was never a public hearing with Alton Gas in our community. Never.”

Permits secured, consultations

For its part, the company has insisted it has consulted with local Indigenous people, and the provincial government has agreed.

More importantly, the company says it has already secured the permits it needs to start pumping water from the river.

At the entrance to the protest camp off Riverside Road, a steel gate is covered in placards and a canvas lean-to. A sign that warns against trespassing — installed by the company with the help of the RCMP — has been covered with a blanket.

Protesters maintain a Mi’kmaq encampment near the Shubenacadie River. (Andrew Vaughan/THE CANADIAN PRESS)

In May of last year, protesters built a tiny, two-storey house out of straw bales and lime plaster. It has a dirt floor, wood stove, bunks and plenty of provisions inside.

There’s also a garden. Chickens and geese roam the makeshift squatters camp.

On this day, there are only three protesters — they call themselves water protectors — at the site. But some supporters from Halifax later drop by for a visit.

“We have a lot of allies, settlers who are supporting this camp — it’s not just the Mi’kmaq,” says Ducie Howe, Bernard’s cousin and a resident of what she calls Shubenacadie Reserve No. 14, the original name for the nearby First Nation.

“There’s people from all over who will come. And they’ll keep coming.”

‘Giving out permits? Those are illegal’

Howe says Nova Scotians need to be reminded that the company is operating on unceded Mi’kmaq territory.

“We signed peace and friendship treaties,” she says. “We never signed treaties that gave up any part of our lands … Giving out permits? Those are illegal. They didn’t have the right to do that.”

Closer to the river, there’s a smaller, flat-topped wooden building that Bernard describes as a truckhouse. The reference is to the 1752 Peace and Friendship Treaty, which states that the Mi’kmaq are free to build “truckhouses” along the river to facilitate trade.

In the distance, a small hut for security guards sits empty.

Company spokeswoman Lori Maclean says some protesters have been served with trespassing notices.

“The company is aware of the activity of protesters at the site and continues to engage with law enforcement and the community,” she said in a recent email. “Alton sites are work areas that are open only to Alton staff or approved contractors.”

Alton has received the environmental and industrial approvals it needs to proceed, including two environmental assessments and an independent third-party science review. However, provincial Environment Minister Margaret Miller has yet to make a decision about an appeal of the industrial approval filed by the Sipekne’katik First Nation.

Mi’kmaq activist Ducie Howe carries a sign at an encampment near the Shubenacadie River. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)

As for the brine that will be pumped into the river, the company says the peak release on each tidal cycle will be approximately 5,000 cubic metres, which will be mixed in with four million cubic metres of brackish tidal flow.

The company says the brine flowing into the Minas Basin “would not be detectable and would be insignificant in terms of the natural fluctuation of salinity the ecosystem is subject to during each tidal cycle.”

‘Brine will not impact the ecosystem’

Alton Gas also says the intake pipe will not suck in fish or small organisms because the water will be filtered through a rock wall, and the intake flow will be low enough to allow all fish to swim away.

“The requirements of our monitoring program with provincial and federal regulators will ensure that the brine will not impact the ecosystem,” the company’s website says.

Before Bernard and Howe leave the river, the pair stand at the edge of the bank to make an offering through song.

The lyrics are sung in the original Ojibwa and then in Mi’kmaq: “Water, I love you. I thank you. I respect you. Water is life.”

By Michael MacDonald · The Canadian Press · Aug 05, 2018

[SOURCE]

Sipekne’katik Band Prepared For Long Protest At AltaGas Site

Band member Cheryl Maloney says the sit-in won't end until the work stops and a court appeal of the environmental permits is completed. (Robert Short/CBC)

Band member Cheryl Maloney says the sit-in won’t end until the work stops and a court appeal of the environmental permits is completed. (Robert Short/CBC)

‘We’ve started to allow big business to dictate how our environment is going to be,’ resident says

By Paul Palmeter, CBC News Posted: Sep 29, 2016

Indigenous people and other residents near Stewiacke, N.S., aren’t backing down in their opposition to a Calgary company’s plans for a natural gas storage site in the area.

About a dozen people including Sipekne’katik band members began a sit-in Monday in the area where AltaGas plans to store natural gas in three underground salt caverns near the Shubenacadie River.

They say it’s going to be a lengthy one.

“I think we’ve started to allow big business to dictate how our environment is going to be,” said Paula MacMillan, who lives near the site and joined the sit-in Wednesday.

“You have to get out there and make your voice heard because if you don’t it’s not going to change. You have to let the government and big business know that you don’t want this.”

‘No risk with this project’

The group wants more consultation and “better science” concerning the Shubenacadie River’s use during the process of creating caverns for natural gas storage.

The company insists the science is sound.

“With the amount of data we have and the studies that have been done, we’re confident that there is no risk with this project,” said Chuck Lyons, AltaGas vice-president of environment, health and safety.

AltaGas has drilled three holes deep into the ground to hollow out the salt caverns, and the company will soon be moving two of those wells to the next stage.

A rig drills holes for pipes that will carry water from the Shubenacadie River 12 kilometres away to salt caverns. Another set of pipes will carry the salty wastewater back to the same river to be flushed away with the powerful current. (CBC)

A rig drills holes for pipes that will carry water from the Shubenacadie River 12 kilometres away to salt caverns. Another set of pipes will carry the salty wastewater back to the same river to be flushed away with the powerful current. (CBC)

That involves a process known as salt brining — creating a cavern in a salt formation underground.

“We’ll take water from the tidal estuary and pump it into the cavern and down into the well where the salt will be dissolved by the water,” Lyons said. “The water will be brought back up out of the well and returned to the river.”

Brining process ready to start

The process creates large caverns where AltaGas plans to store surplus natural gas from the Maritimes and Northeast Pipeline, located 10.8 kilometres away.

AltaGas says they are close to starting the brining process, but it will take 24 to 36 months before it’s complete and the caverns are ready to store natural gas. The capacity to start will be 4.5 billion cubic feet of gas.

It’s the release of the brine into the Shubenacadie that concerns the protesters.

They’re worried the water released after the brining process will damage the tidal estuary’s fragile ecosystem. And they’re skeptical of the company’s assurances that the water will be safe for the environment.

Members of the Sipekne'katik band have placed a flag and 10 treaty-based fishing traps near the AltaGas Ltd. work site on the Shubenacadie River. (Robert Short/CBC)

Members of the Sipekne’katik band have placed a flag and 10 treaty-based fishing traps near the AltaGas Ltd. work site on the Shubenacadie River. (Robert Short/CBC)

The river experiences a range of salt concentrations because it rises and falls twice a day with the tides of the Bay of Fundy, the highest tides in the world.

AltaGas says the salinity levels in the river will be monitored by provincial and federal environment departments as well as the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans.

Eel traps used to bolster protest

Band member Cheryl Maloney — who resigned as a band councillor this week, hoping to deflect legal threats against the band — said the sit-in won’t end until the work stops and a court appeal of the environmental permits is completed. She said there’s been a delay in the court proceeding.

“By them just moving ahead, because of a court delay, is wrong,” she said.

The band has placed 10 eel traps into the river as part of its protest. The traps are a nod to previous court victories for Indigenous people regarding fishing, in particular the 1993 case of Donald Marshall Jr.

Marshall was arrested for fishing eels, which led to a Supreme Court of Canada ruling, known as the Marshall decision, that confirmed Indigenous people have the right to fish for a moderate living.

Protesters are worried the creation of underground storage caverns will destroy the tidal ecosystem of nearby Shubenacadie River. (Robert Short/CBC)

Protesters are worried the creation of underground storage caverns will destroy the tidal ecosystem of nearby Shubenacadie River. (Robert Short/CBC)

Protesters prepared to stay

The group is preparing for a lengthy sit-in. A shack has been built for shelter with a wood stove inside.

“Stephen Harper removed all protection for rivers and lakes in this country and now we’ve elected a new government, and we’ve sat back and waited for protections and they’re not coming,” said Maloney.

“So we Nova Scotians and Mi’kmaq are joining forces and are standing up, standing up to defend.”

The gas project didn’t happen overnight.

Planning began nearly a decade ago and wells were drilled over the last two years.

Premier satisfied with review process

“I am confident that the Crown has met its obligation to consult with the Mi’kmaq of Nova Scotia and others on this project,” Premier Stephen McNeil said in a statement Monday.

“Nova Scotians should be aware that this project only received approval after years of consultation and environmental review.”

Underground natural gas storage has long been used in Canada, dating back to 1915. Salt caverns, in particular, have been used to store natural gas for more than 50 years, but never in Nova Scotia.

“The signal is: They are here to stay once they start brining and we don’t want that to happen,” MacMillan said.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/altagas-gas-protest-sit-in-1.3782936?cmp=abfb