Glyphosate protesters set up camp in Kedgwick River clearcut - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:11 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Glyphosate protesters set up camp in Kedgwick River clearcut

A small group of environmental activists has set up an encampment in a clearcut near Kedgwick River to try and prevent it from being sprayed with glyphosate.

Members of group EcoVie have protective gear but hope industry 'will not actually come and spray us'

'We're hoping that industry will not actually come and spray us.'

8 years ago
Duration 0:51
Environmentalists are camping on Crown lands near Kedgwick River hoping to prevent glyphosate spraying.

A small group of environmental activists has set up an encampment in a clearcutnear Kedgwick River to try toprevent it from being sprayed with glyphosate.

The 10 people from EcoViesay they intend to disrupt any spraying on the Crown land, which is licenced to Acadian Forest.

"We don't really know how long we'll be there," said spokeswoman Jean MacDonald. "Our main objective is to protect that one site.

"It's small. It's a start."

Glyphosate is used in aerial spraying by the forest industry to control undergrowth. It is also used by NB Power andin household garden weedkillers.

Arecent report by the New Brunswick government concluded the risks to humans fromglyphosateuse is low.

Francine Levesque is with a group protesting the spraying of glyphosate by the forest industry. (Radio-Canada)
But the EcoViegroup disputes that and wants government to set a moratorium on use of the chemical product in New Brunswick.

"We have issuesconcerning health, our health, our wildlife, our water, our air, our soil," said MacDonald. "And we're not getting any responses or any answers from thegovernmentthat really tie in with the reports and the studies that are coming out throughout Europeand the United States and South America."

The Acadian Forest land is scheduled to be sprayed and the protesters say they have "a plan in place to protect ourselves."

"We do have protective gear in place," said MacDonald.

"We're hoping that industry will not actually come and spray us."

MacDonaldsaid the group plans to stay in the encampment as long as there is glyphosate spraying in Madawaska County.

With files from Shift