Nova Scotia premier believes Northern Pulp plant will never reopen - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia premier believes Northern Pulp plant will never reopen

Campaigning in Pictou West on Tuesday, Premier Tim Houston said he couldn't see how the Northern Pulp paper plant that closed in 2020 could ever reopen, nor would his government favour its return to operations.

'It's not something that as a province we would be in favour of,' Tim Houston says

Man wears a blue button-up shirt stands in a park on a sunny day.
Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston campaigned in Pictou West on Tuesday in advance of the May 21 byelection. (CBC)

Premier Tim Houston says he believes the Northern Pulp plant, shuttered by the company in January 2020, will never reopen.

Houston made his comments while campaigning for the PCs in Pictou West in advance ofthe May 21 byelection.

"I don't even know how that mill could be reopened after just sitting there for that amount of time," Houston said Tuesday. "It's not on my radar, it's not something that, as a province,we would be in favour of."

Houston said traditional industries such as forestry, fishing and farming have their place, but not just anywhere.

"These are important industries to our province, but they all have to be at the right place," said Houston. "They all have to be in the right communities."

Houston suggested his party's political opponents were "trying to scare people'' by suggesting the plant might resume operations some day.

The plant has long been apolarizing issue in the region, pitting those who supported its operations because ofits well-payingjobs and substantial economic impact against those who saw the pulp mill as a polluter and environmental threat to the province.

Houston says people not talking about mill reopening

Houston said bringing up the issue during the byelection is "the worst type of politics,"calling Northern Pulp a non-issue in thePictouWest campaign.

"It's just not something that people are talking about," Houston said during a swing through aPictouneighbourhood with PC candidate MarcoMacLeod.

Although the company ceased operations, formallyterminated its unionized workforce and told those 110former employeesthey no longer belonged to the company's pension plan,Northern Pulp has never saidit is walking away from its Nova Scotia operation.

a building with smoke stacks on a cloudy day
The Northern Pulp mill in Abercrombie Point, N.S., is shown in 2015. (Jeorge Sadi/CBC)

In fact,the company has until next spring to submit an environmental assessment applicationto the provincial Environment Department for a proposed new effluent treatment facility. It requested and was granted a deadline extension last March.

The provincial government and the company are also embroiled in a legal battle over the company's claim it was forced to shut down operations when the provincial government cut off its access to a treatment facility that allowed it to dump effluent into Boat Harbour.

In December 2021, the mill owners filed a suit against the province seeking $450 millionin damages and losses. In April 2022,the two sides entered a court-ordered, non-binding mediation processand agreed to pause any legal actions.

A previous Liberal government passed the Boat Harbour Act with unanimous support in 2015, legislation that set a deadline for when effluent had to stop flowing into the former tidal estuary located next to thePictouLanding First Nation.

Paper Excellence Canada, the company that owns the mill, said it is focused on the mediation process with the province and that would inform what it does next.

Forestry's place in Nova Scotia

Forest Nova Scotia, an industry lobby group, wasn't taken aback by Houston's comments.

"We're not surprised by what the premier had to say," said Stephen Moore, the organization's executive director."The writing seems to have been on the wall for awhile here about the future of Northern Pulp."

But Moore seized on Houston's characterization of forestry as an important traditional industryin the province.

Upcoming byelection

"We do also hearin the premier's comments that there's an openness to a potential mill somewhere else in the province and that remains a hope of the sector," said Moore. "You know, we would like to see a pulp mill in Nova Scotia."

Houston called the byelection just over two weeks agoafter the suddenresignation of KarlaMacFarlane,the PC MLA whorepresented the area for a decade.

Along withMacLeod, candidatesinclude MaryWooldridge-Elliott (Liberal Party), MelindaMacKenzie(NDP) and ClareBrett(Green Party).

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