The ARC-100 nuclear project is in trouble

Since our coalition formed four years ago, CRED-NB has been vocal in our opposition to the two new nuclear projects planned for the Point Lepreau site on the Bay of Fundy. One of the projects, ARC-100, is currently undergoing a provincial environmental impact assessment. Read our info page about the project HERE.

This week there were several news reports indicating that the ARC project is in trouble. CRED-NB core member Susan O’Donnell writes about the situation today in the NB Media Co-op, HERE.

Is Nova Scotia next for nuclear power experiments?

CRED-NB Champion Mary Lou Harley lives in Nova Scotia where a legislative change stripped the province of “legal protection from expensive and dangerous nuclear power experiments, a protection we have had for over 30 years.” Read Mary Lou’s story HERE in the NB Media Co-op where she explains the situation and the implications for her province.

CRED-NB’s vision for Canada’s electricity grid and network 

The House of Commons standing committee on natural resources is conducting a study on Canada’s electricity grid and network. CRED-NB submitted a brief for the study that will be considered when the committee drafts its final report to Parliament. Our brief is HERE.

We have three main recommendations:

1) Canada should use the fastest and most affordable pathway to a zero GHG emission power grid in Canada: replacing fossil fuel-fired generation solely with renewable energy sources complemented by energy storage, transmission interties and demand-side management.

2) Canada should minimize the time and resources spent on developing new nuclear reactors, especially risky new experimental reactors, as they are not required to build a zero GHG emission energy grid in Canada.

3) All federal funding for research and development of new nuclear reactors and all grid energy technologies should be moved to government research granting agencies.

CRED-NB is encouraging other groups and individuals to also submit briefs for this study. Our brief could provide a template. The link to the study is HERE.

Chief Akagi requests public hearing to review any new governance arrangement for the Point Lepreau nuclear reactor on Peskotomuhkati homeland

In May, former New Brunswick Energy Minister Mike Holland tabled a bill to change the Electricity Act. The change would allow NB Power to enter a partnership with Ontario Power Generation (OPG). The bill became law in early June.

In a letter to the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CNSC) on May 29, Peskotomuhkati Chief Hugh Akagi outlined his initial concerns with the proposed agreement between NB Power and OPG, which reportedly includes a partial ownership stake in the Point Lepreau Nuclear Generating Station.

The letter is from the Passamoquoddy Recognition Group (PRGI) which represents the Peskotomuhkati Nation in Canada and the interests of rightsholders and the Peskotomuhkati ecosystem, including the Point Lepreau Nuclear Station. Any new owners of the Lepreau CANDU nuclear reactor will have rights and responsibilities that PRGI wants clarified.

Read the story published today in the NB Media Co-op, HERE.

NBASGA’s vision for a renewable energy future for New Brunswick

CRED-NB champion, the New Brunswick Anti-Shale Gas Alliance (NBASGA), put its comments on the energy transition up on its website, HERE.

In its submission, NBASGA argues that renewable energy – primarily wind and solar – should be the focus of the lion’s share of New Brunswick’s energy investments. It is the only option that checks all the strategic focus boxes, including affordability, energy security and reliability. Similar to CRED-NB, NBASGA believes that new nuclear energy is not needed. The submission quotes the latest research showing that SMRs are too expensive, slow and risky.

How does electricity work when the sun doesn’t shine and the wind doesn’t blow? Storage!

Energy storage plays a key role in helping wind and solar power dominate the growth in electrical grid capacity. Storage includes batteries or other systems that hold energy until it’s needed. With adequate storage, the New Brunswick electrical grid no longer needs energy sources such as natural gas that emits greenhouse gases (GHGs) or risky and expensive nuclear power.

Read the full article in the NB Media Co-op by CRED-NB’s Tom McLean, HERE.

CRED-NB supports the Peace Caravan with an event May 25 in Fredericton

CRED-NB is pleased to participate in an information-sharing workshop in Fredericton presented by the NS Voice of Women for Peace. This activity is part of their journey to Ottawa to join with peace and social justice groups from across Canada to protest CANSEC, the largest annual weapons trade show in Canada.

At the event, CRED-NB will share information on the links between the civilian nuclear industry, including in Canada and New Brunswick, and the proliferation of nuclear weapons.

The workshop, entitled Demilitarize, Decarbonize, Decolonize, will be held in Fredericton at Conserver House, 180 St. John Street, on Saturday, May 25 from 7 to 8 PM.

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CRED-NB’s vision for a renewable energy future: video

On April 23, CRED-NB core member Tom McLean presented our vision of a nuclear-free renewable energy future as part of the Atlantic Canada Climate network speaker series. In the video, Tom describes how New Brunswick can meet its future energy needs with renewable energy and storage technologies. Watch the video:

Video: Indigenous Leaders Raise Concerns About Nuclear Waste

Indigenous leaders from New Brunswick and Ontario held a media event in Ottawa today to share their concerns about nuclear waste on their homelands. Participants:
Chief Hugh Akagi, Peskotomuhkati Nation in Canada
Chief Ron Tremblay, Wolastoq Grand Council
Mississauga First Nation Councillor Peyton Pitawanakwat
Elizabeth May, Co-Leader of the Green Party of Canada, MP for Saanich-Gulf Islands
Facilitator: Kim Reeder, consultant, Passamaquoddy Recognition Group

Watch the video HERE.
Read the media release HERE.

The APTN covered the story, HERE.

CRED-NB Letter of Comment on NB Power’s rate increase request 

In our submission to the New Brunswick Energy & Utilities Board (EUB), CRED-NB urges the EUB to require that NB Power validates its demand for higher power rates by taking proactive, economically and environmentally responsible action to improve its overall performance while reducing greenhouse gas emissions to address the climate emergency in the years leading to 2030. We submit 11 improvement strategies that can help NB Power achieve its prime requirements and advancements at the lowest cost, in the least time, and with greatest benefit. Read our submission HERE.