Kincardine likely to host public hearing in a year
By Troy Patterson, Kincardine News
Posted 3 hours ago
KINCARDINE – Close to a year from now, public hearings in the Municipality of Kincardine could be the focus of national and international attention if Ontario Power Generation’s (OPG Deep Geologic Repository (DGR approvals process remains on schedule.
The federal government recently appointed a three-member Joint Review Panel (JRP to review the documents put forward for OPG’s proposed DGR for low and intermediate-level nuclear waste. The Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency (CEAA posted information on the JRP on its website, after Minister of Environment Peter Kent made the announcement with Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CNSC president Michael Binder on Jan. 24, 2012.
The JRP’s mandate is to conduct an examination of the environmental effects of the proposed project to meet the requirements of the CEAA. It will also obtain information necessary for the consideration of the licence application under the Nuclear Safety and Control Act (NSCA to prepare a site and to construct the DGR.
The first-in-Canada project, planned at the Bruce nuclear site in the Municipality of Kincardine has been in the works since 2001. The project is owned by OPG, with work contracted to Canada’s Nuclear Waste Management Organization (NWMO to provide technical and other services through the approval process.
As the proponent, OPG has been awaiting the JRP appointments since it submitted its Environmental Impact Statement (EIS, Preliminary Safety Report and Technical Support Documents the JRP in April 2011.
The proposed facility is a 650-metre (2,230ft. deep ‘nuclear waste repository’ in close proximity to OPG’s Western Waste Management Facility (WWMF that stores the waste planned for the facility, at the Bruce nuclear site. The entrance to the DGR to be located about 1km from Lake Huron. The repository is to be built under a 200-metre, 450-million-year-old cap of multi-layer shale and sedimentary limestone to protect and store and seal up to 200,000 cubic metres of low and intermediate level waste indefinitely.
«What we have are ideal geologic conditions for this repository,» said NWMO’s Marie Wilson after the EIS was submitted in April, 2011. «The formations are predictable. «
OPG/NWMO Geologic studies have outlined how only minute traces of prehistoric moisture is found at these depths; highly salinated from ancient oceans with concentrations eight to 10 times that of sea water as found on their geologic core samples from the site. The site is also isolated, with no risk to groundwater sources, which exist only within the first 100 metres of geology, according to the OPG document.
«Our case is very solid about our ability to protect the lake,» Wilson said.
With the Jan. 24 announcement, Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency (CEAA communications officer Lucille Jamault said the three-member JRP was selected «based on their experience and absence of bias, or conflict of interest, as well as being qualified in these areas.»
The panel reviewing the EIS will be chaired by Dr. Stella Swanson, who holds a PhD in Limnology (study of inland waters, as well as a Bachelor of Science (Hon. in Biology, and is accredited with a Post-Doctoral Fellowship in Radiation Ecology, according to a biography on the CEAA website. With 30 years in the field, Swanson has previously worked on assessing the impacts of the nuclear fuel cycle on human health and the environment from uranium mining and milling, nuclear power plants and nuclear waste storage.
Two panel members were also named. The first is Dr. James F. Archibald, a mining expert that has previously sat on federal-provincial review panel for new uranium mine developments in Saskatchewan and was a technical advisor to the federal review panel that assessed nuclear fuel waste disposal concepts. The second is Dr. Gunter Muecke, an award-winning geology expert with over 40 years of experience, who has worked as a field geologist in the oil and gas industry, as a lecturer, professor and has sat on environmental assessments and review panels overseeing quarry proposals in Nova Scotia.
Jamault said the JRP has 14 days, or until Feb. 7 to announce and advertise the beginning of the «maximum» six-month public review of the EIS.
«It’s well laid out in the (EA agreement,» said Jamault. «The timelines are very clear in terms of what the panel must do and when. «
During the six-month review, OPG and the Municipality of Kincardine anticipate that a significant number of interested parties, supporting and opposed to the project, will be involved in the review. These groups will include members of the public, Aboriginal groups and other stakeholders, who are all encouraged to review the lengthy 10,000-page EIS, or the 60-page summary.
OPG’s conclusion, based on its findings within the EIS, are that the DGR project is not expected to have «any adverse effects on the public or the environment,» Wilson said after its April 2011 submission.
After the six-month review period is completed, likely in August, 2012, the CEAA will compile the comments, questions and submissions collected during that time to present to OPG as the proponent. The JRP would then submit any questions, requests for additional information or concerns, alongside the questions and issues submitted by the public, to the proponent.
«The Joint Review Panel could decide the EIS is sufficient, if not, if more information is requested, the proponent can take the time it needs to answer the additional questions,» Jamault said. «It’s important for the panel to receive adequate responses to these questions, as required in the guidelines.»
OPG then has an «indefinite» amount of time to respond to the questions and requests for further information, in order to properly and completely respond to the public and JRP, said Jamault. Once the JRP is satisfied with the additional information provided to it, and all questions have been «adequately answered and accepted, the panel will close the public review period.
The panel is then obligated to give 90 days notice of a date for the JRP public hearing, to address the information brought forward by the proponent, and address further presentations and submissions by stakeholders as a result of the public review. Based on the timeline, the hearings could take place in late 2012 or early 2013.
According to Jamault, it’s «common practice» to hold JRP public hearings in the host community, the Municipality of Kincardine, which could be late fall 2012, or early 2013. Public hearings can range from 30 to 45 days, but an exact date and location can’t be determined by the JRP until after the public review process is completed.
Upon closure of the public hearings, the JRP has 90 days to provide a report on its recommendations to the Minister of Environment (MOE. Jamault said once the MOE receives the report, it signals the end to the Environmental Assessment (EA process and the project heads to the House of Commons for discussion and a vote by federal Members of Parliament (MPs.
If the federal government votes that the project may proceed, the JRP could then issue a ‘License to Prepare the Site and Construct’ to OPG in late 2012 or early 2013. It woud then have to decide, in a manner consistent with the federal government's response, whether to approve the licence applications, Jamault said.
OPG expects the construction phase to take between five to seven years to complete, when it would then need to apply to the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CNSC for a ‘License to Operate’, possibly in 2015. Pending completion of the DGR, the CNSC must hold another round of public hearings, expected in 2017, on OPG’s application for a ‘License to Operate’ the facility. If approved, the DGR could begin accepting low and intermediate level nuclear waste from the Bruce site, as well as Darlington and Pickering nuclear stations by 2018-2019.
Used nuclear fuel storage is not a part of the DGR project.
The EIS agreement, along with more information on the DGR project, is available on the Canadian Environmental Assessment Registry at www.ceaa-acee.gc. ca , reference # 06-05-17520 as well as on the Web site of the CNSC at www.nuclearsafety.gc.ca
Information is also available at www.opg.com/dgr
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