K'JIPUKTUK (Halifax) – The ongoing debacle on what to do with Nova Scotia's fracking waste has taken an inter-provincial turn.
Atlantic Industrial Services' facility in Debert, Nova Scotia currently holds about 30 million litres of fracked wastewater from Nova Scotia's only ill-fated adventure in hydraulic fracturing, which took place in 2007-2008.
Since Triangle Petroleum's hydraulic fracture of three wells - two in the Kennetcook area and one near Noel, Nova Scotia – what to do with the waste has become an environmental issue approaching legendary status in terms of the twists, turns, ineptitudes and sideshows related to trying to do something, anything, with it.
After a tricky measure by which the town of Windsor, Nova Scotia, accepted just over 7 million litres of the wastewater down it's sewer system between 2010 and 2011 – this before the wastewater was found to contain Naturally Occuring Radioactive Materials, which triggered a new series of safety measures in dealing with it – Atlantic Industrial Services has been eagerly seeking a solution to the wastewater it has been saddled with.
Why any department in the provincial government wouldn't have thought that the Naturally Occurring Radioactive Materials that are naturally found in Nova Scotia might not come back up with any hydraulic fracturing attempts, before doing the hydraulic fracturing, is anybody's guess.
When a new Liberal government imposed a 2013 importation ban on fracking wastewater, the general understanding was that that solution to Atlantic Industrial Service's wastewater problem, whatever it might be, would have to be a homegrown one.
Nova Scotia would develop and find some kind of remedy to this problem, all by it's big kid self.
“The Minister [of the Environment] has been clear that we've just passed laws saying that we're not going to allow other people's fracking wastewater to be shipped to our province,” noted Nova Scotia Department of the Environment media contact person Lori Errington. “It's kind of disingenuous for us to ship it to them.”
Well, call Nova Scotia disingenuous.
Atlantic Industrial Services has been up to its old tricks, this time poking around municipal councils in New Brunswick (New Brunswick is not Nova Scotia, FYI), wondering if anybody's got a sewer system for sale and a sleepy public to boot.
The company filed a request for an Environmental Impact Assessment with the New Brunswick Department of Environment on June 6th, 2014, to move the 30 million litres to New Brunswick.
Then, 60 days later, after the 30 day so-called public consultation period had expired with zero transparency and zero public consultation, Atlantic Industrial Services presented the proposal to dump the 30 million litres down the Dieppe, New Brunswick, sewer system.
Dieppe council determined that it “needed answers” before accepting the fracking waste from Atlantic Industrial Services. But it does now raise the question of where might Atlantic Industrial Services strike next.
Which city council in cash-strapped New Brunswick might find itself cash-strapped enough to take the waste?
Of course, the fiercely pro-shale gas government of New Brunswick will first have to accept Atlantic Industrial Services' Environmental Impact Assessment. For one glaring reason, it is likely that they will.
Atlantic Industrial Services' facility in Debert, Nova Scotia, is the Maritimes most technologically advanced wastewater treatment facility. With a Nova Scotia ban on imports (but obviously not on exports) of fracking wastewater now in place, frack-happy New Brunswick will be looking for its own homegrown solution to its wastewater problem.
The New Brunswick Anti-Shale Gas Alliance, in checking out Atlantic Industrial Services facilities in New Brunswick, noted that the company had “no facilities other than a garage, access to the municipal sewage system, and an old certificate for waste disposal.”
In effect, it will be right down the drain.
“The Minister [of the Environment]'s stand is that: 'This is our problem. We have to find a way to deal with it in a way that's environmentally responsible,'” says Errington in Nova Scotia. “The Minister's been really adamant about it.
“Sending it to New Brunswick or any other province would be our option of last resort. The Minister...is looking for an in-Nova Scotia solution to deal with our problem. He's been really clear about that.”
Clearly disingenuous?