Quebec approves pipeline project in the Laurentians - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 10:29 AM | Calgary | -16.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Quebec approves pipeline project in the Laurentians

The province's environmental review board gave the project the green light, despite saying the developer overestimated the benefits of the project.

Pipeline will send natural gas from Mirabel to landfill in Sainte-Sophie

A flag indicates where an Energir gas line is situated
The future 10-kilometre pipeline will connect the Sainte-Sophie landfill site to the nergir network in Mirabel. (Christinne Musch/The Canadian Press)

The Quebec government has authorizednergir to build a 10-kilometre pipeline to supply "renewable natural gas" at the Waste Management technical landfill in Sainte-Sophie, Que. a project many environmentalists are opposing.

The decree published in the Official Gazette on July 3 requires nergir to comply with several environmental obligations, such as restoring wetlands and reforestation in Quebec's Laurentians region.

But environmental groups, including the Front commun qubcois pour une gestion cologique des dchets (FCQGED), say the conditions lack teeth.

"Too many elements have been put aside in this project for us to give the developers carte blanche," FCQGED president Denis Blaquire said in a news release published Wednesday. "This project was studied in isolation while several organizations are calling for a more general reflection on the place of natural gas in the necessary energy transition."

The government says it based its decision on an Environment Ministry analysis published on May 9, which found the project environmentally acceptable under certain conditions.

On April 19, theBureau d'audiences publiques sur l'environnement (BAPE),Quebec's environmental review board, gave the project the green light.

In its report, the BAPE says the project should be approved, despite the developer "overestimating" environmental benefits by failing to take into account WM's plans to use fossil fuels to run the facilities.

The BAPE has yet to study the complex, which is expected to start operating in 2025.

Depending on the route of the pipeline, the width of the 10-kilometre corridor the developer intends to build between Sainte-Sophie and Mirabel could extend between 80 metres and 180 metres.

Paper mill in Saint-Jrme at risk: Environmental groups

Climate advocacy groups argue that recent studies challenge the environmental friendliness of renewable natural gas, noting its non-carbon neutrality, rarity, high cost and environmental impacts.

They also disapprove of nergir and WM's plans to divert renewable biogasfrom the Rolland paper mill in Saint-Jrme, 13 kilometres southwest ofSainte-Sophie.

In an open letter published on May 2, the groups warned that the mill might have to resume using fossil fuels because of the nergir project, "which will greatly increase its GHG emissions, or will simply have to cease its operations, resulting in many job losses."

Reporting by Radio-Canada's Jrme Labb, translated by Holly Cabrera