Ontario First Nation says nuclear waste project must meet its criteria even if fast-tracked
The first three projects that could be declared of national interest and fast-tracked for approval in the fall, as part of an infrastructure push that is key to the Carney government’s agenda, were announced by the government on Wednesday. All three are in northern regions of the country. That agreement has remained confidential to the community and has not been released to the public.
- ▪The first three projects that could be declared of national interest and fast-tracked for approval in the fall, as part of an infrastructure push that is key to the Carney government’s agenda, were announced by the government on Wednesday.
- ▪All three are in northern regions of the country.
- ▪That agreement has remained confidential to the community and has not been released to the public.
Opening excerpt (first ~120 words) tap to expand
ShareSave for laterPlease log in to bookmark this story.Log InCreate Free AccountA Northwestern Ontario First Nation says it will determine whether a proposed nuclear waste deposit site on its territory can proceed, even though the project was just added to the federal government’s list of projects it intends to fast-track. The first three projects that could be declared of national interest and fast-tracked for approval in the fall, as part of an infrastructure push that is key to the Carney government’s agenda, were announced by the government on Wednesday. All three are in northern regions of the country.
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Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at The Globe and Mail.