• 65 forced from homes after Irving Oil butane leak in Saint John

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    A leak of a highly-flammable gas at Irving Oil’s operations forced roughly 65 people from their homes in an east Saint John neighbourhood on Monday, Jan. 8.

    The CBC reported on the butane leak at Irving Oil’s Saint John East Terminal after the company announced on Twitter that it had discovered the rupture during “routine testing.”

    As of Wednesday morning, the residents from roughly 30 homes over four streets still could not return home.
  • Appel à soumissions: Prix du journalisme environnemental Beth McLaughlin

    Les candidatures sont maintenant ouvertes pour le 6e prix annuel de journalisme environnemental Beth McLaughlin en reconnaissance d'une couverture approfondie et réfléchie des questions environnementales au Nouveau-Brunswick.

    Si vous avez écrit sur un sujet environnemental, ou si vous avez été inspiré par quelqu'un qui l'a fait, veuillez envisager de proposer votre travail pour ce prix. Les ouvrages publiés entre le 1er août 2020 et le 31 juillet 2021 sont admissibles.

    Toutes les soumissions doivent être reçues au plus tard le 31 juillet 2021. Veuillez faire parvenir votre soumission au comité du prix du journalisme environnemental de la section Sud-Est du Conseil de conservation du Nouveau-Brunswick, à l’adresse suivante : ccnbsoutheast@gmail.com.

    Le prix de 500 $ sera remis à l'automne.

    Tous les détails sont ici:
     


  • Beth McLaughlin Environmental Journalism Award Winner Announced

    The Southeast Chapter of the Conservation Council of New Brunswick (CCNB SE) is pleased to announce that Simon Delattre of l'Acadie Nouvelle is this year's winner of the 3rd annual Beth McLaughlin Environmental Journalism award.

    “Simon Delattre broke an important New Brunswick story that made everyone, including political decision-makers, aware of our growing use of glyphosate and the dangers it poses to human health and the environment,” said the judges of this year’s award.Delattre’s two-part series, published in August 2017, revealed that the forest company J.D. Irving was spraying the glyphosate-based product Weed Master in the protected area of the Turtle Creek watershed, which supplies drinking water to more than 144,000 residents in Greater Moncton, Riverview and Dieppe.Upon receiving his award at the Southeast Chapter’s meeting on Nov. 14, Delattre, who is from France, said he is asking more questions about how closely the New Brunswick government is aligned with the forestry industry. He said he is interested in covering more environmental stories.

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    Simon Delattre (R) of l’Acadie Nouvelle accepts this year’s Beth McLaughlin Environmental Journalism Award at the Dieppe Public Library  on Nov. 14 from Dave MacDonald, president of the Southeast Chapter of the Conservation Council of New Brunswick. (Photo by Serge Robichaud)

    The judges also selected the Red Dot group to receive an honourable mention for their work over the past four years in publicizing the poor water quality at Parlee Beach, as well as threats to coastal wetlands in the Shediac area.

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    Arthur Melanson, speaking for the Red Dot Group at the Beth McLaughlin Environmental Journalism Award Presentation on October 14 at Dolma Food in Moncton. (Photo by Nancy Arsenault)

    During their campaign, the Red Dots were constantly in the media, writing scores of letters to the editor, granting interviews to reporters, filing multiple Right to Information requests, and communicating directly with the provincial politicians responsible for protecting the environment and New Brunswickers' health.By April 2017, the group had more than 2,000 members, among them such familiar names as Arthur Melanson, Tim Borlase, Brenda Ryan, Michael Sullivan and Dr. Scott Mawdsley, who wrote a 100-page letter to then-Premier Brian Gallant pointing out that the government knew about fecal contamination at Parlee Beach for well over a decade, but did nothing to fix it.

    The call for nominations for next year’s Beth McLaughlin Environmental Journalism Award will be out in the coming months. The Award for environmental reporting in New Brunswick comes with a $500 prize. The judges of this year’s award were Roland Chiasson, Erin Steuter, and Bruce Wark.
    The CCNB SE Chapter thanks the judges, nominators, and the many other volunteers who make this award possible.

     
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    Media contact:  Anita Cannon (506) 364-2572  ccnbsoutheast@gmail.com
  • Buy Local for Thanksgiving: We’ve got an app for that!



    At the height of the harvest season and just in time for Thanksgiving, the Conservation Council of New Brunswick is releasing its new, free BuyLocalNB™ smartphone app!

    Our user-friendly app helps you find delicious and wholesome locally-grown meats and alternatives, fruits, vegetables, grain products and more — all grown or produced right here in New Brunswick! 

    Looking to prepare a local-infused Thanksgiving feast with all the fixings this year? Use the BuyLocalNB™ to source your ingredients within minutes.

    But it’s not just for local food! Looking for furniture with that authentic, hand-carved feel? Or are you on the look-out for a thoughtful gift idea, like the perfect hand-made artisanal craft? Maybe you want environmentally-friendly cleaning supplies or soaps? The BuyLocalNB™ directory has it all, and our new smartphone app puts everything right at your fingertips.

    We also want to help you experience the local food economy through our smartphone app. Use the ‘Visit a Farm’ feature to find a local producer near you — maybe a sugar shack, apple orchard or dairy farm — and arrange a first-hand look at what they do to provide our families with fresh, wholesome, local products. You’ll also find the dozens of farmers markets and local markets adding life and vibrancy to our communities.

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    The BuyLocalNB™ initiative launched at the Conservation Council in 2009. In 2011, we developed an online local food directory that became and instant favourite of local foodies, with chefs and retailers using our directory to source their products and ingredients.

    We revamped our online food directory last fall, adding a user-friendly searchable database of local growers, producers and retailers.

    Today, the online directory and complementary smarthphone app feature more than 280 local farmers, craftspeople and businesses, with more becoming listed each day!

    The BuyLocalNB™ app is currently available as an Android download. It will be available in iOS soon. (Are you an iOS user who is anxious to try out our new app? Check out the directory at buylocalnb.ca for a preview of what the app can do!)

     Download App

    Why should you shop local with our new BuyLocalNB™ app?  Easy! Supporting local food: 
    •   Supports the provincial economy and the family farm;
    •   Keeps N.B. money in N.B. communities by circulating our food dollars locally;
    •   Protects the environment by decreasing greenhouse gas emissions from transportation;
    •   Strengthens our communities by letting New Brunswickers get to know their local farmers and learn about where their food comes from; and
    •   Proactively increases our public health by providing better access to healthy nutritious food
    Get the new BuyLocalNB™ smarthphone app to download local food to your table today!
  • Call for Nominations: Beth McLaughlin Environmental Journalism Award

    Nominations are now open for the 6th annual Beth McLaughlin Environmental Journalism Award in recognition of in-depth and thoughtful coverage of environmental issues in New Brunswick.
     
    If you have written on an environmental topic, or have been inspired by someone who has, please consider nominating the work for this award. Works published between August 1, 2020 and July 31, 2021 are eligible.
     
    Submit entries by July 31, 2021 to the Conservation Council of New Brunswick, Southeast Chapter Environmental Journalism Award Committee at ccnbsoutheast@gmail.com
     
    The $500 award will be presented in the fall.
     
    Full details are here:
     


  • CCNB Action - Vote for Our Forests

    CCNB Action needs your help to distribute our “Vote for Our Forest” cards. The cards, available in English or French, include 4 questions that you can ask the candidates seeking election in the next provincial election on Sept. 22. The cards can also be displayed in your window or door to show your support for our forest.

    To get copies of the cards, email Tracy at forest@ccnbaction.ca.
    To view the English card, click here.
  • Conservation Council responds to Sisson Mine EIA approval

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    Thursday, Dec. 3, 2015

    FREDERICTON —
     Stephanie Merrill, Director of Freshwater Protection with the Conservation Council of New Brunswick, issued the following statement in response to the Department of Environment’s approval of the Sisson Mine Environmental Impact Assessment:

    “I’m surprised by today’s announcement considering it’s been made in a vacuum. Final approval of this project is a joint process between the provincial and federal government — but we’re still waiting on the review from the feds, and there are outstanding parts of that review that we’re committed to participating in.

    The province also has not released the summary of the Independent Review Panel to the public, as it’s required to do by law. The summary needs to be released right away for the sake of transparency, otherwise our government is playing fast and loose with the rules that let people participate in this process.

    The company behind the mine proposal, Sisson Mines Ltd, is still far from securing the financing needed to move forward with the project, and no public financing accounts have been released. At best, today’s announcement is a signal that the province is open to business, but in reality, you can put lipstick on a pig, but it’s still a pig.

    The conditions of approval are vague when it comes to critical issues like emergency planning, the security of the tailings dam, and liability. Most striking, we’re letting the fox guard the henhouse by leaving the responsibility to protect the Nashwaak River and watershed directly in the hands of the company. Even the International Council on Mining —  composed of the world’s largest companies — said yesterday that the control standards for tailing facilities are inadequate and the council would be reviewing and revising its standards.

    We’ve seen at least three major tailings disasters in the past year and a half — at Mount Polley in B.C., the Buenavista del Cobre mine in Mexico, and most recently in Brazil,  where 16 people died and the Brazilian government announced yesterday a $5.2 (billion) USD billion lawsuit against the company responsible.

    First and foremost at this point, we call on the province to release the summary report of the Independent Review Panel so New Brunswickers know what the experts in the scientific community have to say about this project proposal.”
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    For more information or to arrange an interview, contact:

    Jon MacNeill, Conservation Council of New Brunswick: 458-8747 | 261-1353 |jon.macneill@conservationcouncil.ca
  • En 2021, les usines de combustibles fossiles du N.-B. ont provoqué une augmentation de 6 % des émissions responsables du réchauffement planétaires issues du Nouveau-Brunswick

    Territoire ancestral des Abénaquis/Fredericton— Les émissions de gaz à effet de serre du Nouveau-Brunswick ont augmenté de 700 000 tonnes entre 2020 et 2021, ce qui représente une augmentation de 6 % en raison d’une hausse des émissions du secteur de l’électricité selon le Rapport d'inventaire national 1990-2021 d’Environnement et Changement climatique Canada 2023 : Sources et puits de gaz à effet de serre au Canada.

    Au Nouveau-Brunswick, les gaz à effet de serre à l’origine du réchauffement planétaire ont passé de 11,2 millions de tonnes en 2020 à 11,9 millions de tonnes en 2021, la dernière année pour laquelle des données sont disponibles. Au vu d’une ventilation détaillée des émissions pour tous les secteurs économiques de la province, on constate que l’augmentation des émissions provient exclusivement du secteur de l’électricité

    « Il faut mettre fin à la combustion des combustibles fossiles pour produire de l’électricité », déclare Louise Comeau, co-directrice exécutive du Conseil de conservation. « Faire de l’argent à partir de sources d’énergie à l’origine du réchauffement planétaire n’est pas un processus éthique. Cette façon de faire augmente nos dettes en matière de carbone et met notre avenir en danger. Il est maintenant temps d’abandonner les usines aux combustibles fossiles pour préconiser les énergies renouvelables, l’entreposage, les interconnexions et l’efficacité énergétique. »

    L’augmentation de 700 000 tonnes affichée par le secteur de l’électricité du Nouveau-Brunswick représente une hausse annuelle de 26 %, soit de 2,7 millions de tonnes en 2020 à 3,4 millions de tonnes en 2021. Cette hausse a été suscitée par des augmentations des émissions de la centrale de Coleson Cove (47 %, ou de 730 000 tonnes en 2020 à 1 070 000 tonnes en 2021), la centrale de Belledune (jusqu’à 22 %, ou de 1 140 000 tonnes à 1 390 000 tonnes) et la centrale de Bayside (jusqu’à 11 %, ou de 830 000 tonnes à 920 000 tonnes).

    La centrale de Point Lepreau a fonctionné la majorité de 2021, avec trois brèves coupures de courant en février, avril et novembre. La production d’énergie éolienne a chuté de 21 % à cause de fissures dans les fondations à Kent Hills. Ces coupures de courant augmentent la dépendance du Nouveau-Brunswick envers les usines aux combustibles fossiles ou les importations du Québec ou de la Nouvelle-Angleterre. En 2021, Énergie NB a aussi augmenté ses ventes par exportation, ce qui peut contribuer à une utilisation accrue des usines aux énergies fossiles.  Selon le rapport annuel de 2021-2022 d’Énergie NB, il y a eu une augmentation de 52 % des ventes par exportation (de 369 millions de dollars en 2020-2021 à 558 millions de dollars en 2021-2022), et une augmentation de la production de 35 % des gigawattheures (de 4 576 MWh en 2020-2021 à 6 175 GWh en 2021-2022). 

    Les augmentations des émissions au fil des ans sont préoccupantes même si les tendances à long terme sont encore à la baisse. Les émissions de gaz à effet de serre sont inférieures de 39 % par rapport à celles de 2005 et de 7 % par rapport à celles de 2019. Pour 2022, on s’attend à des tendances similaires à celles de 2021, ce qui indique l’importance de contrôler les émissions du secteur de l’électricité par des mesures comme un règlement fédéral sur l’électricité propre. 

    Comme la Journée de la Terre (22 avril) approche, le Conseil de conservation appelle à une stratégie d’électricité propre afin d’assurer au Nouveau-Brunswick un système d’électricité fiable, durable et abordable qui soit bien équilibré au niveau de l’efficacité énergétique, de l’entreposage et des énergies solaire, éolienne et hydro-électricité intraprovinciaux, et assorti de transmissions inter-régionales comme la boucle de l’Atlantique. 

    Pour obtenir une entrevue, veuillez communiquer avec :

     Jon MacNeill, directeur des Communications, Conseil de conservation du Nouveau-Brunswick, 506-238-3539 |jon.macneill@conservationcouncil.ca

  • Making it Happen: COP21 in Paris | A special edition of EcoAlert Magazine


    The Conservation Council of New Brunswick has released a new special edition of its membership magazine,
    EcoAlert: <2° — Making it Happen at COP21 in Paris.


    This special edition will help you cut through the jargon and technicalities of international climate negotiations to understand:What the heck is COP21 in Paris? What’s it all about? What does the fight against climate change mean for me, our province, and Canada as a whole?


    • In this issue: •the road to locally-made clean energy in NB • charting the course toward a low-carbon economy • a brief history of international climate negotiations • best and the rest: countries’ climate plans heading into COP21 • how you can live greener and cleaner at home and work • and more


    Click here to download a PDF version of this issue, or head toour archives for past editions.
  • Nominate Your Eco-Hero! Deadline: July 31

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    The Milton F. Gregg Awards are back and bigger than ever!

    The awards have been presented by the Conservation Council annually since 1981 to deserving individuals and organizations who have contributed to protecting New Brunswick’s environment.

    This year we’ve expanded the Milton F Gregg Awards in celebration of our 50th year of environmental action in New Brunswick. You can now nominate your Eco-Hero in one of 15 categories!

    The main Eco-Hero award is given in memory of Milton F. Gregg, who was a founding member of the Conservation Council and had a particular concern for the health of the Wolastoq (St. John) River. Gregg served as federal cabinet minister, diplomat and Chancellor of the University of New Brunswick.

    Please submit nominations by July 31. Our selection committee will notify you and the nominee by September 1. Our awards ceremony will be held at the Beaverbrook Art Gallery in Fredericton on October 12th, 2019 from 7 – 9 p.m.

    Click here to see our full list of catagories and submit your nomination Milton F Gregg Awards.

  • Wildlife, forestry and conservation groups join with scientists and academics to call for new Crown Lands and Forests Act

    FREDERICTON — A broad range of public interest groups and experts in New Brunswick says new legislation is needed to ensure our public forests are being managed to meet the needs of all New Brunswickers.

    The group, which includes representatives from wildlife organizations, the scientific community, private woodlot owners, environmental and conservation organizations, is calling for the urgent development of a new Crown Lands and Forests Act.

    In a statement sent to the provincial government today, the group says the existing act, which came into law in 1980, fosters an outdated approach to forest management and fails to reflect the interests of the whole province. Forest management has become more complex, and New Brunswickers now expect forests to be managed for water, wildlife, recreation and other uses as well as jobs and revenue.

    The statement referenced Auditor General Kim MacPherson’s June 2015 report on forest management, which stated our public forest should be managed for economic, environmental and social values, and highlighted that the province has lost money from the management of public forests for at least the last five years.

    The group says new forest legislation should:

    (1) State clear principles for managing public forests to protect the range of life in the forest, nature’s benefits, a wide variety of sustainable, forest-based business opportunities, and recreational values all in the context of climate change;

    (2) Clarify and reinstate government as the trustee responsible to the public for the stewardship of Crown lands;

    (3) Ensure transparency in setting forestry goals and objectives, and in achieving them, including a robust system of public involvement and consultation throughout the process;

    (4) Respect the Peace and Friendship Treaties and establish mechanisms for consultation through free, prior, and informed consent with indigenous peoples;

    (5) Support diversification and value-added processing within New Brunswick’s forest products sector; and,

    (6) Ensure that private woodlots provide a proportional share of the wood supply and promote productivity from private woodlots through stronger management, pricing and marketing measures.

    Read the group’s statement and background information here.

    -30-

    “Our membership is convinced that opening more conservation land to harvesting of trees in sensitive, stream buffers could endanger vulnerable Atlantic salmon populations by damaging the habitats upon which they depend. It is appalling that such a sweeping change to the forest management regime was forced upon us without any discussion with the concerned watershed groups and conservation groups.   We have deepened our commitment to work cooperatively with the provincial government, First Nations, the forest industry, scientists, conservation organizations and other interest groups to better manage our Crown resources,” says Debbie Norton, President of NB Salmon Council.

    “What’s really significant here is the broad range of people who are coming together and saying, ‘this act doesn’t work for us anymore — it doesn’t work for the good of the province. Our forests are very special to New Brunswickers, so when this many people and different types of experts are saying something is broken, it’s time to fix it,” says Lois Corbett, Executive Director of the Conservation Council of New Brunswick.

    “Naturalists from across New Brunswick are very concerned about the lack of attention the province pays to wildlife and habitat in our public forests. We see the consequences of this every day, we are ready to work with government in developing a new act that better protects New Brunswick nature,” says Vanessa Roy-McDougall, Executive Director of Nature NB.

    “NB lags behind all provinces in Canada except PEI when it comes to protecting nature. New legislation could carefully craft new directives about how to balance investments in forest conservation and other economic interests,” says Roberta Clowater, Executive Director of Canadians Parks and Wilderness – New Brunswick.

    “The fundamental flaw in the act is that industrial consumers of wood were made managers of crown land and not customers, there are conflicts of interest, that can only be resolved by creating a new CFLA.Wood lot owners believe that the people harvesting crown wood should have a common interest with us in getting fair market value for  logs and other forest products. It is time to correct the mistakes of the past for the good of all N.B.,” says Andrew Clark of the New Brunswick Federation of Woodlot Owners.

    “The New Brunswick Wildlife Federation supports the use of public forests in the province to provide a variety of social and economic benefits. However, those uses should not compromise the integrity of natural habitats and biodiversity,” says Charles LeBlanc, President of the New Brunswick Wildlife Federation.

    For more information or to arrange an interview, contact:

    Jon MacNeill, Conservation Council of New Brunswick: 458-8747 | 261-1353 | jon.macneill@conservationcouncil.ca  

    Sabine Dietz, Nature NB: 536-1260 | 536-7560 | sabine.dietz@bellaliant.net (bilingual)

    Andrew Clark, New Brunswick Federation of Woodlot Owners: 459-2990 | 324-3380 | andrewclark@xplornet.com

    Peter J Cronin, NB Salmon Council: 444-9012 | 238-4616 | pjcronin18@gmail.com

    Roberta Clowater, Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society, NB Chapter: 452-9902 | rclowater@cpaws.org

    Rod Currie, New Brunswick Wildlife Federation: 458-5643 | racurrie@nb.sympatico.ca
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