Environmental groups slam deal allowing Nova Scotia to use coal plants past 2030
HALIFAX — Two environmental groups are slamming the recent agreement allowing Nova Scotia to use coal-fired electrical plants beyond the new federal deadline to phase them out by 2030.
The federal-provincial deal was touted as recognition of the work Nova Scotia has already done to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, with the province having already met the national target of a 30 per cent reduction in emissions from 2005 by 2030.
But the Margaree Environmental Association and the Sierra Club Canada-Atlantic said Thursday the agreement would simply keep the province reliant on coal when it could do more to wean itself off fossil fuels faster.
“Many Nova Scotians like us are extremely concerned about the federal-provincial agreement to allow Nova Scotia to continue to burn coal rather than having a plan to shut down coal and pet-coke burning plants as soon as possible,” said Gretchen Fitzgerald, the national program director of Sierra Club Canada-Atlantic.


