In mid-September, the Pictou Landing First Nation band council filed a lawsuit against the province of Nova Scotia, Neenah Paper, Kimberly-Clark and Kimberly-Clark NS Inc., demanding action on Boat Harbour. The harbour is adjacent to the reserve and has been absorbing pulp processing effluent —currently about 95 million litres per day—for 44 years. The effluent is […]
Environment
Fear and Seeking in Nova Scotia
Chad Pelley, a novelist and Atlantic Canlit blogger out of St. John’s, recently wrote: “The world is ending. No one else seems concerned about the global freakshow of weather worldwide this last two years. Time to quit your job, kiss strangers and travel the world while you still can.” A few days later my uncle, […]
Xofa X-Mas
Without snow, Em insisted on a green Christmas. She laced her hiking boots, left her family at the city hotel and followed her guidebook’s thumbnail map to the bus station. A wavering finger pointed her to a strip of pavement on the far side of the parking lot. She sat on her daypack reading Aldo […]
Flying Into the Abyss
Four years ago I sat in a 1980s Norwegian airliner on a runway in Ghana. The second time the power went out I swore if I survived it would be my last flight. Two weeks later, I hopped a super-saver flight from London to Paris. These days I don’t go past Toronto. Every time I […]
Fast garbage
You’ve just finished your Big Mac. Like any conscientious consumer, you separate your waste and recycling before heading out. Feel like you’ve done your part for the environment? Those leftovers you put in the recycling might end up in the landfill. Some fast food restaurants in Halifax, such as McDonald’s and KFC, are not recycling […]
Halifax gets connected
“It’s freaking me out,” Steve Bedard says. “It’s too much of a shock to the system.” Bedard is on the board of the Halifax Cycling Coalition and he’s talking about two big wins for cyclists. In the same week, cyclists learned that Nova Scotia has become the first province to initiate a one-metre safety rule—motorists […]
Certifiably green
Six years ago, the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design green rating system came to Canada. The program is an international standardized way to assess the lifetime environmental impact of buildings. While no standardized system is flawless (who gets to decide what counts as green; can the same standards really apply everywhere?), LEED forces greenwashers […]
Don’t Fear the Coyote
Coyotes are the new bogeymen. They handily scare small children and simple-minded adults. OK, there’s a slight difference. Last year, bogeymen killed zero Nova Scotians. Coyotes didn’t kill any Nova Scotians either, but two coyotes killed one Toronto visitor—Taylor Mitchell—and that’s a tragic, unusual loss. It’s a tragedy for Mitchell and the people who love […]
We are all junkies
Before my son was born I was asked what I most wanted for him. “I want him to know who he is and where he belongs,” I said. Maybe that sounds more strict- father wannabe than liberal columnist. But I’ve come to believe that what sociologists call dislocation—essentially the loss of a sense of belonging—is the […]
Wasted Energy
A year ago this month the province created Efficiency Nova Scotia (ENSC), “an independent administrator to help Nova Scotians cut electricity use.” Responsibility for our energy efficiency will no longer be in the hands of a government department, but an independent body. Great idea. So far, ENSC is just ramping up: recruiting board members, hiring […]
Native green
Driving north from Halifax you’ve probably seen the 40-foot statue of Glooscap. Maybe you’ve seen it and thought, “At last, Tim Hortons, next exit.” In the statue’s shadow, on the outskirts of Truro, not far from the 102, across the road from an RV sales centre amid a business park, lies the Glooscap Heritage Centre. […]
Chinese puzzle
China’s not known as green, but a Canadian expert on Chinese renewable energy says we should watch and learn. It seemed safe to say China has a bad reputation on environment. It has 20 of the world’s most polluted cities. It’s crowded. There was an 11-day traffic jam on the Beijing-Tibet highway. Eleven days! (And […]

