NIPISSING—The Anishinabek Nation remains united and opposed to any deep geological nuclear waste repositories within its territory.
Grand Council Chief Patrick Madahbee says the Anishinabek Nation continues to support the 2010/30 Chiefs-in-Assembly resolution which states that the Anishinabek Nation opposes any deep geological nuclear waste repositories within the Anishinabek Nation territory.
“We respect federal minister of environment and climate change Catherine McKenna in requesting additional studies before she can make an environmental decision,” Chief Madahbee told the Anishinabek News in its February 23, 2016 edition. “However, it still does not change our position.”
Ontario Power Generation (OPG) was planning to bury low to intermediate level radioactive waste beside Lake Huron, within Saugeen Ojibway Nations territory.
Lake Huron supplies drinking water to millions of people in Canada and the US, and it is also a significant ecosystem that supports the livelihoods of the Anishinabek Nation. OPG is facing international opposition as 184 municipalities have passed resolutions opposing OPG’s proposal and proposed waste repository.
It was pointed out by Chief Madahbee that according to the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples-to which Canada is signatory-“States shall take effective measures to ensure that no storage or disposal of hazardous materials shall take place in the lands or territories of indigenous peoples without their free, prior and informed consent.”