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Ten Things to Know About the Giant Radioactive Waste Dump Coming to the Ottawa River

by Lynn Jones, Ottawa River Institute

The Ottawa River is a Canadian Heritage River that flows past Parliament Hill. It has untold value as a beautiful natural and historical treasure. The river is sacred for the Algonquin People whose ancestral territory it defines.


The Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CNSC), also known by many Canadians as Canada’s “nuclear industry-captured regulator,” recently approved a construction license for a giant radioactive mound beside the Ottawa River on the property of Chalk River Laboratories, 180 km northwest of Ottawa.

The giant radioactive mound is known as the ‘Near Surface Disposal Facility’ or “NSDF.”

1. The site is less than one km from the Ottawa River

2. The enormous mound would hold one million tons of radioactive and other hazardous waste

3. Algonquin First Nations and the Assembly of First Nations are opposed to the NSDF

4. Drinking water for millions of Canadians is threatened by the dump

5. There is no safe level of exposure to the radiation that would leak into the Ottawa River from the mound

6. Experts say the wastes will remain radioactive and hazardous for thousands of years

7. More than 140 municipalities in Quebec and Ontario are opposed to the NSDF

8. Canadian taxpayers are paying, but a multinational consortium is calling the shots

9. Construction of the NSDF would destroy critical habitat for protected species.

10. The waste needs to be cleaned up but there are better ways to do so.

Two legal challenges to the approval of the construction license for the NSDF were launched in February 2024, one by the Kebaowek First Nation and the other by Concerned Citizens of Renfrew County and Area, Ralliement contre la pollution radioactive and the Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility.

Readers who object to their tax dollars funding this dump should contact their federal MPs and let them know.


Lynn Jones is a founding member of the Ottawa River Institute, a non-profit, charitable organization based in the Ottawa Valley. ORI’s mission is to foster sustainable communities and ecological integrity in the Ottawa River watershed. A more detailed version of this article is available at https://concernedcitizens.net/

PHOTO: Courtesy Lynn Jones

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