Canada
Canada is the world's largest exporter of uranium and operates nuclear reactors including on the Great Lakes. Attempts are underway to introduce nuclear power to the province of Alberta and to use nuclear reactors to power oil extraction from the tar sands.
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Bicameral, bipartisan state legislators and members of congress take action to stop Canadian Great Lakes shoreline radioactive waste dumps
Would you bury poison beside your well?
So asks the group Stop the Great Lakes Nuclear Dump (STGLND), comprised of residents who live near Ontario Power Generation's (OPG) Bruce Nuclear Generating Station (BNGS) in Kincardine, on Ontario's Lake Huron shore, just over 50 miles from Michigan.
With nine atomic reactors on site, BNGS is the largest nuclear power plant on Earth.
Since 2002, OPG has schemed to bury Ontario's so-called "low-," and highly radioactive "intermediate-," level nuclear wastes, from 20 reactors across the province, at BNGS, less than a mile from the Lake Huron shore.
A large U.S.-Canadian environmental coalition, including Beyond Nuclear, has fought hard for two decades to block the insane proposal.
On Jan. 31, the very nearby Saugeen Ojibwe (First) Nation will hold a referendum on whether to accept OPG's offer of $150 million, in exchange for SON agreeing to "host" this DGR (short for Deep Geologic Repository; opponents sarcastically call it a DUD, short for Deep Underground Dump).
But in early December, Canada's Nuclear Waste Management Organization, comprised of three nuclear utilities and dominated by OPG, named three finalist sites, all in Ontario, still under consideration to become the country's high-level radioactive waste dump, for irradiated nuclear fuel from 22 reactors.
Two -- Huron-Kinloss and South Bruce -- are only 20 miles or so from BNGS, still near Lake Huron. The third, Ignace, is 150 miles northwest of Lake Superior.
In response, a bipartisan group of State of Michigan legislators has pushed back with a resolution opposing Great Lakes shoreline radioactive waste dumping.
So too has a bicameral, bipartisan U.S. congressional caucus.
In Congress, H. Res. 805, Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that the President and the Secretary of State should ensure that the Government of Canada does not permanently store nuclear waste in the Great Lakes Basin, has been introduced.
It already has 20 co-sponsors, 13 Democrats and seven Republicans from six Great Lakes States.
Urge your U.S. Representative to help protect the precious Great Lakes, drinking water supply for 40 million people, by co-sponsoring H. Res. 805.
You can reach your U.S. Rep.'s D.C. office, via the Capitol Switchboard, at (202) 224-3121.
Learn more, including links to news coverage, here.