Marineland Canada says site for planned whale refuge in Nova Scotia is too polluted
HALIFAX — A plan in Nova Scotia to build North America’s first coastal refuge for whales formerly kept in marine parks has come under fire from Marineland Canada.
The marine park in Niagara Falls, Ont. — the only venue in Canada that has captive whales — released a study this week alleging the proposed site for the Whale Sanctuary Project is too polluted.
Citing provincial studies, Marineland said the site in a bay near Port Hilford, N.S., has been contaminated by two toxic tailings dumps left behind by gold mines that operated between 1860 and 1939 in the historic Wine Harbour Gold District.
“Huge volumes of arsenic and mercury were dumped into open mine tailings for decades throughout the district … (and) the safety and stability of the two tailings dumps sites are not known, but it is believed they do not meet any modern environmental standard,” the study says.