Sunday, 4 September 2022

Oil and gas wellfield that fuelled Moncton to be shut down

http://oldmaison.blogspot.com/2005/09/sussex-gold-found-and-bernard-lords.html 

 

David R. Amos said... Here is the real reason Hamm quit it is at the very bottom of this particular blog. This email is also why the dudes in Fredericton are so nervous these days. Simply put I'm back. I can only wonder how long this Blog will remain before Chucky Leblanc deletes it in order to cover up the public corruption he secretly supports.

----- Original Message -----
From: David Amos
To: bsharpe@nl.rogers.com ; davidamos@bsn1.net ; duffy@ctv.ca ; martine.turcotte@bell.ca ; news@ctv.ca ; am@ctv.ca ; diane.bourque@flsc.ca ; jcrosbie@pattersonpalmer.ca ; gbyrne@pattersonpalmer.ca ; corp.website@sunlife.com ; cynthia.merlini@dfait-maeci.gc.ca ; shickman@pattersonpalmer.ca ; lrikleen@Bowditch.com ; John.Conyers@mail.house.gov ; smay@pattersonpalmer.ca ; bmosher@mosherchedore.ca ; carterweb@emory.edu ; Robert.Creedon@state.ma.us ; Brian.A.Joyce@state.ma.us ; parkhill@stu.ca ; plee@stu.ca ; billestabrooks@navnet.net ; kentlib@nbnet.nb.ca ; police@fredericton.ca ; wickedwanda3@adelphia.net ; marno3@shaw.ca ; cmgstjohns@nf.aibn.net
Cc: guild@interlog.com ; ombudsman@cbc.ca ; lise@cmg.ca ; pacificpalate@telus.net ; ajehman@hotmail.com ; maureen_matthews@cbc.ca ; gerry@cmg.ca ; bvessey@pei.eastlink.ca ; sallypitt@hotmail.com ; garyparsons@nfld.net ; neilmac@vzw.blackberry.net ; deesdee@yahoo.com ; shawk_1999@yahoo.com ; cari_blanchard@yahoo.com ; cturner@nbnet.nb.ca ; briann@accesswave.ca ; mplaurin@sympatico.ca ; lebelb@nbnet.nb.ca ; slmsmbouchard@hotmail.com ; maurice10@rogers.com ; m.meldrum@ns.sympatico.ca ; twomech@nb.sympatico.ca ; dugasp28@hotmail.com ; embateman@hotmail.com ; sawebb@hotmail.com ; pgcastle@hotmail.com ; newschick@hotmail.com ; oldmaison@yahoo.com
Sent: Tuesday, October 04, 2005 1:19 AM
Subject: Fwd: Re: This is who I am Bobby Baby. Read it and weep.


I had to respond to this. Brian Gaudet should have read my last email before bouncing it back to me with his insults. I was already gone. At least this Frenchman, sounds more like a proper Maritimer. Yet if he was going to spout off to me he should have been man enough to say it front of the rest of you too. Let us all see if he has truly Billy Gates blocking me after trying to pick a fight with me. Yahoo will tell the tale on that. That said, I do admire that he defends his wife's name and is willing to fight about it even if he does not understand the issues. That is honourable but dumb. I was confused that the email address said two mech so I suspect that he may be a mechanic just like me and not any sort of lawyer or newsman either. I like that as well.
It seems he has been raised on the four F's just like me. Only thing is I ain't hiding behind an electronic mask like he said. If he had bothered to read I had even inserted my phone number. I will be coming to Sackville very soon but by then your protests will likely be over and I would be met with the indifference that I was faced with last year. So I will bother you all no more even though I will be forwarding and blogging this email in many other places. It is the same methods that the locked out people employed to bring CBC to the table. they have no right to put down my actions against them. I do not wish to speak to the CBC or the employees about a lawsuit I am filing against the Crown because of their actions against me. That would be kinda dumb even for a Maritimer don't you think? I would rather have spoken to pissed off people CBC had locked out of work. It made far more sense to me.
I have many friends in the Sackville area. Perhaps Frenchy should ask around about me to some mechanics he may know to see if most folks who know me well think me to be a liar. He should not rely on CBC to find out the truth about me. To offset any confrontations from people he did not know, Frenchy should have told his wife not to use his email address. If he did not want to be bothered by people she and her other CBC buddies had ignored last year during the last federal election he should have told me out of the gate that he was not his wife. She could have gotten her own hotmail account like my eleven year old in Amherst just did. Instead she used her husband's email to tell the world on the internet that she was actively protesting being out of work? She was soliticiting our support for her plight but in the next electronic breath her husband proves that they care about nobody else? CBC and all of its reporters are the bullshitters in this matter not me. They are self centered greedy bastards also.
CBC does have a mandate to give all people running for a seat in Parliament equal time not just the people the reporters want to win. That is the law and their mandate as a Crown Corp. In case you are reading this Brian Gaudet talk tough all you wish. I don't scare easy because I am too dumb to know fear. Ask the Secret Service who tried to take me away to Cuba over two years ago or the jailers who threw me in the hole last year because I was pretty pissed off if I am a chickenshit or not. Because I display no fear people label me as crazy in order to make themselves feel better about their own cowardice. I have walked the walk for far too long to be frightened by anyone now. I live each day as my last. Only integrity surprises me now. It is a rare thing to find combined with age and power.
If you don't believe me or think I am harrassing you in any way why not call the RCMP or sue me French?. Bring along this email to prove how I have offended you. I will love to argue the Crown about it in court. I will bring along what I served upon the CBC in Saint John while I was running for Parliament last year. It should make for an interesting argument that CBC will not report. Their lawyers have not answered me yet but many others have and know tha CBC got my material too. It appears that i must sue to get an answer as to why the CBC ignored its mandate.
Frenchy I would prefer to meet your lawyer face to face in court in a civil lawsuit rather than duke it out on the street with you and inspire another criminal matter. Besides I have too much to lose even if I won such a senseless thing in court or in the street. You are another ordinary asshole like me. There is no need to battle with you. I am getting too old for such nonsense now but I will certainly defend myself from anyone. If you wish to pursue the matter be forewarned that I don't fight fair anymore. If perchance I lose I am very big on getting even. My battles are never over until that happens. What I teach my son also holds true for me. I tell him to never back down from anyone because it is too expensivee to one's own pride and you will have to run from bullies your whole life. In truth a brawl proves nothing at all except how dumb we can be. Nevertheless like hockey fighting can be a great sport sometimes. Confused? Me too. what do you teach your son Frenchy?
Like you Frenchy I prefer face to face confrontations but only in front of many witnesses these days so that nobody can accuse me of saying or doing anything wrong. If you wish to fight, call the cops first and announce your intentions then all that I ask of you is that you throw the first swing so that my actions will be in defence. Is that OK with you Frenchy??????
You are right about one thing though. Nobody cares. However it is not stupid of me to piss people off. It is merely one of those things I do that nobody seems to appreciate. It works like a charm to get others to prove to me that they are assholes. The big difference between an asshole like me and an asshole like you is that I care about what happens to others. You don't. If you disagree why not help another Maritimer by the name of Byron Prior. He needs all the help he can get. I don't. You don't even have to Google him. Read the portion of his his web site that was at the bottom of the second email I sent to you today. If you have any heart in you at all pick up the phone and call him to see if he is for real for yourself. I did the best I could to help him with his litigation against Billy Matthews and all his Newfy buddies while your wife's buddy Ian Hannamansing who is from Sackville only called Byron a liar while he was doing his big special in Newfoundland about justice last year.
If my memory of what Byron said about the show that night is correct, your wife's fellow CBC workers carefully edited Byron from any of their tapes shown on TV while the Attorney General Tommy Marshall's son sat right by his side and made it on TV. In my opinion the CBC dudes in Newfoundland should all be fired ASAP for that reason alone. That fact has nothing to do with me and my concerns whatsoever. All Canadians were denied the opportunity to hear what Byron Prior had to say about how justice is being served in the Maritimes. It should make no difference at all whether or not Hannamansing thought of Byron a lair. We all had the right to hear what he had to say after CBC had invited the public they work for to speak on TV. How else can we decide the truth about anything if we do not hear from all sides? This is a Democracy isn't it is free speech a myth on public TV? CBC does not have the right to to be judge and jury simply because they have the ability to edit tapes.
Get it Frenchy???????????
Here is my phone number again Frenchy 506 434 1379 if you wish to ask me any questions. I will not bother to look up yours. I do not care about you think anymore if you don't wish to speak man to man. I will do as you requested and merely leave you all alone just like I said in the last email I ever intended to send to any of the CBC crowd. Now that they are comfortably back at work editing the truth for Paul Martin's benefit not ours, I know it would be fruitless to approach them anymore.
Before you give me a call Frenchy, perhaps you should review email that you bounced back to me. For your education here is my face as well and an article about me in a local paper then ask yourself why the CBC reporters ignored an interesting little circus.
I ain't hiding and I ain't a lair. I am just another Maritime asshole just like you Frenchy. You should understand me as being a simple, sincere and serious asshole even if you do not believe that I am a man with some pretty serious beefs against the corrupt justice system and the CBC that helps it in its malice towards us all. It is late and my rambling rant is over. As I wrote this I kept remmbering my encounters with the Frenchy from the far side of my hometown of Dorchester last year. His name is Charles LeBlanc. Man that bastard is full of hot air. I had to get this off my chest. I will sleep better with you dismissed from my mind too. Good luck with your own conscience from now on. Say Hey to Chucky Leblanc for me will ya> Like you he is blocking my emails after sending me a flood of them last year. I will lay odds your wife knows of him. The Maritimes ain't that big a place and he is quite a bragger.
Veritas Vincit
David Raymond Amos

----- Original Message -----
> > > > From: "McKnight, Gisele" McKnight.Gisele@kingscorecord.com
> > > > To: lcampenella@ledger.com
> > > > Cc:motomaniac_02186@hotmail.com
> > > Sent: Tuesday, March 22, 2005 2:53 PM
> > > > Subject: David Amos
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > > Hello Lisa,
> > > > > David Amos asked me to contact you. I met him last June after he
> > became
> > > an
> > > > > independent (not representing any political party) candidate in our
> > > > federal
> > > > > election that was held June 28.
> > > > >
> > > > > He was a candidate in our constituency of Fundy (now called
> > > Fundy-Royal).
> > > > I
> > > > > wrote a profile story about him, as I did all other candidates. That
> > > story
> > > > > appeared in the Kings County Record June 22. A second story, written
> > by
> > > > one
> > > > > of my reporters, appeared on the same date, which was a report on
> the
> > > > > candidates' debate held June 18.
> > > > >
> > > > > As I recall David Amos came last of four candidates in the election.
> > The
> > > > > winner got 14,997 votes, while Amos got 358.
> > > > >
> > > > > I have attached the two stories that appeared, as well as a photo
> > taken
> > > by
> > > > > reporter Erin Hatfield during the debate. I couldn't find the photo
> > that
> > > > > ran, but this one is very similar.
> > > > >
> > > > > Gisele McKnight
> > > > > editor A1-debate A1-amos,David for MP 24.doc debate
2.JPG
> > > > > Kings County Record
> > > > > Sussex, New Brunswick
> > > > > Canada
> > > > > 506-433-1070
> > > > >
> > > >
> > >
Raising a Little Hell- Lively Debate Provokes Crowd

By Erin Hatfield

"If you don't like what you got, why don't you change it? If your world is all screwed up, rearrange it."

The 1979 Trooper song Raise a Little Hell blared on the speakers at the 8th Hussars Sports Center Friday evening as people filed in to watch the Fundy candidates debate the issues. It was an accurate, if unofficial, theme song for the debate.

The crowd of over 200 spectators was dwarfed by the huge arena, but as they chose their seats, it was clear the battle lines were drawn. Supporters of Conservative candidate Rob Moore naturally took the blue chairs on the right of the rink floor while John Herron's Liberalswent left. There were splashes of orange, supporters of NDP Pat Hanratty, mixed throughout. Perhaps the loudest applause came from a row towards the back, where supporters of independent candidate David Amos sat.

The debate was moderated by Leo Melanson of CJCW Radio and was organized by the Sussex Valley Jaycees. Candidates wereasked a barrage of questions bypanelists Gisele McKnight of the Kings County Record and Lisa Spencer of CJCW.

Staying true to party platforms for the most part, candidates responded to questions about the gun registry, same sex marriage, the exodus of young people from the Maritimes and regulated gas prices. Herron and Moore were clear competitors,constantly challenging each other on their answers and criticizing eachothers’ party leaders. Hanratty flew under the radar, giving short, concise responses to the questions while Amos provided some food for thought and a bit of comic relief with quirky answers. "I was raised with a gun," Amos said in response to the question of thenational gun registry. "Nobody's getting mine and I'm not paying 10 cents for it."

Herron, a Progressive Conservative MP turned Liberal, veered from his party'splatform with regard to gun control. "It was ill advised but well intentioned," Herron said. "No matter what side of the house I am on, I'm voting against it." Pat Hanratty agreed there were better places for the gun registry dollars to be spent.Recreational hunters shouldn't have been penalized by this gun registry," he said.

The gun registry issues provoked the tempers of Herron and Moore. At one point Herron got out of his seat and threw a piece of paper in front of Moore. "Read that," Herron said to Moore, referring to the voting record of Conservative Party leader Steven Harper. According to Herron, Harper voted in favour of the registry on the first and second readings of the bill in 1995. "He voted against it when it counted, at final count," Moore said. "We needa government with courage to register sex offenders rather than register the property of law abiding citizens."

The crowd was vocal throughout the evening, with white haired men and women heckling from the Conservative side. "Shut up John," one woman yelled. "How can you talk about selling out?" a man yelled whenHerron spoke about his fear that the Conservatives are selling farmers out.

Although the Liberal side was less vocal, Kings East MLA Leroy Armstrong weighed in at one point. "You’re out of touch," Armstrong yelled to Moore from the crowd when the debate turned to the cost of post-secondary education. Later in the evening Amos challenged Armstrong to a public debate of their own. "Talk is cheap. Any time, anyplace," Armstrong responded.

As the crowd made its way out of the building following the debate, candidates worked the room. They shook hands with well-wishers and fielded questions from spectators-all part of the decision-making process for the June 28 vote.

Cutline – David Amos, independent candidate in Fundy, with some of his favourite possessions—motorcycles.

McKnight/KCR

The Unconventional Candidate

David Amos Isn’t Campaigning For Your Vote, But….

By Gisele McKnight

FUNDY—He has a pack of cigarettes in his shirt pocket, a chain on his wallet, a beard at least a foot long, 60 motorcycles and a cell phone that rings to the tune of "Yankee Doodle."

Meet the latest addition to the Fundy ballot—David Amos.

The independent candidate lives in Milton, Massachusetts with his wife and two children, but his place of residence does not stop him from running for office in Canada.

One has only to be at least 18, a Canadian citizen and not be in jail to meet Elections Canada requirements.

When it came time to launch his political crusade, Amos chose his favourite place to do so—Fundy.

Amos, 52, is running for political office because of his dissatisfaction with politicians.

"I’ve become aware of much corruption involving our two countries," he said. "The only way to fix corruption is in the political forum."

The journey that eventually led Amos to politics began in Sussex in 1987. He woke up one morning disillusioned with life and decided he needed to change his life.

"I lost my faith in mankind," he said. "People go through that sometimes in midlife."

So Amos, who’d lived in Sussex since 1973, closed his Four Corners motorcycle shop, paid his bills and hit the road with Annie, his 1952 Panhead motorcycle.

"Annie and I rode around for awhile (three years, to be exact) experiencing the milk of human kindness," he said. "This is how you renew your faith in mankind – you help anyone you can, you never ask for anything, but you take what they offer."

For those three years, they offered food, a place to sleep, odd jobs and conversation all over North America.

Since he and Annie stopped wandering, he has married, fathered a son and a daughter and become a house-husband – Mr. Mom, as he calls himself.

He also describes himself in far more colourful terms—a motorcyclist rather than a biker, a "fun-loving, free-thinking, pig-headed individual," a "pissed-off Maritimer" rather than an activist, a proud Canadian and a "wild colonial boy."

Ironically, the man who is running for office has never voted in his life.

"But I have no right to criticize unless I offer my name," he said. "It’s alright to bitch in the kitchen, but can you walk the walk?"

Amos has no intention of actively campaigning.

"I didn’t appreciate it when they (politicians) pounded on my door interrupting my dinner," he said. "If people are interested, they can call me. I’m not going to drive my opinions down their throats."

And he has no campaign budget, nor does he want one.

"I won’t take any donations," he said. "Just try to give me some. It’s not about money. It goes against what I’m fighting about."

What he’s fighting for is the discussion of issues – tainted blood, the exploitation of the Maritimes’ gas and oil reserves and NAFTA, to name a few.

"The political issues in the Maritimes involve the three Fs – fishing, farming and forestry, but they forget foreign issues," he said. "I’m death on NAFTA, the back room deals and free trade. I say chuck it (NAFTA) out the window.

NAFTA is the North American Free Trade Agreement which allows an easier flow of goods between Canada, the United States and Mexico.

Amos disagrees with the idea that a vote for him is a wasted vote.

"There are no wasted votes," he said. "I want people like me, especially young people, to pay attention and exercise their right. Don’t necessarily vote for me, but vote."

Although…if you’re going to vote anyway, Amos would be happy to have your X by his name.

"I want people to go into that voting booth, see my name, laugh and say, ‘what the hell.’"



Brian Gaudet twomech@nb.sympatico.ca wrote:

From: "Brian Gaudet" twomech@nb.sympatico.ca
To: "David Amos" motomaniac_02186@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: This is who I am Bobby Baby. Read it and weep.
Date: Mon, 3 Oct 2005 21:41:47 -0300

Listen, asshole.......This is not Suzanne's email it is her husband. I certainly don't care for the remarks that you are making about her. Having said that, I asked you once politely to remove us from your list. I will have blocked you by now, so I will not have to put up with your e-mails or bullshit any longer...................But I am not one for emails anyway.........I prefer to talk face to face............So you can't hide behind this electronic mask.............Do You get it???????????? I would not hide from a pathetic waste of oxygen such as you antway. People just don't care............Understand............No body cares about you and your stupidity..................Go AWAY...........

 

 

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/oil-wellfield-moncton-shutdown-orlen-1.6568078 

 

Oil and gas wellfield that fuelled Moncton to be shut down

Company seeking environmental approval to decommission 44 oil and gas wells in the Moncton region

ORLEN Upstream Canada Ltd. has filed an environmental impact assessment to decommission 44 oil and gas wells, some that still produce crude oil sent to the Irving Oil refinery in Saint John.

The request seeks to plug the wells and remediate the area around the wellheads in southeastern New Brunswick.

"Combined with rising crude oil prices and a move towards decarbonizing the Canadian economy, ORLEN has decided to concentrate its exploration and development operations to higher yield, more diverse oil and gas reserves in Western Canada and around the world and to decommission low producing or unviable operations," says a 228-page document filed this summer by Dillon Consulting.

No one from the company's Canadian operations or its parent company based in Poland provided interviews requested at the start and end of August.

Examples of inactive oil and gas wellheads that would be decommissioned as part of the plan to shut down the wellfield. (Dillon Consulting)

ORLEN is one of the few companies extracting oil and gas in the province. Headwater Exploration, previously known as Corridor Resources, has a natural gas well east of Sussex that became a focal point in the debate about shale gas about a decade ago.

ORLEN's plan would close a chapter on New Brunswick's early hydrocarbon industry. 

The document filed with the province's Department of the Environment and Local Government at the end of July lays out a history of the wellfield the company is seeking to decommission.

It says initial exploration in New Brunswick began in 1858 with shallow wells in the Memramcook area on the east side of the Petitcodiac River, but work stopped when vast reserves were discovered in Pennsylvania the following year.

Exploration of the Stoney Creek portion of the wellfield, on the west side of the Petitcodiac, began in 1908 and it produced natural gas until 1991.

Orange dots mark the locations of oil and gas wells that would be decommissioned if the province gives approval for the work proposed to wrap up by 2027. (Dillon Consulting)

The wellfield supplied natural gas to nearby Hillsborough and north to Moncton through a 14-kilometre pipeline.

Sophie Cormier, Moncton's director of culture and heritage, said it was a significant selling point for the city.

"The city used to advertise itself as the city with natural gas," Cormier said. "Moncton was the only city in the east that had a gas field and that had production that they were able to sell."

Cormier said the availability of gas to heat and light homes and businesses drew industry to the area. One of the biggest customers was the Canadian Government Railways workshops, the nationalized railway headquartered in Moncton that, according to the Canadian Society for Civil Engineering, later became Canadian National (CN) Railway.

                                         A photo from about 1910 provided by the Albert County Museum of one of the wells in the Stoney Creek area. (Albert County Museum/Submitted)

A 1994 Times-Transcript newspaper story recounts that during the First World War, "underground mains provided citizens with this wonderfully cheap form of energy.

"Considering the ever increasing war-time demand for coal and wood, Moncton became known as 'the city with natural gas.'"

The story said there were more than 3,100 customers by 1917.

After the war, however, the story notes estimates of the natural gas reserves were overestimated and supply needed to be curtailed. 

Eventually commercial customers were cut off, and by the 1950s "the ever-diminishing supply and ever-increasing prices had swept aside past dreams of cheap, limitless energy."

"The dream of making it like Pittsburgh or other cities that really relied on gas for their industry was just not possible," Cormier said. 

                                                         An active gas well in the Stoney Creek area slated to be decommissioned. (Dillon Consulting)

Later, Irving Oil held a lease on the wellfield. Between 2005 and 2008, Irving decommissioned 42 wells. Some were later reactivated by Contact Exploration Inc., which also drilled new wells and built a storage facility in Stoney Creek.

The last well was drilled in 2010. In 2014, Contact merged with another to form Kicking Horse Energy Inc. ORLEN bought that company the following year.

"ORLEN has indicated their desire to decommission the wells that remain in ORLEN's care, and to eventually completely exit the region," the document states. 

The primary wellfield with 17 active and 18 inactive wells is in Stoney Creek, several kilometres south of Moncton. Five inactive wells are farther south near Hillsborough. 

Two inactive wells are on the east side of the Petitcodiac River near Memramcook, and two other inactive wells are in Monteagle, north of Salisbury.

Crude trucked to Irving refinery

All of the wells are on privately owned land. Those landowners received lease payments because of the wells.

Crude oil from the active wells is collected at the storage site before being trucked to the Irving Oil refinery in Saint John.

Crude oil is stored in holding tanks in Stoney Creek before being trucked to the Irving Oil refinery in Saint John. (Dillion Consulting)

"The economic viability of the remaining wells for production is limited in the current and expected future economic climate," the environmental impact assessment document states. 

"There is simply insufficient production in the active wells, and limited potential for additional development, to take advantage of economies of scale at this wellfield that are required for a stable and viable operation in an ever-changing and volatile global oil and gas market."

The document says decommissioning would involve placing cement plugs at various depths in the wells, capping the casing and removing any surface infrastructure. Any contaminated soil from the well sites would be removed and sent to an approved disposal facility.

The document says if approval is granted, work is expected to start this year and be complete by 2027.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Shane Magee

Reporter

Shane Magee is a Moncton-based reporter for CBC. He can be reached at shane.magee@cbc.ca.

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices

 

28 Comments
Commenting is now closed for this story.
 
 
Buford Wilson
I had no idea there were producing wells in New/Nouveau-Brunswick.
It's a dagum shame to shut them down.  
 
 
 
Toby Tolly
beautifully written booklet cover
n'est past?
 
 
Jim Redmond
Reply to @Toby Tolly: What does nest past mean?
 
 
Toby Tolly
Reply to @Jim Redmond: means I wasn't proof reading what I typed'ed
 
 
 
Jim Redmond
Will anyone thank the oil and gas companies for fueling the economic development of North America for a hundred years. I sure will.

 

 

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/blue-green-algae-nb-1.6569891 

 

Blue-green algae bloom detected in Belleisle Bay

The bloom has high levels of anatoxin-a, which is also known as 'very fast death factor'

A water test on Monday confirmed high levels of anatoxin-a, at 2.5 parts per billion, along the Hatfield Point Trail behind the cemetery. Colin Forsythe, the executive director of the non-profit group, said there should be no trace of the toxin in a normal reading.

Forsythe said anatoxin-a is also known as "very fast death factor." 

If consumed, he said it can have a serious impact on the central nervous system. 

"In significant quantities the toxin can kill you in minutes of respiratory paralysis," he said. "So if you ingested too much of it, you'd lose your coordination, have muscle spasms, convulsions, and eventually you wouldn't be able to breathe."

Forsythe said he doesn't know anyone locally who has died from anatoxin-a, but it has been killed several dogs in the province. 

A middle-aged man in a blue collared shirt looks at the camera. He is standing on a rocky beach. Colin Forsythe, the executive director of the Belleisle Watershed Coalition, said climate change is contributing to changes that create the perfect environment for cyanobacteria to bloom. (Katie Hartai/CBC)

Veterinarian Shanna-Lynn Neily at the Kennebecasis Valley Animal Hospital said ingesting the toxin can quickly become life-threatening for dogs. 

"In some cases, if they've had very small amounts ... with rapid intervention they can do quite well, but usually if they've had higher doses, it's within a few hours that they can go into shock and they can die," she said. 

Neily recommends pet owners avoid areas known to have cyanobacteria blooms. 

"If you know there's an algae bloom in the area, don't take your animal to that water source. It's just it's not worth it to risk it," she said. "Go to water sources that we know are safe."

If a pet does consume cyanobacteria, Neily said it's important to get them to a veterinarian as quickly as possible. 

More toxic than July's bloom

Forsythe said most often, cyanobacteria blooms in New Brunswick appear on the surface and look like little green flecks of paint. The current bloom however, is benthic, meaning it's along the bottom of the riverbed. He said it looks like clumps of dark green, brown, or even black vegetation that will become lighter in colour once it washes ashore and dries. 

These mats are about half a kilometre away from where another cyanobacterial bloom was confirmed by the coalition in July. This is the only new cyanobacteria bloom reported by the province in 2022. 

Clumpy green algae beneath the water's surface. The current cyanobacteria bloom is benthic, meaning it’s along the bottom of the riverbed. (Submitted by Colin Forsythe)

Forsythe said the July bloom contained different toxins. 

"We did not detect anatoxin-a there. We detected low levels of a toxin called microcystin," he said. "That would likely not be fatal to any adults, but potentially pets. Most adults would experience nausea, gastrointestinal pain, stuff like that."

Anatoxin-a is fairly rare in New Brunswick at this time, but Forsythe expects it will become more common.

"Human-induced climate change … is allowing us to have warmer temperatures and more frequent intense rain events that help to create the perfect environment for cyanobacteria blooms," he said.

Forsythe said the Belleisle Watershed Coalition will continue to monitor the Hatfield Point water until it tests negative. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Katie Hartai is a reporter based out of Saint John. Her favourite stories to tell involve the environment and mental health. Contact her at katie.hartai@cbc.ca.

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices

 

12 Comments
Commenting is now closed for this story.
 
 
 
Derek Grant
Hard to believe that Belleisle Bay is the only new hotspot. It seems to be thriving everywhere these days. Kennebecasis Bay seems more "aglow" this summer, although the area around the RYC remains the only official designated Blue-green algae on the river
 
 
 
 
Richard Ames
It seems that humans won't be happy until we cannot swim in the water, sit on the grass, wander the forests, and breathe the air.
 
 
Sting Napal
Reply to @Richard Ames: When the last tree has been cut, the last fish caught, and the last river poisoned - only then will we realize that humans taste like pork.
 
 
 
 
Daniel Torrance 
Has the practice of largescale widespread spraying of Glysophate been looked at as a potential factor in the increase of these blooms?
 
 
Bob Smith
Reply to @Daniel Torrance: No. They know the cause of these blooms generally and don't investigate theories lacking in substance.
 
 
Daniel Torrance 
Reply to @Bob Smith: Why would it be lacking in substance? Do you think the great quantities of Glysophate has a positive effect?
"Many studies have found a natural resistance of cyanobacteria and blue-green algae to glyphosate in the sense that they're not affected by the presence of glyphosate, and they can actually use glyphosate as a resource to proliferate,"
 
 
Bob Smith
Reply to @Daniel Torrance: Your sentence reads that the bacteria isn't affected by glyphosate and also is affected by it at the same time. Yeah, that's definitive talk there...maybe those studies need tweaking by science and facts.
 
 
Daniel Torrance
Reply to @Bob Smith: Maybe they do Bob, who am I to say? This came from a CBC article from last year in Nova Scotia, so some study must've gone into it I would guess. Not a theory without substance but still a theory like everything else.
 
 
Daniel Torrance 
 
 
 
 
 
John Reist
what causes it and does it effect wildlife such as deer?
 
 
 
 
 
Eddy Jay
Cue the climate change greeniacs.  
 
 
Richard Ames
Reply to @Eddy Jay: Is this a way of trying to silence those who believe in climate change? Do you make such comments because you are unable to debate the topic based on the facts and merits of the actual subject matter?
Just one other question: when we made drastic cuts to sulfur dioxide in both the US and Canada (Acid Rain Treaty) and therefore almost eliminated acid rain in North America, do you not feel/think that we are much better off?

 

 

 

 

 

No comments:

Post a Comment