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February 25, 2026

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Not low hazard

Not low hazard

The Equity

Dear Editor,

Canadian Nuclear Laboratories (CNL) has placed an ad in THE EQUITY on Aug. 28, claiming that it has . . .

“conducted remarkable work over the past 60 years, including the production of lifesaving medical isotopes, and the development of CANDU reactors…” But in fact, CNL has existed only five years and played virtually no role in this work. The Harper government created CNL in May 2014 as a subsidiary of the federal crown corporation Atomic Energy of Canada Limited (AECL). In September 2015, it gave a group of Canadian and foreign corporations all CNL shares, along with a 10-year contract to run Chalk River and other federal nuclear sites. Two U.S. corporations, Fluor and Jacobs, and one Canadian corporation, SNC Lavalin, now own CNL.

During its 62-year history between 1952 and 2014, AECL carried out research in nuclear physics, accelerator physics and materials science, developed nuclear reactors, produced plutonium for U.S. nuclear weapons, and produced medical isotopes. Today AECL is only a 40-person shell that funnels roughly a billion dollars of federal tax money each year to CNL and the corporations that own it.

We would also like to point out that the “low-level waste” that CNL wants to pile up in a giant mound beside the Ottawa River is not “low hazard.” It includes many long-lived radionuclides such as plutonium that can be deadly if inhaled or ingested and non radioactive hazardous substances such as PCBs, asbestos and arsenic. For more detail on what the term “low level waste” means, please see the fact sheet “Quick Facts about Low Level Waste” at www.concernedcitizens.net.

Lynn Jones, Concerned Citizens of

Renfrew County and Area

Johanna Echlin, Old Fort William Cottagers’ Association



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