HALIFAX — Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston says some anti-fracking protesters at a consultation session on the province’s onshore gas exploration plans drowned out voices of those who wanted to learn more about fossil fuel production.
A Halifax environmental advocacy group, on the other hand, says those voices represent just some of the many Nova Scotians who are concerned about environmental risks tied to fracking.
Houston posted his comments on social media, along with a short video of a consultation session in Windsor, N.S., held on Monday evening. In the 13-second video, protesters can be heard chanting: “no fracking, no fracking.”
Houston said some people “will hear those chants as opposition to jobs, economic growth, and investments in the public services people rely on, including health care.”
Fracking involves pumping a mix of water, sand and additives into wells at a very high pressure.
The premier said both perspectives, those opposed to fracking and those in favour of it, “are real, and both deserve space in this conversation.”
Houston’s government sparked that conversation more than a year ago when it introduced legislation lifting a ban on fracking in Nova Scotia, in place for over a decade.
The decision has the potential to create new jobs and economic opportunities, as well as trigger significant environmental impacts. The federal government has said more research is needed to answer questions about what happens to the air, land and water in areas where the fossil fuel companies operate.
Houston said his government lifted Nova Scotia’s moratorium on fracking to help the province better withstand economic challenges related to U.S. tariffs. He’s called blanket resource bans “lazy policy.”
But he said the actions of protesters could prevent the province from pursuing an important discussion about jobs, energy production as well as environmental concerns.
Nova Scotia tapped Dalhousie University to administer a $30 million program that will see university researchers and the private sector study the province’s estimated 198-billion cubic metres of onshore natural gas.
“Going forward, we will continue to hold these sessions, but the expectation is clear: they must be spaces where all Nova Scotians can speak — not just the loudest voices in the room,” Houston said.
Badia Nehme, an energy coordinator with Halifax’s Ecology Action Centre, said those protesters have legitimate concerns about the implications of fracking on the environment and in their communities.
“Nova Scotians are frustrated that they’re not being heard,” Nehme said in an interview Wednesday.







