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N.S. government says new rules for mining projects will speed up approvals

HALIFAX — Nova Scotia's government is streamlining the approval process for potential metal mining projects after they go through an environmental assessment.
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Excavators work at Atlantic Gold Corporation's Touquoy open pit gold mine in Moose River Gold Mines, N.S. on Tuesday, June 6, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Andrew Vaughan

HALIFAX — Nova Scotia's government is streamlining the approval process for potential metal mining projects after they go through an environmental assessment.

Environment Minister Timothy Halman announced changes Friday to the "industrial approval" process, which sets rules for the daily operations of a mine, and the monitoring of environmental requirements.

Halman told a news conference in Halifax that his government's new "phased" approach allows applicants to submit some details about their plans after their projects have been approved. For example, a company will be able to submit erosion- and sedimentation-control plans after its project's approval but before construction on the mine begins.

As well, Halman said his department will create a new specialized team to handle all mining files to ensure timely processing of requests.

The minister said the changes will help projects begin more quickly and maintain environmental standards.

“What's being presented to you today is years and years of listening to companies asking for greater clarity and greater predictability and we’ve delivered that today,” he said.

The Mining Society of Nova Scotia said in a release the industry welcomes the changes and hopes they will "improve the efficiency of the permitting process."

However, Karen McKendry, wilderness outreach co-ordinator at the Ecology Action Centre, said in an interview Friday that the Progressive Conservative government hasn’t made needed improvements to transparency in the industrial approval process.

The public can’t view documents related to industrial approval applications until after they’ve been approved, she said. “All of the details about water monitoring and air monitoring and protecting wildlife are very opaque … There’s no public input."

In addition, she said, “under the industrial approval process, the details of how a project operates can be changed over and over again without anybody finding out about it.”

She said that while the government is committing to shortening timelines for industry, it has ignored appeals for changes that “serve the environment or the public” by giving citizens more opportunity to comment on potential projects.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 13, 2025.

Michael Tutton, The Canadian Press

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