Comment
One in two Ontarians live near one of the 25 reactors that line the shores of the Great Lakes. With major nuclear accidents happening about once a decade globally, Ontario should be prepared to protect us in the event of a nuclear emergency. The Ontario government has historically chosen not to prepare for major nuclear emergencies. It has foolishly pretended major reactor accidents couldn’t happen Ontario or at neighbouring American reactors. This short-sightedness needs to stop.
The Ontario government should recognize public expectations for public safety, including putting in place measures to protect the public in the event of a Fukushima-scale accident.
Ontario should commit meet or exceed international best practices for nuclear emergency response planning and preparedness wherever feasible.
Ontario should match the best practice set by Switzerland and put in place emergency plans to protect the public in the event of an a level 7 accident on the International Nuclear Event Scale (INES).
Ontario should be able to protect drinking water supplies in the event of a nuclear accident at any of the twenty-five reactors that line the Great Lakes.
Ontario’s nuclear emergency response plan should be reviewed regularly and transparently.
Emergency plans need to be adapted to meet the special needs of vulnerable communities, such as the elderly or hospital patients.
Planning for major accidents means Ontario needs to expand emergency planning areas. Ontario should expand its evacuation zones to at least 20 km around each nuclear station to match real-world experience and the best practices set by other countries, such as Switzerland.
[Original Comment ID: 210600]
Submitted February 15, 2018 2:20 PM
Comment on
PNERP master plan update
ERO number
013-0560
Comment ID
2657
Commenting on behalf of
Comment status