Quebec pressured to cut arsenic emissions from copper factory and preserve 650 jobs
MONTREAL — Quebec’s government is facing pressure to reduce arsenic levels in the air of a small northwestern city that is home to a copper foundry employing 650 people but emitting 33 times the provincewide standard of arsenic emissions.
A study released Wednesday by Quebec’s public health institute said that if the factory in Rouyn-Noranda, Que., doesn’t reduce the concentration of arsenic in its emissions, between one and 14 additional residents could develop cancer by the year 2060.
Public health director Dr. Luc Boileau visited the city Wednesday and told reporters, “We can’t find it acceptable that a population is subject to this risk.”
Boileau’s visit came after the publication of an open letter earlier in the week by 50 health professionals urging Quebec to address the high level of air pollution in the city caused by the factory — the Fonderie Horne — which has been in operation since 1927. Boileau’s visit also came as the factory’s certification is set to expire and as the province begins negotiations with the company regarding a new emissions cap.


