Western Quebec smelter will reduce arsenic emissions to five times provincial norm
MONTREAL — Arsenic emissions at a western Quebec copper smelter will be reduced to five times the provincial norm by 2017 at a cost of around $500 million, the plant’s owner said Thursday.
Glencore, the Switzerland-based mining company that owns the Horne smelter in Rouyn-Noranda, Que., said it will ask for government aid to help fund the required changes at the factory, which is currently certified to emit 100 nanograms of arsenic per cubic metre of air — 33 times the provincewide standard.
“All companies, when they invest as much money as we are going to do, are always in talks with the government, that is what’s happening on our side; we are at the beginning of the talks,” Claude Bélanger, the chief operating officer of Glencore’s North American copper operations, told reporters.
However, he said the company has the means to fund the improvements itself. “That’s why our teams have started, we are not waiting for the government,” he said.

