Lafarge Canada invests in monitoring systems to help fuels bid

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Canada: As it awaits industrial approval from the Province to burn tyres at its Nova Scotia cement plant, Lafarge Canada says it has spent US$830,000 to install emissions monitoring systems. The company says its new equipment measures plant emissions such as sulphur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, oxygen, and total hydrocarbons every 10 seconds.

Rob Cumming, Lafarge's environment director, says the company's proposed one year pilot project at its Brookfield plant will allow it to gather the scientific evidence needed to assure the public that it is safe to use scrap tyres as a replacement for coal.

In October 2017, the Environment Department said it was reviewing the company's application and would make a decision on the project within 60 days. The project has drawn criticism from residents near the plant, environmental groups and Nova Scotia's NDP, which has called on the Liberal government to ban tyre burning.

Last modified on 29 November 2017

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