CELA presented at a binational meeting of NGOs with Canada Water Agency/Environment and Climate Change Canada and US Environmental Protection Agency in response to the US and Canadian governments proposal not to designate radionuclides as a candidate chemical of mutual concern under the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement July 14 2025.
- John Jackson, Toxics Free Great Lakes Binational Network and Great Lakes Ecoregion Network & Theresa McClenaghan, Canadian Environmental Law Association, ” Nomination of Radionuclides under the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement” and “Adequacy of the Governance Framework for Canadian Nuclear Regulatory Oversight in the Great Lakes” please click here.
- Mary Olson, Generational Radiation Impact Project / GRIP, ” Large gaps in our understanding of radionuclide emissions on public health: the need for precaution and more data,” please click here.
- And references for the presentation “Large gaps in our understanding of radionuclide emissions on public health: the need for precaution and more data”, please click here.
The NGO nominations of radionuclides as a candidate chemical of mutual concern under the Great Lakes Water Qualtiy Agreement is inlcuded here as a letter and here as a submission in 2016 and was re-nominated here in 2022.
Presentation: Nominating Radionuclides as a Candidate Chemical of Mutual Concern under the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement
CELA presented at a binational meeting of NGOs with Canada Water Agency/Environment and Climate Change Canada and US Environmental Protection Agency in response to the US and Canadian governments proposal not to designate radionuclides as a candidate chemical of mutual concern under the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement July 14 2025.
The NGO nominations of radionuclides as a candidate chemical of mutual concern under the Great Lakes Water Qualtiy Agreement is inlcuded here as a letter and here as a submission in 2016 and was re-nominated here in 2022.
Share: