Nova Scotia

Proposed container terminal on Strait of Canso gets deadline extension

The Nova Scotia government has given Melford International Terminal Inc. an extension until October 2024 to start construction on a container terminal in the Strait of Canso.

Nova Scotia government gives proponent until October 2024 to start construction

An artists drawing shows a ship loaded with shipping containers docked alongside a container terminal with dozens of other containers already unloaded.
An artist's drawing of a proposed shipping container terminal on the Strait of Canso. The Nova Scotia government has given the project's backers an additional two years to start construction. (Melford International Terminal Inc.)

The Nova Scotia government has given the proponents of a container terminal in the Strait of Canso another two years to get their project off the ground.

According to the most recent deadline extension, the province is giving Melford International Terminal Inc. until October 2024 to start construction on the $350-million project that has been under consideration for 15 years along the coast in Guysborough County.

The deadline extension is a routine part of working in the global shipping industry, said Richie Mann, the company's vice-president of marketing.

Still, the project is getting closer to launching before the October 2024 deadline, he said.

"The start of construction has never been truly defined, but is it realistic? Absolutely," Mann said. "We are still proceeding with the project. The development is still in the works."

The deadline is part of an agreement struck after the province sold some land to the Melford proponents, subject to several conditions.

Latest in a series of delays

Mann said previous delays have been due to worldwide shipping conditions, but lately the indicators have been moving in Melford's favour.

Trade routes are shifting from the Pacific to the Atlantic and some West Coast ports are suffering from congestion.

The result has been an overall increase in East Coast shipping volumes, Mann said.

But the decision to begin building a terminal means looking ahead 75 to 100 years, rather than basing it on a snapshot of the current business climate, he said.

"It's looking at economic forecasts, it's looking at trends and it's looking at partners who have the same vision and who are willing to make investments and we're optimistic ... that the time is good and that this project will proceed."

Mann said he is convinced construction of the terminal will start before the latest deadline expires.

"The proponents of this project and obviously the investors who have continued to fund our progress and our operations have never lost their belief that this project makes a lot of sense, that it can be beneficial to Canada, particularly East Coast Canada, and that it's sustainable and it addresses a lot of the changing demographics in the shipping industries," he said.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Tom Ayers

Reporter/Editor

Tom Ayers has been a reporter and editor for 38 years. He has spent the last 20 covering Cape Breton and Nova Scotia stories. You can reach him at tom.ayers@cbc.ca.

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