Bruce Power

Bruce nuclear plant unsafe, workers say: Half-tonne load of steel at facility falls 20 metres from crane by Robert Cribb, Toronto Star (June 29, 2009). Nearly half a tonne of steel plummeted 20 metres to the ground from atop a Bruce Power plant crane last month, narrowly missing workers below and raising safety concerns at the nuclear facility.Bruce Power proceeding with reactor site selection - article no longer available on the internet. (Saskatoon Star Phoenix, June 5, 2009) Bruce Power is moving full steam ahead with its plans for siting a nuclear reactor in Saskatchewan.If you want to read Bruce Power's feasibility study on nuclear power in Saskatchewan, you can download the document called Bruce Power's "Saskatchewan 2020. Clean Energy. New Opportunity"

Jim Harding has written a critique of the Bruce Power document called "The Nuclear Way: Fudging Statistics, Denying Emissions, Ignoring Water and Obscuring Energy Choices."

What Bruce Power won't be telling you about nuclear reactors on the North Saskatchewan River (March 2009). By Dr. Bill Adamson, retired University of Saskatchewan professor and member of the Inter-Church Uranium Committee.

Public barred from Bruce Power news conference in Saskatoon on company’s nuclear feasibility study, November 27, 2008. Read about it here.

Letter of Agreement between Duncan Hawthorne, Bruce Power CEO and Neil Collins, UDP member and Business Manager of IBEW Local 2067. The agreement outlines how the union and the company will work together to promote nuclear power in Saskatchewan. It also indicates that the coal fired power plants will not be replaced by nuclear. In the letter Hawthorne states "we have no intention of replacing any of the output from Sask Power facilities where IBEW 2067 members are currently employed."

Nuclear Disaster April 2007 by Energy Probe's Tom Adams, explores the implications for Ontario electricity users of the refurbishment of the Bruce A nuclear generating station.