Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Federal Government to fund cleanup of buildings, debris on iconic Sable Island

Horses on Sable Island, N.S., are shown in this undated handout photo. The Canadian Press/HO - Parks Canada

Sable Island – the windswept sandbar off Nova Scotia famous for its wild horses and the world’s largest breeding colony of grey seals – is getting federal money for a cleanup.

Story continues below advertisement

Ottawa announced $3.4 million Monday to remove surplus buildings and other debris from Sable Island National Park Reserve, and to design energy measures to reduce fossil fuel consumption.

READ MORE: N.S. energy and mines minister touts Sable Offshore project as an ‘economic success’

The island has a centuries-long history of human inhabitants, and evidence of that history – such as unused buildings and debris, including hazardous debris – remain on the isolated island, posing a risk to its sensitive ecosystems.

Nova Scotia MP Sean Fraser, parliamentary secretary to the federal environment minister, says the project will help preserve the 42-kilometre-long island for future generations.

Dubbed the Graveyard of the Atlantic, some 350 vessels have wrecked on the island’s shores and hidden reefs since the mid-1700s.

WATCH: Environmental groups call for offshore-drilling ban off Sable Island

It is home to hundreds of namesake horses, which have roamed there since the 18th century and become synonymous with its romantic and untamed image.

Advertisement
Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article