Letter: Reader says councillor’s comments reflect troubling pattern
To the Editor,
Councillor Curry’s support for the Marchurst BESS project reflects a troubling pattern: framing industrial energy infrastructure as inevitable while glossing over serious safety, environmental, and governance concerns.
Her statements are not grounded in the realities of the proposed site: a rural residential area surrounded by protected wetlands, reliant on private wells, livestock stewards and in some areas with only one road in or out in the event of an evacuation protocol.
Let’s start with the facts. A 250 megawatt Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) is a Class II industrial facility, not a green energy generator. It does not reduce emissions or create renewable power: it moves electricity around the grid. The Ontario Energy Board does not recognize grid-scale BESS as “generation,” and Evolugen has not provided a single document proving net environmental benefit.
Curry’s claims this project is urgently needed for the tech park are speculative. The proposed Marchurst BESS is 10 to 12 kilometres away from the business district. There is no direct feed into Kanata North. No tech company has publicly stated their operations depend on this BESS, and many, as Curry herself notes, are pursuing on-site battery systems. If the need is so critical, why aren’t these facilities being built within the urban footprint, on industrial land zoned for this purpose?
The safety claims are equally questionable. Lithium iron phosphate batteries may be more stable than other chemistries, but they are not fireproof. Recent global incidents, including multi-day BESS fires with toxic smoke plumes, show that fire suppression is complex, and standard firefighting equipment is not always sufficient. Ottawa Fire Services may have been superficially consulted, but there is no publicly available BESS-specific response plan, no public HazMat training protocol, and no assurance that rural residents will be safe if a failure occurs.
Curry’s reference to underground reservoirs as a safeguard for groundwater contamination is misleading. These containment systems are only effective under certain failure modes, and do not account for catastrophic system breaches, chemical leaching over time, or stormwater overflow during firefighting operations. There is also no published hydrogeological study demonstrating that the aquifer beneath the site is protected.
The suggestion that residents should stop opposing the project and instead negotiate for noise attenuation or recreation funds is deeply problematic. That is not consultation: that is soft coercion, wrapped in community grant promises. Rural communities should not be pressured to accept industrial risks in exchange for sports equipment.
This project is being advanced under a Class Environmental Assessment for minor transmission facilities, not the full environmental scrutiny it clearly warrants. That process mismatch alone should halt the project. Moreover, Councillor Curry’s portrayal of Evolugen’s outreach omits critical facts. Their staff members are registered lobbyists, not independent experts. Meetings with councillors are not acts of public education; they are orchestrated lobbying. And door-knocking campaigns and unsolicited flyer drops, often described by residents as intrusive and unwanted, are no substitute for fair, transparent consultation. Ottawa’s tech sector does need reliable energy. But that must be achieved through a responsible, honest process, and environmental accountability – not by offloading industrial-scale risks onto rural communities.
In conclusion, while Councillor Curry claims to have “read everything” there is to know about this project, the implication that her personal review outweighs the concerns of a highly skilled, professionally diverse rural population is both condescending and inaccurate. This community includes electrical engineers, surgeons, firefighters, floodplain planners, public health professionals, environmental lawyers, nature reserve managers, heavy equipment operators, livestock farmers, and many more folks far more knowledgeable than Curry on the precautions that concern a BESS of this size. There are the people who live and work on this land every day, who are busy in volunteer community working groups, fighting this BESS installment and who understand the risks not just on paper, but in practice. Dismissing their expertise with a series of “right?” punctuated soundbites doesn’t inspire confidence – it reveals a serious gap in how decision-makers are listening.
Leigh Fenton,
South March.
Unfortunately for councillor Curry, Leigh Fenton’s above letter has pretty much covered the concerns of most people in this area of West Carleton. Councillor Curry seems far more interested in the yearly $250,000.00 payment. Councillor Curry could receive that payment if she requested that the BESS be located behind Nordion on March road. Right behind Nordion, ( IN THE KANATA NORTH BUSINESS PARK) off Station road, is a OTTAWA HYDRO SUBSTATION. Councillor Curry should take a look at that sight and push for it to be placed there. I know she won’t because Kanata residents won’t stand for it. I doubt very much Sir Terry Mathews wants this anywhere near his business park either.
Follow the tax payers money on this one.