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Soutien financier accordé aux universités de la Nouvelle-Écosse
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The Renewed Scrutiny of Trinity s Most Celebrated Philosopher, George Berkeley – The University Times
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Posted: Dec 22, 2020 11:20 AM AT | Last Updated: December 22, 2020
The goal of the trust is to develop new high-value products and business models through ecological forestry.(Michael Gorman/CBC)
Nova Scotia s $50-million Forestry Innovation Transition Trust has started paying out money.
Announced a year ago, the fund is intended to help the sector move toward sustainability and diversification in the wake of the closure of the Northern Pulp mill.
The funding announced Monday includes up to $2 million for the Nova Scotia Community College s multi-year forestry innovation voucher program, which allows new and existing businesses to develop new products and technology with the help of the college and its resources.
“They cut corners every day, every day,” said Justin Gee, vice-president of First Nations Engineering Services Ltd.
Gee said he encountered these recurring problems while overseeing the work of a construction firm, Kingdom Construction Limited (KCL), during the building of a water treatment plant 10 years ago in Wasauksing First Nation, along the eastern shore of Georgian Bay, about 250 kilometres north of Toronto.
“You have to be on them every step of the way,” said Gee, who was the contract administrator on the project. “You can’t leave them on their own.”
Today, this plant is among seven First Nations water and wastewater infrastructure projects in two provinces, funded by the federal government, that have all involved work by KCL, an Ontario-based firm.