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Home Energy

‘We were left in the dark’: Protesters challenge $3.5 billion Tantramar gas plant

by Bruce Wark
May 4, 2026
Reading Time: 3min read
A group of protesters walk down a wet road under umbrellas. In the foreground, a person wears a large, brown, sculpted moose head mascot. A man in an orange safety vest and hat reaches out to pet the moose head.

Protesters, including a local moose mascot, march along Route 940 on Friday morning, May 1, 2026, to protest the proposed $3.5B gas plant near Centre Village. Photo: Bruce Wark

About 60 protesters, including a moose mascot, gathered in the driving rain last Friday for a May Day rally at the entrance to the proposed 500 MW gas/diesel generating plant on the Chignecto Isthmus near Centre Village.

“No gas plant, no gas plant” and “people over profits,” they chanted as they marched along Route 940 to protest against NB Power’s proposed 25-year contract with PROENERGY, the big American company that would build and operate the gas plant if New Brunswick’s Energy & Utilities Board gives its approval.

smiling woman in yellow rain pants and a black jacket marches down a rainy road. She carries a Canadian flag and a large handmade sign that says "MY COMMUNITY... WATER... AIR... FAMILY -> THEIR FUTURE!!"
Midgic resident Phyllis Wheaton leading a group of marchers along Route 940. Photo: Bruce Wark

“So many countries are looking at how to get off of fossil fuels and yet here, there are two proposed gas plants in New Brunswick, one here and one in Lorneville that would help power a data centre,” said Tantramar MLA Megan Mitton to a chorus of boos.

A woman with long brown hair stands outside on a rainy day under a vibrant, multi-colored floral umbrella. She wears a green jacket and black vest while speaking into a megaphone. To her left is a cleared area of brush and to her right is a wet road.
Tantramar MLA Megan Mitton addresses protesters through a megaphone, criticizing the $3.5 billion project for its lack of energy security and impact on power rates. Photo: Bruce Wark

“Yes, that does deserve some booing,” she said with a smile as she thanked residents from several nearby communities including Memramcook, Cap-Acadie and Sackville for joining the local people in Centre Village, Cookville and Midgic in fighting a gas plant that, she said, would affect them all.

Mitton noted that the gas plant is projected to cost at least $3.5 billion.

“It’s going to raise the power rates of everyone in New Brunswick,” she said. “It’s going to cost us a lot and that money is going to flow down to PROENERGY in the United States.

“This does not help our energy security,” she said. “This does not help us with affordability. Solar and wind are the cheapest energy options.

“It is madness that we are not going all in on solar, wind and energy efficiency and that the Holt government is allowing this to go forward.”

Toxic chemicals

A young man in a clear plastic rain poncho stands on a dirt shoulder next to a wooded area. He is holding a megaphone to his mouth and carrying a "STOP THE TANTRAMAR GAS PLANT" sign.
During the May Day rally, chemistry student Hudson Rogers uses a megaphone to warn the community about potential toxic emissions from the plant. Photo: Bruce Wark

“I believe this plant is a very, very bad idea,” said Hudson Rogers, a chemistry student from the Université de Moncton.

“I believe we should all be against the gas plant in Tantramar,” he added.

“We learn in so many of our classes of the different contaminants and the different substances that come from natural gas and diesel,” he said, adding that breathing such chemicals can damage people’s lungs.

“This plant will be bad for the birds, it will be bad for human health, bad for the environment and bad for our economy.”

No community involvement

A man with glasses and a blue cap stands under a large blue umbrella on a wet road. He is wearing a brown coat and holding a megaphone, looking toward the camera.
Barry Rothfuss, executive director of the Atlantic Wildlife Institute, speaks about the lack of community involvement and transparency regarding the project’s announcement. Photo: Bruce Wark

Barry Rothfuss, executive director of the Atlantic Wildlife Institute in nearby Cookville, said the community knew nothing about the gas plant project until it was announced last July.

“We were blindsided by it,” he said, “and being blindsided by this kind of project seems to be a pattern that we’re seeing.”

He was referring to the announcement this week that the North Shore Mi’kmaq Tribal Council and the Irish company BNRG Renewables had signed a deal for a 150 MW solar project in Cookville.

“It may be a very good thing,” Rothfuss said.

“But as a community, we were left in the dark. We have no idea of the scope or impact that it’s going to have in addition to what we’re looking at with the gas plant here,” he added.

“We’re finding out about these things after the fact, after contracts have been issued and we have no way of determining or protecting ourselves from the impact of what these things are going to do,” Rothfuss said.

“These are major decisions being made without the community being involved in the process.”

‘Beautiful umbrellas’

A woman in a green raincoat and blue scarf holds a white sign that reads "STOP THE TANTRAMAR GAS PLANT" in large orange letters, with "Clean Air | Clean Water | Clean Energy for All" written in green at the bottom.
Meredith Fisher of the Seniors for Climate group joins protesters in the rain to advocate for clean energy alternatives. Photo: Bruce Wark

Friday’s May Day protest was organized by the Tantramar chapter of Seniors for Climate.

Group member Meredith Fisher says it was meant to show solidarity with the residents who live in a beautiful, ecologically sensitive, farming area.

“It just doesn’t make sense to put something like this gas plant here or anywhere for that matter, and it’s going to create chaos for the people who live here,” she says.

“It’s pouring and pouring and pouring rain and we’re all standing here soaking in this parade of beautiful umbrellas.”

Bruce Wark worked in broadcasting and journalism education for more than 35 years. He was at CBC Radio for nearly 20 years as senior editor of network programs such as The World at Six and World Report. He currently writes for The New Wark Times, where a version of this story first appeared on May 2, 2026.

Tags: Atlantic Wildlife InstituteCentre VillageChignecto IsthmusEUBfossil fuelsMegan MittonNB PowerPROENERGYSeniors for ClimateTantramarTantramar Gas Plant
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