Tantramar’s Climate Change Advisory Committee (CCAC) is suggesting the town take steps to protect sensitive wildlife corridors on the Chignecto Isthmus when it adopts a new municipal plan in the next few years.
“There has been a lot of controversy in the last six months as you know about a gas turbine plant,” CCAC Chair Doug Bliss told town council during a presentation this week.
“We want to talk to you about why wildlife corridors are important and why the two, development and wildlife protection, can happen at the same time,” he said.
“It’s all a matter of where you put things.”
During the presentation by Bliss, Adam Cheeseman of Nature NB and Melanie Jellett of the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society, members of council looked at a map showing wavy blue bands marking the corridors where moose, other animals, amphibians and insects move across the Isthmus between New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.

Canadian Geographic map showing Chignecto Isthmus that the magazine describes as “a pinch point of wetlands, forests and shoreline areas interwoven with transportation corridors, industry and communities. And as the human footprint here grows, the integrity of natural spaces and the connections between them are being whittled away.” Illustration: Canadian Geographic, August 2025
When Councillor Allison Butcher asked where the proposed gas plant would be in relation to the wildlife corridors, Melanie Jellett replied: “Right smack dab in the nice blue band where the wildlife are moving.”
“Where it says ‘New Brunswick,’ look at the bottom of the I or around where the I is,” Doug Bliss added.
He reminded council that the Nature Conservancy of Canada has purchased land on the Isthmus (2,200 hectares or more than 5,400 acres) to protect migration corridors and that residents of Tantramar are very familiar with the annual sandpiper migration at Johnson’s Mills as well as Shep, the giant sandpiper statue in Dorchester.
“Which just goes to show you that in our municipality, there is already a lot of attention to wildlife habitat protection,” Bliss said.
Adam Cheeseman also reminded council that well over 20 groups are working to protect wildlife on the Isthmus.
Jellett pointed out that in 2008, the Town of Amherst worked with the Nova Scotia government to protect its drinking water supply by designating watershed lands as a provincial wilderness area.
“This past February the town purchased an additional 120 acre parcel of forest land,” she said, “so they’re really building on their conservation lands within their municipality.”
She also pointed out that in 2018, Cumberland County introduced bylaws in their Municipal Planning Strategy to protect the wildlife corridor.
Closer to home, she said, the Southeast Regional Service Commission is developing a regional land use plan and is also working to identify the best location for a wildlife crossing underpass or overpass on Rte. 15 between Moncton and Shediac.
She suggested that Tantramar could include conservation zones in its municipal plan to protect sensitive wildlife areas from development.
After the presentation, Councillor Michael Tower thanked the CCAC.
“I always love to get this information that helps build our battle up to protect this area from things that should not be planted around here,” he said.
“Meaning the gas plant.”
It appears that PROENERGY Canada President John MacIsaac ran into stiff opposition on Wednesday as he attempted to give a presentation on the proposed gas plant to residents of Elsipogtog First Nation. To read the report from the NB Media Co-op, click here.



























