One-in-five homes tested nationwide have radon levels exceeding Health Canada’s guideline of 200 becquerels per cubic metre (Bq/m³). The scale of the problem has been captured in six years’ worth of test results from 30,000 homes across Canada, believed to be the largest and most detailed body of results collected in this country.
Invisible Threat
Radon is an invisible, odourless radioactive gas that is naturally emitted from uranium in soil and enters homes, where it can concentrate. When radon is inhaled, it can damage DNA in the lungs and cause cancer. The carcinogen is the second-leading cause of lung cancer in Canada, estimated to be responsible for more than 3,000 deaths a year — more than from motor vehicle collisions.
The Investigative Journalism Bureau and the Toronto Star worked in collaboration with researchers with the University of Calgary and Evict Radon to obtain 30,000 test results from across the country.
Growing number of Canadian households contain deadly levels of radon gas, national study finds
Exposure to deadly radon gas in Canadian homes continues to grow, according to a nationwide study conducted by University of Calgary researchers. Nearly 18 per cent of Canadian homes contain radon levels at or above Health Canada’s action guideline of 200 becquerels per cubic metre (Bq/m³) for the carcinogenic gas, according to the national study.
Read the StoryCanadian officials found radiation levels in these northern Ontario homes ‘well above’ the safe limit. Their response: ‘¯\_(ツ)_/¯’
The number of homes in Elliot Lake affected by buried radioactive waste could top 100 — twice as many as previously thought.
Read the Story‘I thought I was safe’: Federal government’s radon advice creates a false sense of security
Health Canada’s radon guideline is 200 Bq/m³ while the WHO’s is 100 Bq/m³. The regulator defends its policy while a chorus of experts and cancer patients say a change would save lives.
Read the Story‘I thought I was safe’: Federal government’s radon advice creates a false sense of security
Canada's National Observer republished the IJB's investigation into Canada's high radon safety guideline which experts say could be exposing tens of thousands to dangerous levels of the radioactive gas.
Read the Story‘I thought I was safe’: Federal government’s radon advice creates a false sense of security
Reporter Masih Khalatbari discusses the IJB's recent investigation into the federal radon safety guideline and the impact it has on Canadians.
Watch the VideoHomeowners take feds to court over ‘radioactive’ waste
Three homeowners in Elliot Lake are taking the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CNSC) to Federal Court over its recent decision to not order the removal of alleged radioactive waste from their properties.
Read the StoryRadiation is homeowners’ problem, Canadian nuclear regulator says
The Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CNSC) says homeowners are responsible for dealing with the toxic effects of waste rock from nearby uranium mines that was allegedly used as infill on their properties.
Read the StoryThey thought they’d found an affordable place to live. They were never told about the radioactive mining waste
Recent testing at four houses in Elliot Lake reveal elevated levels of gamma radiation and concentrations of radon gas far exceeding safety guidelines. There could be up to 60 homes in the community currently on top of mine waste, documents allege.
Read the StoryShe found out she’d been breathing a cancer-causing gas for over a decade. So why won’t Canada’s health-care system let her get her lungs tested?
Canadians with documented levels of elevated radon in their homes are ineligible for publicly funded lung cancer screening, which is only for heavy smokers.
Read the StoryThe invisible threat inside your home: Dangerous levels of radon gas are being found in more houses across Canada than ever before
Canada has some of the highest measured residential radon rates in the world, with an estimated new case of radon-induced lung cancer diagnosed each day in the hardest-hit provinces. One in five homes — 5,600 of the 30,000 tested nationwide — showed radon levels exceeding Health Canada’s guideline of 200 becquerels per cubic metre (Bq/m³), according to data gathered by researchers from the University of Calgary collaborating with this investigation.
Read the StoryHow some Canadian communities are taking their own steps to address the risks of radon gas
While radon risks remain rarely discussed in most of Canada, some communities and public officials are taking unique steps to generate greater awareness and action.
Read the StoryDoes your home have dangerous levels of radon?
Declan Keogh, the IJB's senior report, goes onto The Big Story podcast to discuss the findings of our investigation into deadly levels of radon gas found in Canadian homes.
Listen to the Podcast