It depends on what they want to launch. It is poorly located for a geostationary satellite, yes. It is actually really good for a GPS launch, though. Nova Scotia is at 45 deg latitude with a coast line facing East/Southeast. That allows them to launch into orbits that are medium Inclination very cheaply, since Inclination changes are way more expensive than adding the extra speed launching at the equator adds. GPS is a 55 deg inclination. Starlink is between 43 and 70 deg inclination. Proliferated LEO constellations are the new hotness, and those will all be inclined, so this isn’t a terrible location.
It depends on what they want to launch. It is poorly located for a geostationary satellite, yes. It is actually really good for a GPS launch, though. Nova Scotia is at 45 deg latitude with a coast line facing East/Southeast. That allows them to launch into orbits that are medium Inclination very cheaply, since Inclination changes are way more expensive than adding the extra speed launching at the equator adds. GPS is a 55 deg inclination. Starlink is between 43 and 70 deg inclination. Proliferated LEO constellations are the new hotness, and those will all be inclined, so this isn’t a terrible location.