Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Asks Utilities Commission To Review $8.8-Billion Site C Dam Megaproject

The Canadian Press, 03 Aug, 2017 02:06 PM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's New Democrat government has requested an independent review of the $8.8-billion Site C dam, threatening thousands of construction jobs on what was a signature megaproject for former premier Christy Clark.
     
    The government has asked the B.C. Utilities Commission to determine the economic viability of the massive hydroelectric dam on the Peace River. The review will begin Aug. 9, with interim findings six weeks later and a final report by Nov. 1.
     
    The NDP campaigned on having the project reviewed by the commission, a practice that was once standard in B.C., before the previous Liberal government's clean-energy laws allowed some projects to bypass the regulatory agency.
     
    "The previous government refused to allow our independent energy watchdog to examine the project to determine if it was in the public interest," Energy Minister Michelle Mungall said Wednesday.
     
    "That was wrong. We're sending this project to the BCUC to ensure we make the right decision for B.C. families."
     
    Mungall said the commission has been asked to confirm whether BC Hydro is on target to complete Site C on budget and by 2024.
     
     
     
     
    It has also been asked to provide advice on three possible outcomes: proceeding with the project, suspending construction and keeping the option open to resume until 2024, or terminating the project and proceeding with other energy options.
     
    Mungall said the utilities commission will be required to consult with interested parties, including First Nations, and it may consider expert advice and public input as well.
     
    The dam is two years into construction and employs more than 2,000 people in northeastern B.C. It would be the third dam on the Peace River, flooding an 83-kilometre stretch of valley, and has faced fierce opposition from local First Nations, landowners and farmers.
     
    Former BC Hydro CEO Jessica McDonald warned in June that delaying the evictions of two homes would result in a one-year delay of a road and bridge construction project at a cost $630 million.
     
    However, Mungall said that rerouting a highway to save one of the homes was an option.
     
    BC Hydro confirmed Wednesday that while some highway realignment work will be delayed, mitigation options have been identified so that river diversion can remain on track and the overall project schedule and budget can be maintained, should the project proceed.
     
    The Green party, led by Andrew Weaver, has agreed to support the NDP in a minority government. The Liberals, now in Opposition, questioned the New Democrats' motivations for requesting a review.
     
     
    "Is this fake review being done in the best interest of the British Columbia taxpayer or is this simply another way of appeasing Andrew Weaver to prop up their partisan alliance?" asked Liberal member of the legislature Mike Bernier in a statement.
     
    "It is clear this review is designed to meet the NDP's political needs and not the province's electricity needs."
     
    Weaver said in a statement that the Greens were consulted early on the terms of reference for the review, but the final draft was the responsibility of cabinet.
     
    Construction will continue while the review is underway, but that provides little solace to the 2,400 people working on the project, said Chris Gardner, president of the Independent Contractors and Business Association.
     
    "They've got to be thinking that six months from now they may not have a job," he said.
     
    "Site C was reviewed for three years by an independent panel. BC Hydro spent a decade planning for the project. The provincial and federal levels of government both approved the project. It's now 20 per cent complete."
     
     
     
    However, environmental group Sierra Club BC applauded the government's decision, saying it was good news for ratepayers.
     
    "The reality is that we don't need Site C power, it's hideously expensive and inevitable cost overruns would be paid for by B.C. ratepayers, and more environmentally and economically viable alternatives are available today."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Fire Guts String Of Stores Along Vancouver Street

    Fire Guts String Of Stores Along Vancouver Street
    The fire broke out at about 8 p.m. in a string of one-storey businesses that include a tailor, hair studio, pizza shop, an ice cream store and a Salvation Army thrift store.

    Fire Guts String Of Stores Along Vancouver Street

    Highlights And U-Turns In The B.C. Liberals' Speech From The Throne

    Highlights And U-Turns In The B.C. Liberals' Speech From The Throne
    Here is a look at some of the major promises in the speech, and where the parties stood during the campaign

    Highlights And U-Turns In The B.C. Liberals' Speech From The Throne

    Sears Canada Cutting 2,900 Jobs, Closing 59 Stores, Secures Creditor Protection

    Sears Canada Cutting 2,900 Jobs, Closing 59 Stores, Secures Creditor Protection
    TORONTO — Sears Canada Inc. (TSX:SCC) said it plans to close 59 locations and cut approximately 2,900 jobs under a court-supervised restructuring after it was granted protection from creditors Thursday.

    Sears Canada Cutting 2,900 Jobs, Closing 59 Stores, Secures Creditor Protection

    Torture, Detention Would Be Forbidden CSIS Disruption Tactics Under New Bill

    Torture, Detention Would Be Forbidden CSIS Disruption Tactics Under New Bill
    OTTAWA — The Liberal government's new security bill adds torture, detention and serious destruction of property that would endanger a life to the list of things Canada's spy agency cannot do when disrupting terror plots.

    Torture, Detention Would Be Forbidden CSIS Disruption Tactics Under New Bill

    Men Hit Over Back Of Head: Man Charged In One Of 3 Attacks In Downtown Calgary

    Men Hit Over Back Of Head: Man Charged In One Of 3 Attacks In Downtown Calgary
    CALGARY — Police have charged a man with aggravated assault in the first of three attacks in downtown Calgary in which men were hit in the back of the head with heavy objects.

    Men Hit Over Back Of Head: Man Charged In One Of 3 Attacks In Downtown Calgary

    Ex-Ski Coach Bertrand Charest Found Guilty On 37 Charges In Sex Trial

    SAINT-JEROME, Que. — A Quebec judge described a former high-performance Canadian ski coach as a sexual predator Thursday as he found him guilty of 37 charges related to the exploitation and sexual assault of his young female students.

    Ex-Ski Coach Bertrand Charest Found Guilty On 37 Charges In Sex Trial