Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. expected to make Site C announcement Tuesday in Victoria

Darpan News Desk, 15 Dec, 2014 04:40 PM
  • B.C. expected to make Site C announcement Tuesday in Victoria
VICTORIA — The British Columbia government is poised to make a major announcement on the controversial Site C hydroelectric dam project.
 
Provincial Energy and Mines Minister Bill Bennett has called a news conference in Victoria on Tuesday to make what his ministry says is a major announcement.
 
Bennett has consistently said that he expects to announce before Christmas whether the province will reject or go ahead with construction of the $8.5-billion project.
 
The dam would be the third on the Peace River, flooding 5,550 hectares of land over an 83-kilometre stretch of valley.
 
Crown-owned utility BC Hydro says Site C would generate an estimated 1,100 megawatts of capacity, or enough to power the equivalent of 450,000 homes a year.
 
Last May, a joint federal-provincial environmental assessment panel made no clear recommendation for or against the project, but First Nations and environmental groups say they will fight the proposal in the courts and through public protests.

MORE National ARTICLES

Concerns about E. coli prompt ground beef recall in Western Canada

Concerns about E. coli prompt ground beef recall in Western Canada
OTTAWA — Federal health officials are recalling packages of ground beef produced by food giant Cargill due to concerns about E. coli.

Concerns about E. coli prompt ground beef recall in Western Canada

Fake pregnancy belly used in Barrie, Ont., electronics store theft: police

Fake pregnancy belly used in Barrie, Ont., electronics store theft: police
BARRIE, Ont. — Police say a pair of thieves used a fake pregnancy belly to steal numerous items from an electronics store in central Ontario.

Fake pregnancy belly used in Barrie, Ont., electronics store theft: police

Canada's clean energy sector growing quickly as investment jumps: study

Canada's clean energy sector growing quickly as investment jumps: study
OTTAWA — Canadian investments in clean energy totalled $6.5 billion last year, a 45 per cent increase from 2012, according to a new study released Tuesday.

Canada's clean energy sector growing quickly as investment jumps: study

Senators seek to spur national debate on assisted suicide with proposed new law

Senators seek to spur national debate on assisted suicide with proposed new law
OTTAWA — Thwarted in his efforts to force the House of Commons to debate the issue of assisted suicide, Manitoba Conservative MP Stephen Fletcher has gone down the hall for some help.

Senators seek to spur national debate on assisted suicide with proposed new law

Social security tribunal backlog includes terminally ill, others deep in debt

Social security tribunal backlog includes terminally ill, others deep in debt
OTTAWA — Terminal cancer patients, organ-transplant recipients and suicidal, debt-addled Canadians are among the 11,000 people waiting to have their appeals heard by Ottawa's badly backlogged social security tribunal.

Social security tribunal backlog includes terminally ill, others deep in debt

NDP, Liberals demand Fantino resign from Veterans Affairs portfolio

NDP, Liberals demand Fantino resign from Veterans Affairs portfolio
OTTAWA — Julian Fantino was greeted Monday in the House of Commons by opposition demands that he step down — but how much of a political liability the veterans affairs minister may be for the Conservative government remains to be seen.

NDP, Liberals demand Fantino resign from Veterans Affairs portfolio