Thursday, February 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

BC Hydro Customers Pay Billions For Unneeded, Lengthy Power Deals Says Minister

Darpan News Desk, 14 Feb, 2019 09:26 PM
  • BC Hydro Customers Pay Billions For Unneeded, Lengthy Power Deals Says Minister

VICTORIA — A newly released report by the British Columbia government says BC Hydro customers will pay $16 billion over the next two decades because the Crown utility was pressured to sign long-term contracts with independent power producers.


Minister of Energy Michelle Mungall commissioned the report, which blames the previous B.C. Liberal government for creating the problem.


The report says the Liberals manufactured an urgent need for electricity but restricted BC Hydro from producing it, forcing the utility to turn to private producers and sign lengthy contracts at inflated prices.


Former B.C. Treasury Board director Ken Davidson authored the study, which estimates the cost to the average residential BC Hydro customer will amount to about $4,000 over the next 20 years, or about $200 per year.


Davidson recommends all future energy purchases be made at market rates and finds BC Hydro must be allowed to meet supply obligations through a reasonable level of market trading, rather than by generating all electricity within the province.


The NDP government launched a two-phase review of BC Hydro last June, in an effort to identify cost savings at the utility and a government news release says results of the first phase will be announced Thursday.


Davidson's recommendations informed the BC Hydro review.


Mungall says he also concludes the long-term deals forced upon BC Hydro were mainly with run-of-river producers, whose power is primarily available during spring runoff, when B.C. doesn't require it.


"B.C. didn't benefit. BC Hydro customers didn't benefit. A small number of well-placed independent power producers benefited, and customers were stuck with a 40-year payment plan," Mungall says in the news release.


Government and BC Hydro staff warned the former Liberal administration against requiring lengthy contracts with independent producers, but the advice was rejected, the minister says.


"As a result, these contracts have already cost customers $3.2 billion and are set to cost billions more over the next two decades," she says.

MORE National ARTICLES

U.S. Confirms It Will Ask Canada To Extradite Huawei Executive; China Protests

"We greatly appreciate Canada's continuing support in our mutual efforts to enforce the rule of law."

U.S. Confirms It Will Ask Canada To Extradite Huawei Executive; China Protests

Singer Jeremy Gabriel Who Won Rights Case Against Comedian Exits Social Media Following Threats

Jeremy Gabriel won a human rights case against comedian Mike Ward in 2016, arguing that a joke mocking his disability had amounted to discrimination.

Singer Jeremy Gabriel Who Won Rights Case Against Comedian Exits Social Media Following Threats

Cannabis-Carrying Border-Crossers Could Be Hit With Fines Under Coming System

Cannabis-Carrying Border-Crossers Could Be Hit With Fines Under Coming System
The border agency received approximately $40 million over five years to help enforce the new cannabis law.

Cannabis-Carrying Border-Crossers Could Be Hit With Fines Under Coming System

Transgender Girl Says Sex-Ed Repeal Made Her Nervous About Returning To School

Transgender Girl Says Sex-Ed Repeal Made Her Nervous About Returning To School
The 11-year-old, identified only as AB, testified Tuesday before Ontario's human rights tribunal in a case focusing on how rolling back the curriculum impacts LGBTQ students.

Transgender Girl Says Sex-Ed Repeal Made Her Nervous About Returning To School

Netflix Apologizes To Lac-Megantic For Using Rail Disaster Footage In 'Bird Box'

MONTREAL — Netflix is apologizing to the people of Lac-Megantic after actual footage of the 2013 rail disaster that devastated the town was used in dramas on the streaming service.

Netflix Apologizes To Lac-Megantic For Using Rail Disaster Footage In 'Bird Box'

Jason Kenney Accuser Declines To Specify Which Housing Rules He Says Kenney Broke

A lawyer accusing Alberta United Conservative Leader Jason Kenney of breaking parliamentary residency rules while serving as an MP is declining to explain which regulation he believes Kenney broke or how he broke it.

Jason Kenney Accuser Declines To Specify Which Housing Rules He Says Kenney Broke