Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

BC Hydro Sets Contract For Controversial Site C Dam At $1.75 Billion

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Dec, 2015 11:53 AM
  • BC Hydro Sets Contract For Controversial Site C Dam At $1.75 Billion
VANCOUVER — British Columbia's power utility will pay a consortium of three companies about $1.75 billion to build the largest components of the controversial Site C hydroelectric dam in the province's northeast.
 
The contract agreement announced on Monday by BC Hydro will see the Peace River Hydro Partners build the earthen dam, foundation, two diversion tunnels and spillways in the province's northeast.
 
Initial estimates pegged the work at about $1.5 billion when the Crown corporation announced last month that ACCIONA Infrastructure Canada Inc., Petrowest Corporation and Samsung C&T Canada Ltd. were the "preferred proponents."
 
"We said on Nov. 25 that the cost would be 'more than $1.5 billion' and that a final value would be known once we had concluded a contract," said BC Hydro spokesman Craig Fitzsimmons in an email.
 
"With a contract in place, we now have a confirmed value."
 
The contract's duration is eight years, and at the peak of construction, about 1,500 people will be working on the main projects, BC hydro said in its news release.
 
BC Hydro said the work will create about "8,000 person-years of employment," and it is planning a series of job fairs and "business to business networking sessions" in the new year.
 
"The sessions will provide an opportunity for local, regional and aboriginal businesses and job seekers to meet the main civil works team and other project contractors."
 
Legal challenges against the dam have been launched by several groups and First Nations over concerns about flooding and the impact a new lake created by the dam will have on the Peace River area.
 
 
Opposition New Democrat Leader John Horgan criticized the announcement, noting the contract is a $250-million increase over last month's estimate and there's no guarantee how many jobs will go to British Columbians.
 
"When you're spending billions of dollars of the public's money, I believe any responsible premier of B.C. should ask how many jobs can be guaranteed for British Columbians," he said in a release.
 
Horgan has said that he wouldn't rule out cancelling the $9-billion Site C hydro-electric project if he wins the 2017 election.
 
The BC Building Trades Council said in a news release that it was shocked by the announcement, claiming as many as 1,500 jobs may go to workers from Alberta and Saskatchewan.
 
Council president Lee Loftus said hundreds of Alberta workers are already working on the dam.
 
"Only when every qualified B.C. construction worker who wants a job on this project has been hired should BC Hydro even consider looking outside the province for workers — and that's simply not the case today at all."

MORE National ARTICLES

Report Amazon Canada Is Selling Book By Notorious Killer Paul Bernardo Sparks Outrage

Report Amazon Canada Is Selling Book By Notorious Killer Paul Bernardo Sparks Outrage
Amazon.ca is taking heat on social media and its own website following a report that it's selling an ebook by notorious killer Paul Bernardo.

Report Amazon Canada Is Selling Book By Notorious Killer Paul Bernardo Sparks Outrage

Sammy Yatim, Toronto Teen Shot By Cop Asked Subway Janitor To Call Police Not Long Before Standoff

The trial of a Toronto police officer charged in the 2013 shooting death of a teen on an empty streetcar is hearing from a janitor who encountered the youth at a subway station before the incident.

Sammy Yatim, Toronto Teen Shot By Cop Asked Subway Janitor To Call Police Not Long Before Standoff

Cop Reports On Couple Convicted Of Killing Girl Should Be Part Of Inquest: Motion

Cop Reports On Couple Convicted Of Killing Girl Should Be Part Of Inquest: Motion
A notice of motion filed by the Provincial Advocate for Children and Youth argues the reports provide crucial information that will help understand the circumstances that led to Katelynn Sampson's death in 2008.

Cop Reports On Couple Convicted Of Killing Girl Should Be Part Of Inquest: Motion

Calgarians Waiting For 'other Shoe To Drop' Over Energy Woes: Mayor Naheed Nenshi

Calgary's mayor says plunging oil prices haven't had as dire an effect on the city as most had expected, but many in the industry are still waiting for the "other shoe to drop."

Calgarians Waiting For 'other Shoe To Drop' Over Energy Woes: Mayor Naheed Nenshi

Closing Arguments In First-Degree Murder Trial Of Guy Turcotte Next Week

Toxicologist and Crown expert Martin Laliberte was cross-examined by the defence today, concluding the presentation of evidence for both sides.

Closing Arguments In First-Degree Murder Trial Of Guy Turcotte Next Week

Montreal Begins Receiving Water Sample Data From St. Lawrence Sewage Discharge

Montreal Begins Receiving Water Sample Data From St. Lawrence Sewage Discharge
Richard Fontaine, head of waste water management, said the first sets of data will come from testing for fecal bacteria in the water, while results of chemical testing take roughly 96 hours to complete.

Montreal Begins Receiving Water Sample Data From St. Lawrence Sewage Discharge