Saturday, June 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

BC Premier gives green light to Site C with a price tag of $16B

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Feb, 2021 07:10 PM
  • BC Premier gives green light to Site C with a price tag of $16B

The cost of British Columbia's Site C hydroelectric dam has grown by $6 billion, bringing the price tag of the megaproject to $16 billion and stretching the completion date to 2025.

The provincial government says the skyrocketing expenses are due to construction setbacks, geotechnical issues, COVID-19 and other cost and schedule pressures.

Premier John Horgan's announcement comes weeks after a former deputy finance minister completed his report on the status of the northeastern B.C. dam and submitted the study for cabinet consideration.

The review was ordered last July after Crown-owned BC Hydro reported concerns about risks and delays, and the province says it has accepted all 17 of Peter Milburn's recommendations, including a strengthened project assurance board.

The government also released a review by two independent experts that found changes to the foundation to address geotechnical issues on the project's right bank will ensure Site C meets safety standards.

The province says terminating Site C now would mean an immediate writedown of about $10 billion, which would result in an average 26 per cent increase in BC Hydro rates over the next 10 years if covered by ratepayers.

It says continuing with the project means the costs will be recovered through rates over the 70-year lifespan of the dam.

Horgan also announced new leadership at BC Hydro as Doug Allen — who has held top positions at the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia and TransLink — replaces Ken Peterson as chairman of the board.

The premier said in December 2017 that the NDP government would reluctantly support completion of the dam across the Peace River just west of Fort St. John, but he would never have started the project commissioned by the previous B.C. Liberal government.

MORE National ARTICLES

Surrey man Gurmandeep Singh Atwal arrested for personating a Peace Officer

Surrey man Gurmandeep Singh Atwal arrested for personating a Peace Officer
Surrey man allegedly posed as a peace officer at a home in Richmond on the evening of January 29th, 2021.

Surrey man Gurmandeep Singh Atwal arrested for personating a Peace Officer

COVID-19 cases ticking up after slow drop: Henry

COVID-19 cases ticking up after slow drop: Henry
Dr. Henry says that over the past four days, 1,533 new cases have been confirmed across British Columbia and 26 more people have died.

COVID-19 cases ticking up after slow drop: Henry

NDP calls for military support in vaccine rollout

NDP calls for military support in vaccine rollout
The federal government should engage military personnel along with more medical and nursing students and retired health-care workers to ramp up Canada's faltering vaccine rollout, Singh said Tuesday.

NDP calls for military support in vaccine rollout

SFU reports data breach through cyberattack

SFU reports data breach through cyberattack
The university says the breach mostly involved student or employee identification numbers and at least one other data element, such as admission or academic standing.

SFU reports data breach through cyberattack

Man found dead in his Clayton Heights home: IHIT

Man found dead in his Clayton Heights home: IHIT
The last time Golofit made contact with friends was around 8 a.m. on February 11, 2021. Investigators will be working to build a timeline of Golofit’s activities from that point forward.

Man found dead in his Clayton Heights home: IHIT

StatCan report details dig into jobs-data leak

StatCan report details dig into jobs-data leak
The report, dated June 5 but being made public today, doesn't say how the details on the historic job losses in April made it into a media report before the agency officially released it.

StatCan report details dig into jobs-data leak