Close X
Saturday, January 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

BC Hydro CEO Says Site C Dam Will Be Built, Marks A 'new Era' For Utility

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Jan, 2015 07:58 PM
  • BC Hydro CEO Says Site C Dam Will Be Built, Marks A 'new Era' For Utility
VANCOUVER — The head of BC Hydro is promising the contentious Site C hydroelectric dam will be built, despite overwhelming opposition and court challenges to the $8.8-billion project.
 
Jessica McDonald told a Vancouver Board of Trade luncheon that the dam in northeastern British Columbia is the "most-studied" project in the company's history.
 
"We've researched and consulted over a period of almost eight years. It's been evaluated against every other option. It's the clear winner to provide affordable, reliable power," she told the crowd.
 
Construction on the project is set to start this summer on the Peace River, where it will flood agricultural land, First Nations spiritual, burial and archeological sites and destroy hunting and fishing areas.
 
Environmental groups, ranchers and First Nations have vowed to fight Site C, with some First Nations taking their opposition to the Federal Court of Canada for a judicial review.
 
McDonald said after the speech that she is done selling Site C.
 
"We're moving forward now into implementation," the CEO told reporters. "(We're) really looking forward to having continued conversations about this project, but we're really, at this stage, past the decision point with the final investment decision being made by government."
 
The province approved the project in December. Now, BC Hydro is waiting for the government to finish its permitting process while it uses the time to carry on discussions with local residents and First Nations, McDonald said.
 
 
She shrugged off questions about a contingency plan if Site C is delayed or struck down in the courts.
 
"Our plan is to build Site C, and as I said before we're moving forward with implementation."
 
During her speech, McDonald said the utility is facing several challenges, including aging infrastructure built in the 1960s and '70s, and electricity demands that are expected to rise by 40 per cent over the next two decades.
 
"It's a new era for BC Hydro," she said about the scale of the Site C project. "It's like adding a company to the company."
 
BC Hydro's capital spending will increase to $2.4 billion a year from $1.7 billion annually over the next eight or nine years as the dam is constructed, McDonald said.
 
Site C is expected to meet just 22 per cent of upcoming energy demand. McDonald said the remaining three quarters of demand would be met largely through conservation — by convincing consumers to use less electricity and through new technology such as smart meters.
 
As for the Bank of Canada cutting its key interest rate to 0.75 per cent on Wednesday, McDonald said that's good news for her company's capital plan.
 
"The longer that we see interest rates carrying on low, that's very good for us and very good for our budgeting."

MORE National ARTICLES

Two accused in B.C. terror case plead not guilty at start of jury selection

Two accused in B.C. terror case plead not guilty at start of jury selection
VANCOUVER — Two people accused in what the RCMP described as a plot to blow up the British Columbia legislature have both pleaded not guilty in a Vancouver court.

Two accused in B.C. terror case plead not guilty at start of jury selection

B.C. Auditor General Says Prisons Crowded, Unsafe And Hardly Stop Repeat Crime

B.C. Auditor General Says Prisons Crowded, Unsafe And Hardly Stop Repeat Crime
VICTORIA — British Columbia's prisons are overcrowded, tension-filled facilities that do little to prevent inmates from returning to crime when released.

B.C. Auditor General Says Prisons Crowded, Unsafe And Hardly Stop Repeat Crime

Homicide Investigators Called To Chilliwack To Probe Suspicious Death

Homicide Investigators Called To Chilliwack To Probe Suspicious Death
Mounties say they were called to the scene of a car crash at around 11:00 p.m. Monday and found a man dead inside a vehicle.

Homicide Investigators Called To Chilliwack To Probe Suspicious Death

Road Warriors: Canucks Ready To Hit The Road After Disappointing Homestand

Road Warriors: Canucks Ready To Hit The Road After Disappointing Homestand
VANCOUVER — The Vancouver Canucks are about where Willie Desjardins expected them to be 40 games into his first season as an NHL head coach. How they got to this point is another matter entirely.

Road Warriors: Canucks Ready To Hit The Road After Disappointing Homestand

Search For Missing Vancouver Hiker On North Shore Mountains Resumes

Search For Missing Vancouver Hiker On North Shore Mountains Resumes
North Shore Rescue previously called off looking for Liang Jin because of harsh weather conditions and difficulty narrowing down a search area.

Search For Missing Vancouver Hiker On North Shore Mountains Resumes

Oil-price collapse to keep Harper government in deficit: TD report

Oil-price collapse to keep Harper government in deficit: TD report
OTTAWA — One of Canada's biggest banks says sliding oil prices could turn the federal government's promised 2015-16 surplus into a deficit.

Oil-price collapse to keep Harper government in deficit: TD report