Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

BC Hydro Seeks Court Injunction To Remove Site C Dam Protesters

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Feb, 2016 11:55 AM
  • BC Hydro Seeks Court Injunction To Remove Site C Dam Protesters
VANCOUVER — BC Hydro says allowing protesters to continue blocking construction of the Site C dam project would cost the utility $8 million.
 
The energy utility is in British Columbia Supreme Court seeking an injunction to remove First Nations members and Peace Valley landowners from a protest camp near Fort St. John.
 
A lawyer for BC Hydro says demonstrators are blocking an area where a contractor was to deposit waste rock, and that would require hydro to transport the rock elsewhere, then move it back later at a cost of about $8 million.
 
Mark Andrews says if the alternative site doesn't work for waste rock, there's a small risk that the protesters will force a year-long delay to the project at a cost of $420 million.
 
 
Environmentalist David Suzuki voiced support for the protesters outside court and says the $8.8-billion hydroelectric dam is in conflict with climate change targets agreed to by Canada at the Paris climate conference last year. 
 
Suzuki says agricultural land in the Peace Valley could be the "breadbasket of the north" and it should not be flooded by the dam project.

MORE National ARTICLES

Syrian Refugees In Quebec's French-Integration Classes Learning Fast, Having Fun

Elementary school teacher Evelyn Bissonnette asks her 14 young students to stand up, one by one, and introduce themselves.

Syrian Refugees In Quebec's French-Integration Classes Learning Fast, Having Fun

John McCallum, Jane Philpott Cancelling Controversial Cuts To Refugee Health Care

John McCallum, Jane Philpott Cancelling Controversial Cuts To Refugee Health Care
Starting in 2017, they'll also extend coverage to certain refugees before they even arrive in Canada, including picking up the tab for the medical exams they need to pass in order to move here.

John McCallum, Jane Philpott Cancelling Controversial Cuts To Refugee Health Care

Liberals Didn't Sign Off On Saudi Arms Sale But Will Let It Stand, Says Stephane Dion

Liberals Didn't Sign Off On Saudi Arms Sale But Will Let It Stand, Says Stephane Dion
Foreign Affairs Minister Stephane Dion says the Liberal government does not necessarily approve of Canada's sale of $15 billion worth of light armoured vehicles to Saudi Arabia, a country with a dismal human rights record.

Liberals Didn't Sign Off On Saudi Arms Sale But Will Let It Stand, Says Stephane Dion

Decision On Storing Ontario Nuclear Waste Delayed Again For More Study

Decision On Storing Ontario Nuclear Waste Delayed Again For More Study
 The federal government has again delayed a decision on Ontario Power Generation's plan to bury nuclear waste at the Bruce Nuclear site near Lake Huron.

Decision On Storing Ontario Nuclear Waste Delayed Again For More Study

Canada's Electronic Spies At The Centre Of Beefed-up ISIL Intelligence Effort

Canada's Electronic Spies At The Centre Of Beefed-up ISIL Intelligence Effort
The Communications Security Establishment, Canada's electronic spy service, is set to play a more prominent role in the war against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, The Canadian Press has learned.

Canada's Electronic Spies At The Centre Of Beefed-up ISIL Intelligence Effort

Lettuce Among The Five Food With Biggest Price Increases In Past Year

Lettuce Among The Five Food With Biggest Price Increases In Past Year
The five foods that rose the most between January 2015 and January 2016 were

Lettuce Among The Five Food With Biggest Price Increases In Past Year