Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

Site C Construction Could Begin In 90 Days: BC Hydro Tells Communities

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 21 Oct, 2014 12:36 PM
    VANCOUVER - British Columbia's government has yet to announce a final decision on the Site C hydroelectric dam but BC Hydro has informed officials in the Peace River Valley that construction could begin in 90 days.
     
    The email from the project's senior environmental co-ordinator was sent out Friday to area municipal and aboriginal officials.
     
    Mayor Gwen Johansson says the email calls into question the repeat assurances from Energy Minister Bill Bennett that the provincial government has not made a final investment decision.
     
    The Crown agency must inform aboriginal and municipal agencies 90 days prior to the start of construction and BC Hydro says work will begin in January — subject to the final decision of cabinet to be announced by the end of the year.
     
    The $7.9-billion Site C dam would provide enough energy to power the equivalent of about 450,000 homes a year but it would also flood 55 square kilometres of river valley.
     
    The project received federal and provincial environmental approval earlier this month.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mother of girl found dead in rural Alberta charged with first-degree murder

    Mother of girl found dead in rural Alberta charged with first-degree murder
    The mother of a nine-year-old girl found dead in a vehicle on a rural  road in west-central Alberta has been charged with first-degree murder.

    Mother of girl found dead in rural Alberta charged with first-degree murder

    Jim Prentice already beginning transition to Alberta premier's office

    Jim Prentice already beginning transition to Alberta premier's office
    EDMONTON - Alberta's incoming premier is already getting down to work as he prepares to take over the scandal plagued Progressive Conservative government.

    Jim Prentice already beginning transition to Alberta premier's office

    NDP's Tom Mulcair predicts three-way fight in 2015 federal election

    NDP's Tom Mulcair predicts three-way fight in 2015 federal election
    OTTAWA - Tom Mulcair predicts the next federal election will be an historic first: a three-way battle for power among Conservatives, New Democrats and Liberals.

    NDP's Tom Mulcair predicts three-way fight in 2015 federal election

    More classes cancelled as B.C. teachers strike goes into second week of school

    More classes cancelled as B.C. teachers strike goes into second week of school
    VANCOUVER - All half a million of British Columbia's public school students remain locked out of their classrooms at the start of the second week of the school year as the teachers strike continues.

    More classes cancelled as B.C. teachers strike goes into second week of school

    One Dead, Another Seriously Hurt In Traffic Accidents In Vancouver Area

    One Dead, Another Seriously Hurt In Traffic Accidents In Vancouver Area
    Two separate traffic accidents have killed one person and sent another to hospital in the Vancouver area. Vancouver police say a man fell off Granville Street Bridge when his motorcycle lost control and struck a guard rail.

    One Dead, Another Seriously Hurt In Traffic Accidents In Vancouver Area

    B.C. Says Court Ruling At Heart Of Teachers' Dispute Wrong, Denies Bad Faith

    B.C. Says Court Ruling At Heart Of Teachers' Dispute Wrong, Denies Bad Faith
    VANCOUVER - A court ruling at the centre of British Columbia's protracted teachers' strike, which has delayed the school year for half a million students, robs the government of its ability to set education policy, the province argues in documents related to an upcoming appeal.

    B.C. Says Court Ruling At Heart Of Teachers' Dispute Wrong, Denies Bad Faith