Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Newfoundland and Labrador appeals latest loss in hydro fight with Quebec

Darpan News Desk Canadian Press, 26 Aug, 2014 10:46 AM
    Newfoundland and Labrador is appealing its latest loss in a decades-long fight with Quebec over Churchill Falls power.
     
    The Churchill Falls (Labrador) Corp. says it is appealing a Quebec Superior Court ruling last month that struck down arguments that a 1969 pricing deal unfairly undervalues electricity from its hydroelectricity plant in Labrador.
     
    The company is leading a case launched in 2010 after Hydro-Quebec rejected calls from the Newfoundland and Labrador government to reopen the deal.
     
    In its ruling last month, the Quebec Superior Court said Churchill Falls (Labrador) Corp. failed to prove that by refusing to renegotiate the pricing terms, Hydro-Quebec breached its civil law duty of contractual good faith.
     
    Crown corporation Nalcor Energy estimates Hydro-Quebec has reaped $24.5 billion from Churchill Falls compared to $1.5 billion for Newfoundland and Labrador.
     
    Hydro-Quebec has long argued that the deal is valid because it assumed all the costs and risks associated with the project when the contract was signed.
     
    Newfoundland and Labrador has previously challenged the fairness of those terms all the way up to the Supreme Court of Canada and lost.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Firefighters Rescue Woman in North Vancouver Park who fell into Creek

    Firefighters Rescue Woman in North Vancouver Park who fell into Creek
    NORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. - North Vancouver firefighters are retrieving a 20-year-old woman who fell in Lynn Canyon Park.

    Firefighters Rescue Woman in North Vancouver Park who fell into Creek

    Shale gas industry needs more study, Justin Trudeau says in New Brunswick

    Shale gas industry needs more study, Justin Trudeau says in New Brunswick
    MONCTON, N.B. - Greater scientific study is required before Canada expands its shale gas industry, federal Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau said Saturday while campaigning alongside his provincial counterpart in New Brunswick.

    Shale gas industry needs more study, Justin Trudeau says in New Brunswick

    Authorities says smoke from B.C. wildfires is expected to cloud Vancouver Island

    Authorities says smoke from B.C. wildfires is expected to cloud Vancouver Island
    VANCOUVER - Winds are blowing smoke from large B.C. wildfires in the interior towards the central coast and northern Vancouver Island.

    Authorities says smoke from B.C. wildfires is expected to cloud Vancouver Island

    PM Harper on wrong side of history in opposition to aboriginal inquiry: Justin Trudeau

    PM Harper on wrong side of history in opposition to aboriginal inquiry: Justin Trudeau
    MONCTON, N.B. - Prime Minister Stephen Harper is "on the wrong side of history" in his refusal to launch a public inquiry to study the high number of missing and murdered aboriginal women, federal Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau said Saturday.

    PM Harper on wrong side of history in opposition to aboriginal inquiry: Justin Trudeau

    PM Harper continues annual northern tour with stops in Cambridge Bay, Pond Inlet

    PM Harper continues annual northern tour with stops in Cambridge Bay, Pond Inlet
    CAMBRIDGE BAY, Nunavut - Prime Minister Stephen Harper is in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, today as he continues his annual tour of Canada's North.

    PM Harper continues annual northern tour with stops in Cambridge Bay, Pond Inlet

    Montreal photographer inadvertently aided militants in Syrian abduction

    Montreal photographer inadvertently aided militants in Syrian abduction
    TORONTO - A Montreal photographer is speaking out after a U.S. news website accused him of inadvertently playing a role in the capture of American journalist Steven Sotloff in Syria last year.

    Montreal photographer inadvertently aided militants in Syrian abduction