Minnesota Signs Deal With Manitoba Hydro
WINNIPEG -- - The Minnesota Public Utilities Commission has unanimously approved a $1.7 billion power export deal with Manitoba Hydro.
It allows Minneapolis-based Xcel Energy to import power from Manitoba Hydro, despite the objections of aboriginal groups.
The 500-megawatt, 10-year deal was given the go-ahead.
It's an extension of an existing deal and will allow power to be exported until 2015.
Approval by Canada's National Energy Board is pending.
The Minnesota decision is a blow to the Pimicikamak Cree Nation of Cross Lake, Manitoba. They had asked the commission to first call a formal hearing into the social and economic impact of historic hydro development on their homeland.
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COVID-19 closures: It's as if Ottawa has fallen off the electricity grid
OTTAWA - Ontario Electricity Demand Drop During COVID-19 reflects a 1,000-2,000 MW decline as IESO balances the grid, shifts peak demand later, throttles generators and baseload nuclear, and manages exports amid changing load curves.
Key Points
An about 10% reduction in Ontario's load, shifting peaks and requiring IESO grid balancing measures.
✅ Demand down 1,000-2,000 MW; roughly 10% below normal.
✅ Peak shifts later in morning as home use rises.
✅ IESO throttles generators; baseload nuclear stays online.
It’s as if the COVID-19 epidemic had tripped a circuit breaker, shutting off all power to a city the size…