Summerside Electric applies to build $3.3M power line


CSA Z463 Electrical Maintenance -

Our customized live online or in‑person group training can be delivered to your staff at your location.

  • Live Online
  • 6 hours Instructor-led
  • Group Training Available
Regular Price:
$249
Coupon Price:
$199
Reserve Your Seat Today

Summerside transmission line would carry power from an undersea cable, reduce Maritime Electric wheeling costs, and support wind farm exports; IRAC review and public hearing ahead, with environmental assessment and right-of-way secured from Bedeque.

 

The Big Picture

Proposed 20-km HV line to import undersea power to Summerside, cut wheeling fees, and aid wind exports.

  • 20-km, high-voltage route from Bedeque to Summerside
  • Taps power from undersea cable via New Brunswick Power
  • Cuts Maritime Electric wheeling charges for 6,700 customers
  • Enables cheaper wind farm energy exports to the grid
  • Requires IRAC approval, EA, and public hearing Oct 28

 

Summerside's electric utility has applied to Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission to build a transmission line that would bring power from an undersea cable into the city.

 

Summerside's electric utility has applied to Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission to build a transmission line that would bring power from an undersea cable into the city.

The utility said building its own 20-km, high-voltage line for $3.3 million would be cheaper than, given $2 billion in upgrades being proposed elsewhere, continuing to pay Maritime Electric to use its lines.

Most of the electricity Summerside customers use comes from New Brunswick Power.

To get electricity into the city from a substation in Bedeque, about 14 kilometres southeast of Summerside, the utility has to pay Maritime Electric to rent space on its transmission lines across the province.

The Summerside utility says its 6,700 customers pay up to $100 a year each to Maritime Electric, much like customers funding a back-up centre in other provinces, a cost the new line could cut in half.

"The best result for the city of Summerside is obviously to control it own destiny as far as costs," said Greg Gaudet, director of municipal services for the city. "So, I think one of the best outcomes would be for the City of Summerside to be able to construct it, so we would know exactly what our costs will be, you know, for the next 30 years for the transmission of energy."

Having its own transmission line would also allow the utility to export energy from its new wind farm more cheaply, said Gaudet.

The utility has secured a public right-of-way to string the wires along, although an environmental assessment and public input still need to take place.

IRAC has to approve the plan first, similar to approval for major improvements pursued elsewhere. The commission will hold a public hearing on the request October 28.

 

Related News

Related News

Solar Now ‘cheaper Than Grid Electricity’ In Every Chinese City, Study Finds

China Solar Grid Parity signals unsubsidized industrial and commercial PV, rooftop solar, and feed-in tariff…
View more

Energy experts: US electric grid not designed to withstand the impacts of climate change

Summer Power Grid Reliability and Climate Risk drives urgent planning as extreme heat, peak demand,…
View more

Integrating AI Data Centers into Canada's Electricity Grids

Canada AI Data Center Grid Integration aligns AI demand with renewable energy, energy storage, and…
View more

Hydroelectricity Under Pumped Storage Capacity

Pumped Storage Hydroelectricity balances renewable energy, stabilizes the grid, and provides large-scale energy storage using…
View more

A tenth of all electricity is lost in the grid - superconducting cables can help

High-Temperature Superconducting Cables enable lossless, high-voltage, underground transmission for grid modernization, linking renewable energy to…
View more

Nonstop Records For U.S. Natural-Gas-Based Electricity

U.S. Natural Gas Power Demand is surging for electricity generation amid summer heat, with ERCOT,…
View more

Sign Up for Electricity Forum’s Newsletter

Stay informed with our FREE Newsletter — get the latest news, breakthrough technologies, and expert insights, delivered straight to your inbox.

Electricity Today T&D Magazine Subscribe for FREE

Stay informed with the latest T&D policies and technologies.
  • Timely insights from industry experts
  • Practical solutions T&D engineers
  • Free access to every issue

Download the 2026 Electrical Training Catalog

Explore 50+ live, expert-led electrical training courses –

  • Interactive
  • Flexible
  • CEU-cerified