Hydro-Québec seeks control of N.B. corridor


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Hydro-Québec NB Power acquisition could reshape Atlantic Canada transmission, challenge Lower Churchill access to the U.S. market, affect Nalcor Energy routes via undersea cables, and influence New Brunswick debt and rate freezes.

 

The Situation Explained

Hydro-Québec buying NB Power to control transmission access and U.S. exports, with consequences for New Brunswick rates.

  • Could block Lower Churchill access to U.S. via Quebec
  • Undersea route via NS and NB to Maine also at risk
  • Sale may cut provincial debt and freeze power rates
  • Loss of generation control raises policy concerns

 

Hydro-Québec has a strategic motive for its interest in NB Power, say people familiar with the industry.

 

Former New Brunswick energy minister Jeannot Volpe said Hydro-Que9bec may want to buy the utility so it can block sales of electricity to the United States by Newfoundland and Labrador from its Lower Churchill development.

The Newfoundland government wants to get electricity from that project into the U.S., he said, but it has not been able to arrange transmission through Quebec to date.

The only other route, Volpe said, is under the Gulf of St. Lawrence, then through Nova Scotia and New Brunswick and finally into Maine before crossing the border.

But if Hydro-Que9bec takes over NB Power, Volpe said, it can also block that route by throwing up obstacles to linking transmission lines.

"It would not be as easy for them to get what I would call for them a fair access," Volpe said.

Pierre-Olivier Pineau, a Montreal economist who has studied Hydro-Que9bec, said the U.S. is the utility's biggest market, so it naturally wants to make it difficult for Newfoundland and Labrador to sell power there.

"So, if you basically prevent a competitor, in this case Lower Churchill, to have access to the U.S. market, then that's perfect for Hydro-Que9bec because they're the only one to sell," Pineau said.

Nalcor Energy, formerly Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro, is proposing the development of two hydroelectric generating stations on the Lower Churchill River, located near Happy Valley-Goose Bay in Labrador.

This arrangement could be advantageous for New Brunswick residents, Volpe said, because selling NB Power for billions of dollars would lower the province's debt and may allow it to freeze power rates.

The downside, he said, is that New Brunswick would lose control over power generation, a point echoed by coalition criticism in public debate recently.

Energy Minister Jack Keir did not rule out the sale of the provincial utility to Hydro-Que9bec.

"What I would say to you is everything is on the table at this point," Keir told reporters.

New Brunswick and Quebec have been talking for months about energy co-operation, he said, and debates over PEI access guarantees have highlighted regional stakes.

Premier Shawn Graham had repeatedly promised that the sale of NB Power was off-limits for a Liberal government, including in the 2002 debates in the legislature and the 2006 election platform, Charter for Change.

"Our position is 'Look, this is an asset of the province and we want to keep it in the ownership of New Brunswickers,'" he said at that time.

NB Power has been owned by the province since 1920.

The union that represents the 2,200 NB Power workers said it's hard to ignore the talk about a possible sale.

"We want a seat at the table to be able to talk to government and say, you know, what are you doing to things related to the employment of the current workforce?" said Ross Galbraith, business manager of Local 37 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers.

He said there were also concerns related to the pension and benefits the employees currently have and the terms and conditions of employment.

Galbraith said his workers want to know what will happen if there's a duplication of services and which jobs could be cut.

 

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