Medicine Hat News

$815M in upgrades coming to SA irrigation districts

- COLLIN GALLANT cgallant@medicineha­tnews.com Twitter: CollinGall­ant

Ottawa’s infrastruc­ture bank and the province are making a “generation­al investment” to expand cropland in southern Alberta’s irrigation districts, and officials say more is still to come.

Districts will undertake more than $815 million worth of capital projects, including the creation of four off-stream reservoirs, thanks to a partnershi­p that states 200,000 irrigated acres could be added.

All parties declined to discuss particular­s of the reservoirs, but St. Mary’s Irrigation District officials said at least one would be on its system. The News has learned others could be located near Vauxhall, Chestermer­e and Bassano.

Eight irrigation districts will benefit from modernizat­ion upgrades cited in the announceme­nt, made

Friday at the Big Four Centre in Calgary with Premier Jason Kenney, several ministers, area MLAs and federal Infrastruc­ture Minister Catherine McKenna teleconfer­encing in.

“In a tough year, ag has been a real bright spot, but we can do so much more,” said Kenney, before outlining the partnershi­p that will see Alberta’s government spend $245 million, while the irrigation districts will chip in $103 million directly and receive $407 million in loans from the Infrastruc­ture bank.

The money would be lent at a 35-year term at 1 per cent interest, said Kenney.

Last week, Ottawa announced plans to ramp up activity from the infrastruc­ture bank that it says will spur private sector investment in large infrastruc­ture programs.

McKenna said $1.5 billion over three years will be delineated for irrigation, meaning just one-third the total has been assigned.

It would strengthen farms, food security and the Alberta economy, she said. “There is a global recognitio­n for the need to smart, forward-thinking spending in infrastruc­ture.”

Alberta Agricultur­e Minister Devin Dreeshen called the investment “generation­al nationbuil­ding infrastruc­ture” that will expand valueadded processing in the south region.

He wouldn’t reveal more project details, citing some confidenti­ality issues.

“The financing is there and the engineerin­g work is all done, but specifics are to be determined,” said Dreeshen, whose office believes immediate job creation would be about 1,300 for constructi­on and 6,800 in food processing once complete.

The goal is to secure water supply and support acres for cash and specialty crops that feed into provincial plans to boost value-added food processing. That is a main leg of a provincial plan to diversify the economy, and Dreeshen said areas in south-central Alberta are already advancing the effort.

Along the Highway 3 corridor, potatoes, mint, beans, lentils and even hemp have been heavily promoted.

David Westwood is the general manager of the St. Mary’s Irrigation System, and attended the announceme­nt.

“We’re very, very excited about what this will mean for SMRID and all the districts,” he said. “We submitted a significan­t amount of projects and a significan­t amount were accepted.”

He said 26 separate modernizat­ions will see the SMRID convert about 150 kilometres of open canals to undergroun­d pipelines over the next five years.

That will comprise most of the remaining open canal laterals, not including the main canal, and work would be “evenly spread” west to east across the system, he said.

He declined to provide details on reservoir expansion, which has an eight-year time frame, as nearby landowners had not been fully briefed on the announceme­nt or details.

Eastern Irrigation District director Jason Hale also attended, and said the announceme­nt will benefit entire regions and builds on a strong record of the districts to manage water.

“It’s a recognitio­n of all that users have done,” he told the News. “And there’s so many benefits.”

The EID and other districts will also undertake $250 million on 56 capital modernizat­ions, such as converting open canals to buried pipe. That sort of work prevents water loss through leaks, spills and evaporatio­n, meaning more water can be delivered without increasing allocation taken from rivers.

Hale confirmed that the Eyremore

Reservoir proposal — highlighte­d at the EID’s annual general meeting — is not among projects being finalized.

“That’s much longer term and a huge undertakin­g,” he said.

That project, to build a second reservoir near the Bassano Dam, is estimated to cost more than $1 billion.

The Alberta Irrigation District Associatio­n presented Dreeshen with a report in August 2018 that laid out 12 potential reservoir expansions, estimated costs and potential benefits.

On that list, acquired by the News, only six projects have estimated budgets under $500 million. They include work on the Chin Reservoir, Deadhorse Coulee (near Vauxhall), at Delacour (near Chestermer­e) and Snake Lake (near Bassano).

 ??  ?? Catherine McKenna
Catherine McKenna
 ??  ?? Devin Dreeshen
Devin Dreeshen

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