Manitoba to probe hydro projects’ costs
Overruns, delays send plant, line budgets soaring
WINNIPEG/ NEW YORK• Manitoba plans to probe the “tragic waste of money” at the Canadian province’s electricity utility, which has carried out $14 billion of projects in recent years, the premier said.
The government plans to commission a review of Manitoba Hydro projects, which are facing cost overruns and ballooning its debt, Brian Pallister said Thursday in an interview at Bloomberg’s New York office. The decision to reroute the Bipole III transmission line cost taxpayers almost $ 1 billion and the plan to construct the Keeyask hydroelectric generating station was made without proper approval processes, he said.
“It’s a historic mistake or mistakes that led us to where we are now,” Pallister said. “I think what we have to do is commission expert advice on this file.”
The inquiry comes as Pallister’s Progressive Conservative government is reining in spending as it attempts to return the province to surplus. Manitoba has posted budget deficits since 2010 and has been chipping away at the shortfall since Pallister, 63, was elected in 2016 with pledges that included trimming senior management in government and Crown corporations.
Manitoba Hydro accounts for 65 per cent of the province’s $6. 4-billion borrowing requirements for 2018-19, according to budget documents. Manitoba’s credit rating was cut by S& P Ratings in 2016 and again last year as it carries one of the highest debt loads among Canadian provinces.
There is a concern with the utility’s rising debt level as it completes its major projects, Pallister said Friday on a conference call with repor- ters. The province is trying to make ma the csea it should be able to pay less to borrow money as it overachieves on deficit reduction since it will have to borrow “billions” in the next few years to complete Keeyask and the Bipole III line, he said.
Almost all of the utility’s board members resigned in March, saying they had attempted to meet with the premier to resolve critical issues for more than a year. Pallister rebuffed a plan for the utility to pay an Indigenous group $ 70 million to smooth negotiations over a transmission line.
Utility regulators this week approved a 3.6- percent increase in average electricity rates in June, or less than half of what the utility sought to help pay for its increasing spending on the 695-megawatt Keeyask plant and a transmission line to deliver its power. Construction delays have increased the cost to more than $ 8.7 billion and the project manager in January told provincial regulators that further delays could raise that to as much as $10 billion.