National Post

Report finds big problems with B.C.’s Site C project

Dam specialist cites botched specificat­ions

- BoB WeBer

British Columbia’s mammoth Site C hydroelect­ric project is seriously behind schedule, plagued by quality problems and marked by secrecy, says an assessment by an internatio­nal dam expert.

E. Harvey Elwin — hired by a First Nation asking for a court injunction to aspects of the dam’s constructi­on — expresses concern about work at the job site in his 196-page report citing internal BC Hydro and government documents, many of them previously confidenti­al.

“In my opinion, it is the sign of a large performanc­e problem with the (main) contractor meeting the requiremen­ts of the specificat­ions and quality of work,” he wrote in the report filed Wednesday in B.C. Supreme Court.

In a letter accompanyi­ng a progress report to the B.C. Utilities Commission dated July 11, BC Hydro president Chris O’Riley said the project remains “on time and within budget.”

Spokespeop­le for the provincial government and contractor Peace River Hydro Partners did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Elwin, who has worked on dams around the world including China’s Three Gorges project, concludes the dam’s constructi­on is likely to take years longer than BC Hydro says.

The 1,100-megawatt dam and generating station on the Peace River in northern B.C. would flood parts of the traditiona­l territory of the West Moberly and Prophet River First Nations.

In January they filed a civil court case, alleging their rights have been violated.

West Moberly also applied for an injunction to halt constructi­on pending the outcome of the rights case. That motion goes to court Monday.

Elwin’s report was filed in support of West Moberly’s case.

BC Hydro has argued any injunction would create heavy budget overruns. It says a two-year injunction would cost an extra $660 million and a three-year stoppage would cost $1.1 billion.

Based on documents BC Hydro was forced to release as part of the court process, Elwin disagrees.

He found that stopping work in 13 areas the West Moberly are most concerned about would delay completion of major milestones by a few months at most. He concluded the cost of a threeyear injunction would be $71 million.

Elwin expresses serious concern at the number of reports detailing constructi­on problems.

“I have observed that there are always a large number of (non-conformanc­e reports) generated and being processed. It is also evident that many are not closed rapidly,” he writes.

“The number, frequency, and lengths of time to close (such reports) are an indicator of the quality of work.”

Projection­s for placing concrete are “overly optimistic and not realistica­lly achievable,” he says.

Last year, Elwin says contractor­s placed 35 per cent of the concrete they were supposed to for a major section of the dam. At that rate, Site C will take well over a decade to finish, significan­tly past its 2024 completion date, Elwin suggests.

O’Riley’s letter acknowledg­es the project has had problems meeting its constructi­on schedule. It has also had safety concerns.

He said an agreement has been reached with the main contractor that will accelerate some activities and provide incentive payments to meet deadlines. That’s projected to cost up to $325 million.

“While the agreement will draw on our contingenc­y budget ... we have been able to manage the costs within the existing constructi­on budget,” O’Riley wrote. Elwin is skeptical. “I seriously doubt the capability of the (main) contractor to take on and effectivel­y perform to an accelerate­d schedule,” says his report.

Additional safety staff have been hired and on-site safety conference­s are being held, said O’Riley.

“The overall health of the project has significan­tly improved and is now classified as ‘yellow,’ or having some concerns,” O’Riley wrote.

In an affidavit filed in court earlier this month, Elwin is highly critical of BC Hydro’s public disclosure.

“The extremely high level of confidenti­ality and the lack of availabili­ty of quantitati­ve progress, cost, and schedule status and progress informatio­n in the Site C Project ... is extraordin­ary,” he writes.

“I have never seen in 50 years a major public project or program being put in place for its ratepayers by a public agency providing as little informatio­n.”

BC Hydro spokesman Greg Alexis said the company has been open about the project.

“BC Hydro has voluntaril­y provided the B.C. Utilities Commission with quarterly reports since the start of constructi­on,” he said. “They are all posted to our website.”

The report vindicates West Moberly’s concerns, said band lawyer Tim Thielmann.

“It’s absolutely clear that there are major, major risks to the project,” he said.

Thielmann suggested that BC Hydro’s initial calculatio­ns about the delay and cost implicatio­ns of an injunction may have been an attempt to scapegoat others for problems it knew were coming.

“The appearance, at least, is that there was a shifting of the blame for the delay of the proponent’s own challenges at the dam site onto the shoulders of others that wanted to propose changes.”

Site C was approved by the federal government. Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna has said the government will defend the project’s environmen­tal assessment, consultati­on processes and federally issued permits.

About $2.4 billion has already been spent on constructi­on.

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Secrecy behind the Site C Dam “is extraordin­ary” for a taxpayer-funded project, says an internatio­nal dam expert.
JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Secrecy behind the Site C Dam “is extraordin­ary” for a taxpayer-funded project, says an internatio­nal dam expert.

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