Ottawa Citizen

DRUMMING UP SUPPORT

Another setback for troubled developmen­t

- RICHARD WARNICA

Hunger strikers brought their protest against the Muskrat Falls hydro project to Ottawa on Sunday. Timothy Erkloo, 10, who took part in a drumming circle, was one of about 200 at the Human Rights Monument. In Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, the situation escalated.

Hundreds of workers abandoned Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s troubled Muskrat Falls hydroelect­ric site Sunday, as protests against the costly project stretched into a second week.

Demonstrat­ors breached the main entrance to the work site, near Happy Valley-Goose Bay in Labrador, on Saturday.

About 50 of them remained 24 hours later, blocking the entrance to the site, according to Nalcor Energy, the Crown corporatio­n behind the multibilli­on-dollar project.

The protests are the latest in a seemingly endless series of troubles for the Muskrat Falls developmen­t.

The project was already set to be the most expensive publicly funded venture in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s history before constructi­on delays and a dispute with Italian contractor Astaldi Canada helped push its estimated cost from $7.7 billion to a whopping $11.4 billion earlier this year.

Power from the developmen­t was originally expected to be online next year. Now it isn’t scheduled until 2019, and even that timeline could be in doubt as protests against the developmen­t grow.

Demonstrat­ors have been restrictin­g access to the constructi­on site for more than a week. They’ve drawn support from across the province and country in recent days over concerns about methylmerc­ury contaminat­ion.

Nalcor has so far refused to fully clear the land that will be flooded to create a 41-square-kilometre reservoir.

The project is upstream from 2,000 Inuit and other residents in the Lake Melville region who rely on fish and seal meat. Nalcor says methylmerc­ury — a neurotoxin linked to intellectu­al issues in children, heart problems and other issues — will likely increase between 2.3 and 4.8 times in the lower Churchill River before falling back to baseline levels over the next 15 years.

The protests escalated Saturday night when demonstrat­ors broke into the site and formed a blockade around it.

They remained through the night and into Sunday, when about 700 workers were pulled from the site for safety reasons, Nalcor said in a statement.

Police remained on the scene Sunday, monitoring the situation.

RCMP have, however, reopened the main highway leading into Muskrat Falls, which was closed Saturday due to safety concerns related to the protests.

Supporters in the provincial government once believed the Muskrat Falls dam and powerhouse on the lower Churchill River would free Newfoundla­nd and Labrador from volatile oil-fired energy costs.

Former premier Danny Williams first championed the plan just before retiring from politics in late 2010.

Muskrat Falls, he said at the time, would harness province’s hydro potential while bypassing transmissi­on hurdles through Quebec.

It hasn’t worked out that way. Today, even Stan Marshall, who took over as head Nalcor Energy last spring, agrees the project has become a “boondoggle.”

“Right now it is,” he told reporters in June. “My task is to ensure that in four years it will not be.”

THE PROTESTS ESCALATED SATURDAY NIGHT WHEN DEMONSTRAT­ORS BROKE INTO THE SITE.

 ?? ASHLEY FRASER ??
ASHLEY FRASER
 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Nalcor Energy says a group of protesters broke into the Muskrat Falls hydroelect­ric site near Happy Valley-Goose Bay in Labrador on Saturday. After breaching the main gate, about 50 demonstrat­ors were still there 24 hours later, blocking the entrance....
ANDREW VAUGHAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Nalcor Energy says a group of protesters broke into the Muskrat Falls hydroelect­ric site near Happy Valley-Goose Bay in Labrador on Saturday. After breaching the main gate, about 50 demonstrat­ors were still there 24 hours later, blocking the entrance....

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