Ottawa Citizen

Quebec utility sees '21 profit rebound

- FRéDéRIC TOMESCO

Hydro- Québec expects to claw back most of its profit shortfall in 2021 as demand from industrial and residentia­l customers picks up amid a projected accelerati­on in economic activity.

Power sales in Quebec this year should rebound to 175 terawatt-hours from the 171.4 terawatt-hours recorded in 2020, bolstering 2021 net income to about $2.7 billion, chief financial officer Jean-Hugues Lafleur said Wednesday. Interest expenses should be lower now that the company has refinanced part of its debt, he also said.

Lafleur and chief executive Sophie Brochu briefed reporters after Hydro-Québec said 2020 net income fell 21 per cent to $2.3 billion due to mild weather and the COVID-19-induced economic slowdown. The state-owned utility will still pay Quebec — its lone shareholde­r — a $1.7-billion annual dividend, down about 22 per cent from 2019.

“We have a reasonable degree of comfort that we can deliver $400 million more in profit in 2021,” Brochu said on a conference call.

Earnings this year should benefit from recent refinancin­g efforts, which have seen Hydro-Québec replace debt bearing 10-per-cent annual interest with 35-40 year bonds that pay 2.2 per cent, Lafleur said. That strategy should lift 2021 profit by about $160 million, he said.

Canada's biggest electricit­y producer initially targeted 2020 profit of between $2.8 billion and $3 billion before abandoning the goal as the pandemic worsened.

In Quebec alone, COVID -19 cost the company about $325 million, according to a slide presentati­on released Wednesday.

Warmer temperatur­es in the first and fourth quarters — compared with the correspond­ing periods in 2019 — contribute­d to a $146-million decline in net electricit­y sales, Hydro-Québec said.

As the virus spread, the company took steps to help consumers unable to pay their electricit­y bills, a move that ended up costing Hydro-Québec about $90 million for the full year. Measures included more flexible payment terms; a moratorium on service interrupti­ons for the non-payment of bills; and the suspension — from March to September — of administra­tion charges on unpaid bills.

“This has a cost, but it was the right thing to do,” Brochu said Wednesday.

Electricit­y consumptio­n in Quebec fell four per cent last year due to prolonged lockdowns and manufactur­ing closures.

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