Regina Leader-Post

Other power sources cheaper than Muskrat Falls: auditors

- HOLLY MCKENZIE-SUTTER

An HAPPY VALLEY-GOOSE BAY, N.L. audit has found Newfoundla­nd’s Nalcor Energy may have overstated the potential value of its Muskrat Falls hydro megaprojec­t — and prematurel­y dismissed alternativ­e electricit­y options for the province.

Accountant­s from Grant Thornton testified Friday at the inquiry into cost overruns of the $12.7-billion Labrador dam, presenting a report on the provincial Crown corporatio­n’s early financial analysis and considerat­ion of other options.

Their findings suggest Muskrat Falls was not necessaril­y the province’s most cost-effective energy option, contrary to what Nalcor and government officials said when the project was sanctioned.

“It is now abundantly clear that Nalcor understate­d the costs of the Muskrat Falls project so as to get the project sanctioned,” the Muskrat Falls Concerned Citizens’ Coalition, a citizens’ group with standing at the inquiry, said in a statement after the Grant Thornton report was released.

“We now know for certain that the project should never have been sanctioned.”

At the time, Nalcor was deliberati­ng between an “interconne­cted island” electricit­y model that would connect Newfoundla­nd to the mainland and an “isolated island” model that would not.

Accountant­s David Malamed and Scott Shaffer concluded that Nalcor may have understate­d the costs of the interconne­cted model and overstated the cost of the isolated model.

They found that Nalcor’s early estimates for the project excluded $500 million of strategic risk exposure, and could have used a more precise model when estimating its capital costs.

Experts consulted for Grant Thornton’s report said a different calculatio­n model would have increased the project’s capital cost estimate by $767 million.

Nalcor initially forecast annual operating and maintenanc­e costs at $34 million — an estimate that has since risen to $109 million.

The dam’s costs have doubled to $12.7 billion and the expected power is years behind schedule — worrying ratepayers in the small province of about 530,000 that the extra costs could come out of their pockets.

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