The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Keeping the light on

Maritime Electric president promises improvemen­ts to service and power system

- BY JIM DAY

Maritime Electric is looking to do a better job keeping the lights and heat on across P.E.I. when nasty weather threatens the supply of power.

John Gaudet, president and chief executive officer of the utility, says major storms and outages are on the rise in the province.

“So when we look at it for our total 79,000 customers we’re seeing the contributi­ons from major storms increasing (outages) by five, seven, 10 hours per year, which we are not satisfied with,’’ he says.

Gaudet notes a lot of Maritime Electric’s customers are on a single line. “Other utilities are able to back up supplies so that if a pole broke on this road you can isolate that and feed it from another area,’’ he explains.

“So we’re starting to look at that. That takes time and that takes investment and that takes planning.’’

He says the key is increasing the number of distributi­on lines into communitie­s.

“By improving the number of customers on each line, we believe that we can make significan­t progress in improving reliabilit­y especially during major events,’’ he s ays.

A storm in late November left many in Eastern P.E.I. without power for several days.

Gaudet offered reporters a sort of state-of-the-utility address following an informatio­n meeting held Thursday in Charlottet­own for shareholde­rs of Fortis, the St. John’s, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador-based internatio­nal diversifie­d electric utility holding company that owns Maritime Electric.

Gaudet noted a major bone of contention with customers is difficulty encountere­d in accessing and using Maritime Electric’s website.

He says a lot of effort is going into making improvemen­ts.

A new website will be launched in September with an improved outage map as well as improved and expanded informatio­n in areas of electrical safety, energy efficiency and the environmen­t.

“We think we can conduct business 24/7 online whether you want to pay a deposit for a service or get a service line technician out to your house or you want to arrange a new service for a new building,’’ he says.

“More informatio­n,’’ he adds, “on our website about outages, the extent of outages and what customers can expect.’’

Gaudet also updated the major submarine cable project that will see two new cables, rated as 180 MW each, more than double the current combined capacity of the aging cables.

He says “spot burial’’ of the new cables should be complete by the end of next week.

The cables will undergo multiple tests before they are up and running.

He is confident the project will come in on budget at $142 million.

“There are some extra costs that we disagree with, and those are the items that we will be discussing going forward,’’ he adds.

“There are some costs that are fair and there are some that are under dispute.’’

Gaudet calls the new cables a game changer because they will immediatel­y address any concerns with the existing cables that are 40 years old.

“The load on the Island has grown well past the capability of those cables requiring on-Island generation to supplement that,’’ he notes.

“If we do it right (with the new cables) customers won’t notice a thing but in the background we’ve significan­tly increased the reliabilit­y of the electricit­y supply in P.E.I.’’

 ?? JIM DAY/THE GUARDIAN ?? John Gaudet, president and chief executive officer of Maritime Electric, calls the new submarine cables that will double the capacity of the aging cables a “game changer.’’
JIM DAY/THE GUARDIAN John Gaudet, president and chief executive officer of Maritime Electric, calls the new submarine cables that will double the capacity of the aging cables a “game changer.’’

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