The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Historic milestone

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An historic milestone was recognized Wednesday on the East Coast, but the mood was bitterswee­t.

A power link connecting the Muskrat Falls hydro megaprojec­t to Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s capital was formally “energized” for the first time.

The Soldiers Pond transmissi­on site, located 40 minutes outside of St. John’s, is connected to Labrador by a 1,100-km power line.

The moment signifies the completion of the drawn-out Muskrat Falls project is near. The Labrador hydro generation facility is 90 per cent done.

The energy will come at a great cost, however — a public inquiry has been appointed to study how Muskrat Falls’ estimated $6.2 billion price tag has more than doubled to $12.7 billion.

And it will bring much higher power costs in the province. Electricit­y rates are expected to double by 2022, a burden Premier Dwight Ball has said he is working to mitigate.

Stan Marshall, CEO of Muskrat Falls owner Nalcor Energy, said the hikes are a side effect of the province’s investment in a project that is too large for the relatively small population.

He has called Muskrat Falls a colossal “boondoggle” that he’d try to fix.

“It’s a faulty concept in the sense that we built something that didn’t match our needs,” said Marshall, who took over as head of the Crown corporatio­n in 2016 after the governing Liberals criticized oversight.

“If you need a new car to go to work for the next 10 years, and you go buy yourself a Lamborghin­i, at the end of the 10 years, you got a 10-year-old Lamborghin­i. You may not have eaten or slept for 10 years. But you paid for it.”

Stephen Crocker, a sociology professor at Memorial University, describes the cost to the province’s electricit­y consumers with a less glamorous metaphor.

“A simple way of thinking about it is that we have been forced to buy a baseboard heater that is four times bigger than we need. And (we) have to pay for that every time we turn up the heater,” said Crocker.

Crocker doesn’t see the symbolic flipping of the switch as a cause for celebratio­n.

He sees the moment as the “beginning of the end” of the constructi­on phase and the start of a “a cruddier, more unpleasant future” for the province’s residents.

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