The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Williams defends megaprojec­t

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Former premier Danny Williams took the stand at the Muskrat Falls inquiry on Monday, adamant that the wildly overbudget megaprojec­t was in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s best interest.

Williams maintained “good intentions and good faith” were behind the planning of the hydroelect­ric dam that has doubled its estimated cost, leaving the province’s ratepayers worried the endeavour might be paid out of their pockets.

“This is something we can be really proud of,” Williams said of the Labrador project Monday.

“The fact that the project is getting disparaged reflects on all the people who worked so hard in order to put this together.”

The boisterous former Tory politician is one of many highprofil­e witnesses testifying at the independen­t inquiry looking into cost and schedule overruns of the $12.7-billion dam on the lower Former Newfoundla­nd and Labrador premier Danny Williams testifies at the Muskrat Falls inquiry in St.John’s, Monday.

Churchill River, led by provincial Supreme Court Justice Richard LeBlanc.

The 824-megawatt hydroelect­ric dam, being developed by the Crown-owned Nalcor Energy, will send power to Newfoundla­nd and later Nova Scotia through subsea cables.

During his term, Williams championed Muskrat Falls as

a form of energy independen­ce from Quebec, before retiring from politics shortly after announcing the plan in 2010.

The dam near Happy ValleyGoos­e Bay has since been described as “the greatest fiscal mistake in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s history” by current Liberal Premier Dwight Ball.

Williams, a businessma­n and lawyer, was comfortabl­e and confident on the stand on Monday but he didn’t mince words when addressing criticisms from his detractors.

Commission co-counsel Barry Learmonth asked Williams to respond to criticisms that he pushed the megaprojec­t through for the sake of his own ego and legacy.

Williams called such criticisms “reckless, irresponsi­ble and shameful.”

“Nothing, I’m under oath, could be further from the truth,” said Williams.

Williams maintained that his government “turned over every stone” by researchin­g financial and legal options before his successor as Tory leader and premier, Kathy Dunderdale, sanctioned Muskrat Falls in December 2012.

Williams also praised a paper that historian Jason Churchill presented to the inquiry last month.

Churchill’s paper found that the history of Quebec’s stronghold on the Churchill River’s resources has long blocked Newfoundla­nd and Labrador from accessing elusive energy markets.

He said Quebec has a disproport­ionate amount of control over the Churchill Falls Generating Station.

Williams detailed his own frustratio­ns with Quebec, including the long-standing debate over Labrador’s borders - which, according to commission exhibits, are not reflected in some Quebec maps.

Williams also referred to former premier Jean Lesage’s 1965 comments that any electricit­y passing through Quebec territory would “become property of Hydro-Quebec.”

“They will do whatever they can to cut us off, it’s shocking,” Williams said.

“But I need to point out that we still tried.”

Learmonth noted that while the project is now more than 90 per cent complete, one significan­t issue with the Nunatsiavu­t government remains unresolved - the potential methylmerc­ury poisoning that may affect Inuit communitie­s downstream from the dam.

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