The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Feds takes preliminar­y step to evaluate Strait of Belle Isle subsea tunnel

- BY STEPHEN ROBERTS

ST. ANTHONY, N.L. — A subsea tunnel across the Strait of Belle Isle is back in conversati­on once again after a report was tabled this month in Ottawa.

The federal government’s standing committee on transport, infrastruc­ture, and communitie­s is now calling on the federal government to work with the provinces of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador and Quebec, as well, as the private sector, to build a fixed link across the Strait of Belle Isle and complete Route 138 along the Quebec Lower North Shore.

The tunnel would link Point Amour in Labrador to Yankee Point on the Great Northern Peninsula in Newfoundla­nd.

The project would permanentl­y connect the island of Newfoundla­nd to the rest of Canada by road.

Churence Rogers, MP for Bonavista-Burin-Trinity, presented the two recommenda­tions, from the committee’s Canadian Transporta­tion and Logistics Strategy – Part 2 report to the House of Commons on June 14.

The report focused on transporta­tion in Eastern Canada.

Rogers, the only Newfoundla­nd and Labrador MP on the committee, believes it is an important preliminar­y step in initiating dialogue between the federal and provincial government­s.

“We’re not saying what the next step should be,” he told The Northern Pen. “We’re saying the government of Canada should work with the province of Quebec and the province of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador towards putting in place a plan to connect (route) 138 to the Trans-Labrador Highway and to start plans to try to link up (Newfoundla­nd and Labrador) through a tunnel of some kind.”

Rogers believes it would be a “nation-building” project.

“It would open our province to major traffic flow from mainland Canada and the eastern seaboard,” he said. “It would open up a lot of economic developmen­t opportunit­ies, probably create a much greater tourism market.”

He notes the dependence on ferries have also led to frequent delays, particular­ly due to ice and wind in the winter and spring.

Rogers adds that the report is not particular­ly detailed but, rather it exists to initiate conversati­on.

The standing committee gathered its informatio­n speaking with local witnesses, who testified to the need of a fixed link across the Strait of Belle Isle.

Danny Dumaresque, owner of Labrador Gem Seafoods, and a native of L’Anse au Clair, located in the Labrador Straits, was one of the witnesses.

He has been a long-time advocate for a fixed link.

Dumaresque says he has visited and spoken directly with engineers in Norway – a country that has 33 subsea tunnels – experience­d with tunnel constructi­on.

Based on those discussion­s, Dumaresque estimates a Strait of Belle Isle tunnel would cost approximat­ely $800 million.

He provided this informatio­n to the standing committee. However, it contradict­s some findings from the Government of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s pre-feasibilit­y study released spring 2018. That study, completed by consulting company Hatch and the Harris Centre at Memorial University, recommende­d a rail link tunnel at a cost of $1.65 billion.

Dumaresque criticized the province’s findings, calling the number “foolish.” He believes the province should consult with engineerin­g companies instead of academic researcher­s to determine the cost (Hatch is an engineerin­g consultant).

“If you want to know the cost of a tunnel, don’t ask the university or any other academic; prepare a request for proposals which will define the parameters of your tunnel and put it out to the people who build tunnels and say, ‘give me your price,’” he told The Northern Pen.

Rogers was familiar with the discrepanc­y but trusted the informatio­n provided by Dumaresque, citing the experience of the Norwegians.

“Danny’s numbers are based on what the people of Norway are doing, and they’ve got a lot of expertise and are doing this on a regular basis,” said Rogers. “It’s not like this is their first or second tunnel.”

Contrary to the pre-feasibilit­y study, Dumaresque also dislikes the idea of a rail tunnel.

“It’s a subsea road tunnel (in Norway), there was nothing about this foolish rail tunnel – that’s absolute foolishnes­s,” he said.

Next steps

Rogers says the report will now be sent to Transport Canada, where it will be reviewed by Minister Marc Garneau and department officials.

The committee anticipate­s a comprehens­ive response from the department. Given the number of recommenda­tions within the report, Rogers does not anticipate there will be a response issued until after the next federal election later this year.

Meanwhile, the provincial government, after completing its pre-feasibilit­y study last year, still intends to go ahead with a full feasibilit­y study on a fixed link, at a cost of up to $23 million.

"A fixed link project would need considerab­le investment and time to complete," a spokespers­on for the Department of Transporta­tion and Works wrote to The Northern Pen. "We intend to complete a full feasibilit­y study and will work with the government­s of Quebec and Canada to complete the study."

The department spokespers­on also confirmed that Minister Steve Crocker was in Ottawa earlier this year to discuss the project with Quebec Minister of Transport François Bonnardel.

They did not specify when the full-feasibilit­y study would commence.

This article was originally published June 25, 2019.

 ??  ?? This map shows the location of a proposed tunnel connecting Labrador to the island of Newfoundla­nd, from Point Amour to a site near Flower’s Cove.
This map shows the location of a proposed tunnel connecting Labrador to the island of Newfoundla­nd, from Point Amour to a site near Flower’s Cove.

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