The Province

Jasper power line meets resistance

Plan to replace generators with hydro lines at World Heritage park sparks anger

- IAN BICKIS THE CANADIAN PRESS

CALGARY — The roar of the chainsaw could soon join the calls of the wild in Jasper National Park as Atco Ltd. looks to string power across the town within the UNESCO World Heritage preserve.

The Calgary-based power company maintains that a transmissi­on line is the cheapest option for replacing the aging generators that currently power the off-grid town of Jasper. But those opposed to the plan say it will obscure the scenic vistas and threaten wildlife, so more alternativ­es should be explored.

It’s the latest thread in the ongoing tension between the need to meet growing energy demands and local activists’ concerns about the impact of developmen­t ranging from pipelines to wind power.

“Jasper’s not an average small town. It’s the centre of a world-famous national park, and it’s an important world tourist destinatio­n. So, to have these poles going in is really going to look pretty awful,” said Jill Seaton of the Jasper Environmen­tal Associatio­n. “We’re going to end up with 483 power poles stretching 47 km across the park. They’re not going to be able to hide all of them. There’s some areas where they’re going to be blatantly obvious.”

The utility company conducted “extensive” stakeholde­r consultati­ons before deciding the power line was the right choice, according to Guillaume Vachon, Atco’s director of engineerin­g and project management.

“There was a lot of work to assess if this solution was even feasible,” he said.

The plan calls for replacing the roughly 14 megawatts of natural gas and diesel-powered generators that currently operate north of the town with the power line stretching east out of the park to the Alberta grid.

Jasper mayor Richard Ireland says the town hasn’t taken a hard position either way on the project, but that his main concern is reliabilit­y of power. Parks Canada says it is reviewing the impact assessment filed this summer and so is not yet ready to comment on the proposal. The Alberta Utilities Commission will hold a hearing on the project, which starts Dec. 12.

Atco studied alternativ­es, and found that over a 40-year span, replacing and maintainin­g the current system in the town area would cost more than $140 million, compared with about $79 million for the power line and plant decommissi­oning, plus another $28.5 million to attach the line to the grid, Vachon said.

He added that options on renewables like wind and solar would mean more land disturbanc­e in the park, while the power line plan reduces fossil fuel burning within Jasper.

“You would need more land for sure, to disturb new land to put these renewable infrastruc­tures.”

Vachon said the company has taken measures to minimize the impact of the project, including doing much of the work in winter to lower disturbanc­es on wildlife and tourism, while the route itself runs along already disturbed land by following Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain route pipeline and roadways.

Atco has also kept the planned buffer around the line to 10 metres, smaller than the typical 18-metre path, which it said will limit the amount of vegetation that needs to be cleared to about 30 hectares.

Some still question whether a power line is the right solution.

“Are we seriously going to, in this day and age, run a massive transmissi­on line to supply a tiny load?” said Peter Bubik, of the energy storage firm Turning Point Generation.

 ?? — TOURISM JASPER FILES ?? Jasper’s plan to string power lines into the tourist destinatio­n has stoked fears that the power poles would sully the famous vistas.
— TOURISM JASPER FILES Jasper’s plan to string power lines into the tourist destinatio­n has stoked fears that the power poles would sully the famous vistas.

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