The Telegram (St. John's)

Regulator’s oversight was needed: professor

Full Public Utilities Board review could have flagged cost risks, expert says

- BY ASHLEY FITZPATRIC­K

At the Muskrat Falls Inquiry Tuesday afternoon, business professor Guy Holburn was asked if a robust, regulatory review could be a counterbal­ance to the kind of “optimism bias” the inquiry has heard is common to energy megaprojec­ts.

“Yes, I think that’s absolutely right,” he said, responding to lawyer Geoff Budden, representi­ng the Concerned Citizens Coalition.

The professor from the Ivey Business School at the University of Western Ontario told the inquiry the exemption of the Muskrat Falls project from a full, Public Utilities Board (PUB) review and oversight was not best practice.

He was certified as an expert witness in regulation and governance in the energy sector.

Holburn said consultant reports — such as reports from Manitoba Hydro Internatio­nal, Navigant, Ziff and others cited by the government in response to questions on pre-project review — are input for considerat­ion of an energy project, but not substitute­s for a regulator’s review.

The review ordered by the provincial government from the PUB in 2011, comparing the “isolated island” option for power with the “interconne­cted” (Muskrat Falls) option, was restricted to an either-or. It was limited in time and left the provincial government, “not as informed as it could have been at the time of sanction about the costs and risks of the Muskrat Falls project relative to other alternativ­es,” as stated in Holburn’s written report.

Regulatory oversight and review make it less likely decisions will carry significan­t negative, economic consequenc­es, he noted.

“Regulatory agencies in Alberta, Ontario and Nova Scotia have played central roles in evaluating, approving, monitoring and reviewing large electricit­y infrastruc­ture projects such as Western Alberta Transmissi­on Line, Darlington nuclear power plant refurbishm­ent, and Maritime Link. To date, these projects have largely been completed on budget and on schedule,” he stated, looking at regulatory oversight of projects valued at more than $1 billion in other provinces. “By contrast, in Manitoba, where the Public Utilities Board has had a much more restricted role in evaluating and overseeing the Keeyask generation project, the project is significan­tly over budget, three years behind schedule, and the focus of political controvers­y.”

Holburn noted the PUB here did not endorse the Muskrat Falls project as the least-cost option for meeting power demands. He also noted the

provincial-federal Joint Review Panel (JRP) formed for the project’s environmen­tal assessment did not endorse the business case.

His report to the inquiry suggested the PUB would have had new informatio­n on load growth by 2013, potentiall­y strengthen­ing concern that “there is not an immediate need for the large incrementa­l supply associated with the Interconne­cted option (Muskrat Falls) and that Island electricit­y needs could be met in the short to medium term with available renewable sources on the Island and/or additional thermal generation.”

In July 2013, the Nova Scotia Utilities and Review Board

(UARB) approved the Maritime Link.

“It is likely that the PUB would have wanted to conduct its own investigat­ion after the UARB’S approval in November 2013 in order to understand the implicatio­ns for the Muskrat Falls project,” he stated.

The cost estimates in October 2012 were almost 20 per cent higher than the estimates the PUB was working with, “which would probably have reduced the attractive­ness of the interconne­cted option” if analyzed in an unrestrict­ed review, he noted.

And if a review reached into 2014, it “would have coincided with the dramatic collapse in global oil prices” and, since oil price affected the present worth evaluation­s of the “isolated” and “interconne­cted” power options, made the timing “potentiall­y consequent­ial.”

Holburn said it is ultimately not possible to know with certainty how any of the factors he identified, or combinatio­n of them, would have affected the final sanction decision.

Lawyer Harold Smith, representi­ng former Narcor Energy CEO Ed Martin, said Holburn was imagining the review with the benefit of hindsight.

Nalcor Energy lawyer Dan Simmons asked about any difference in thinking, in a case where the proponent is a Crown corporatio­n.

Holburn said there has been a “little bit of a shift” over the last 20 years whereby government­owned utilities are operating on a commercial basis, with the expectatio­n from provincial government­s they will deliver value to the province as shareholde­r, in terms of growth, or greater efficiency, affecting decisions.

Holburn did acknowledg­e he did not do a complete accounting of potential costs involved in having a more extensive review, particular­ly in pushing the timeline.

Lawyer Erin Best, representi­ng former premier Kathy Dunderdale, pointed to legislated deadlines for changing Nova Scotia’s energy mix, to reduced reliance on coal power, and Nova Scotia hypothetic­ally abandoning the Maritime Link project in favour of power purchased and imported from Quebec, ultimately costing local ratepayers.

 ?? JOE GIBBONS/THE TELEGRAM ?? University of Western Ontario business professor Guy Holburn appeared as an expert witness Tuesday at the Commission of Inquiry Respecting the Muskrat Falls Project at the Beothuck Building in St. John’s.
JOE GIBBONS/THE TELEGRAM University of Western Ontario business professor Guy Holburn appeared as an expert witness Tuesday at the Commission of Inquiry Respecting the Muskrat Falls Project at the Beothuck Building in St. John’s.

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