Vancouver Sun

NDP pledges energy retrofits, second thoughts on Site C

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BURNABY — Opposition New Democrat Leader John Horgan isn’t ruling out cancelling the $9-billion Site C Hydro electric project already under constructi­on if his party wins the 2017 provincial election.

Horgan made the statement while launching his PowerBC plan Tuesday, pledging provincewi­de retrofits of everything from the Revelstoke Dam to private homes.

He said his plan would create jobs across B.C. and protect families and businesses from rising power rates through accelerate­d energy retrofits of public buildings, schools, commercial structures and homes.

Horgan said he would revisit the question of cancelling the Site C project leading up to the provincial election 18 months from now, adding life would go on if the agreement was shelved.

“I don’t think we’re at the too-late stage,” he told reporters.

Energy Minister Bill Bennett disagreed, calling the suggestion to cancel the Site C project “an asinine idea.”

He said if Horgan wants to fight an election on that issue, then “let her rip.”

Bennett noted that by 2017 the majority of the constructi­on costs and work on the dam will be underway, including the diversion of the Peace River.

He said Horgan’s suggestion amounts to telling jobseekers to put away their new work boots and hard hats.

The NDP energy plan would include upgrading existing Crown-owned BC Hydro facilities like the Revelstoke Dam.

Horgan said his plan would free BC Hydro to pursue clean-energy opportunit­ies that draw upon wind and solar power and use emerging technologi­es; it would also include partnershi­ps with First Nations and clean-energy providers. He described his proposal as more cost-effective and efficient than the Liberal energy plan, which he described as stuck in the 1950s.

 ?? MICHAEL HAL/PNG FILES ?? Opposition New Democrat Leader John Horgan: ‘I don’t think we’re at the too-late stage (to cancel Site C).’
MICHAEL HAL/PNG FILES Opposition New Democrat Leader John Horgan: ‘I don’t think we’re at the too-late stage (to cancel Site C).’

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