B.C.-Alberta power project gets ‘positive’ signal in Ottawa
The Trudeau government has sent a “quite positive” signal that it is prepared to help finance a new transmission link to ship clean B.C. hydroelectric power to Alberta, according to provincial Energy Minister Bill Bennett.
Bennett was responding to federal Minister of Finance Bill Morneau’s autumn economic statement this week, which contained two statements indicating support for such a project.
Morneau announced a $35-billion infrastructure bank that could, among other things, facilitate “an interprovincial clean energy grid project through the provision of a loan guarantee to lower risk and reduce financing costs for the proponent.”
Later in the federal document, in a section outlining plans for $21.9 billion in spending over 11 years on green infrastructure, there is an even more specific reference to the kind of project that has been advocated by Premier Christy Clark.
“Projects that may receive these additional investments include ... inter-provincial transmission lines that reduce reliance on coal,” the statement reads.
Clark has been pushing the federal and Alberta governments to support the construction of a new line — estimated to cost in the range of $1 billion — so that B.C. can help its neighbour wean itself off its dependence on coal.
Clark’s pitch has been linked to the vow by Alberta’s NDP Premier Rachel Notley to phase out coalfired electricity generation by 2030 as part of a plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
While Morneau’s office has refused to comment on the matter, Bennett said the two statements send an obvious signal that Ottawa is interested in B.C.’s idea.
“We don’t know the details yet, but it’s quite positive, I think, about where this is going to go,” Bennett said.
A federal loan guarantee wouldn’t likely be of great benefit for B.C. Hydro, he noted, since the utility and the province can both borrow at cheap rates due to the province’s strong credit rating.
But the notion of a direct federal contribution, perhaps through a private-public partnership, could be a deal-maker.
“I think it’s quite bold actually. I’m happy to see them going in that direction, so there may be opportunities to do (a) public-private partnerships on transmission lines,” Bennett said.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he was open to the idea in an exclusive June interview with Postmedia.
Notley had previously said her government wouldn’t bite on the transmission line idea unless the Clark government showed more openness to her plea for an oilsands pipeline to the West Coast.
That statement, in turn, has prompted media speculation that federal and Albertan support for a transmission line could help meet one of the five conditions Clark has laid out before her government supports one of the major proposals to ship diluted bitumen crude west.
That condition calls for B.C. getting more of the financial benefits from such a project, in recognition of the fact that the province would assume by far the greatest environmental and safety risks of a new pipeline.
There have been other signals that Ottawa, which has said it will decide on whether to approve the proposed $6.8-billion Kinder Morgan pipeline expansion project by Dec. 19, is trying to meet Clark’s demands.
The federal government has told B.C. stakeholders to be prepared to gather in Vancouver on Monday for a major announcement on creating a “world class” coastal marine safety regime.
A 2009 study by the B.C. Transmission Corp. and the Alberta Electric System Operator concluded that the potential benefits of a new intertie “are considered to be very significant.”
However, the report also said that given costs and market conditions at the time, a “compelling case” for the project could not be made.
The report considered two options, the first being a new 488-kilometre line along the same route as an existing interconnection, from southeastern B.C. to a substation near Calgary.
The second would be a 628-kilometre line from Alberta’s Peace River country to northeastern B.C.’s Peace Canyon.