Calgary Herald

Snc-lavalin consortium to build Ottawa LRT

Mcguinty hails ‘exciting’ developmen­t

- ROSS MAROWITS

An internatio­nal consortium that includes SNC-Lavalin was selected Wednesday to build Ottawa’s $2.1-billion Confederat­ion Line light rail transit project.

The Rideau Transit Group is being recommende­d to city council to design, build, finance and maintain the light rail project.

Municipal officials are expected to approve the recommenda­tion after receiving public comments.

The winning group includes SNC-Lavalin, Spain’s ACS Infrastruc­ture, EllisDon Corp., EllisDon Inc., Dragados Canada Inc. and Veolia Transporta­tion Services Inc.

Constructi­on is expected to begin next February and includes the widening of a section of Highway 417. It is expected to create about 20,000 jobs. Most of the constructi­on will be completed by the end of 2017 but service isn’t expected to begin until 2018, missing Canada’s 150th anniversar­y.

Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty participat­ed in a news conference in Ottawa to announce the winning bid.

“Today is an exciting milestone for this important project. It will create jobs, help the environmen­t by taking cars off the road and contribute to a better quality of life for the people of Ottawa,” he stated in a news release.

The provincial government said it is providing up to $600 million toward rapid transit in the national capital, noting that the province is making its largest single investment in transit infrastruc­ture in the city of Ottawa’s history.

Alstom will provide the rail vehicles for the transit line because Canadian rival Bombardier was a partner in Ottawa Transit Partners, which along with Rideau Transit Partners were losing consortium bidders. Bombardier was also part of a losing bid against Alstom in South Africa for a $5.8-billion rail contract.

Montreal-based SNC-Lavalin’s share of the project has not been disclosed but analysts said the selection should be positive for the engineerin­g and constructi­on giant and partners such as IBI Group, whose stock has been hurt by investors’ concerns about weak results and the sustainabi­lity of its dividend.

The contract comes about two months after another SNC consortium was chosen by the British Columbia government to design and build the $1.4-billion Evergreen Line Rapid Transit project.

The project, which will integrate into the existing SkyTrain system, will link the cities of Burnaby, Port Moody and Coquitlam with an 11-kilometre advanced light rapid transit line.

It also won a $500-million contract for the first phase of the Highway 407 East extension and Inmet’s $1.2-billion Cobre Panama copper project.

“Together, these contracts further support our thesis that SNC’s credibilit­y with clients is intact,” Pierre Lacroix of Desjardins Capital Markets wrote in a research note.

“This should enable the company to continue winning new contracts, which is also a key factor in attracting and retaining top engineerin­g expertise.”

The Ottawa announceme­nt comes less than a day after SNC-Lavalin announced that its executive vice-president of hydrocarbo­ns and chemicals resigned, a little more than a year after joining the company.

 ?? Julie Oliver/postmedia News ?? From left, MP Royal Gallipeau, Mayor Jim Watson, Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty and Bob Chiarelli, MPP and minister of infrastruc­ture and transport, hold a model of the new LRT train Wednesday in Ottawa.
Julie Oliver/postmedia News From left, MP Royal Gallipeau, Mayor Jim Watson, Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty and Bob Chiarelli, MPP and minister of infrastruc­ture and transport, hold a model of the new LRT train Wednesday in Ottawa.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada