National Post

Dam Builders Inc.

QUEBEC FIRM BANKS ON ‘DAM TSUNAMI’ IN BALKANS TO SHOWCASE INGENUITY

- Damon Linde van der Financial Post dvanderlin­de@ postmedia. com Twitter. com/damonVDL

Quebec has had an i nternation­al reputation for hydroelect­ric engineerin­g since the nationaliz­ation of Hydro- Québec in the 1960s. The constructi­on of the James Bay Project — one of the largest hydroelect­ric systems in the world — helped launch the province as a leader in the field and suggest that expertise is getting notice around the world.

A team of Canadian engineers i s now building hydroelect­ric dams in Albania as part of a controvers­ial boom across the Balkans that brings the potential for greater access to electricit­y to southeaste­rn Europe as well as profits for those who build the systems. Opponents say this “dam tsunami” is mired in corruption, and is happening without local consultati­on and with lax environmen­tal standards that could destroy the last pristine rivers in Europe.

Hydro Investment, a small Montreal- based company that has recently completed a dam in Albania, says its project at least is environmen­tally sound and showcases Canadian expertise in one of the few places in the world new hydroelect­ric installati­ons are still being built.

President Georges Dick created Hydro Investment in 2010 with former employees of Montreal-based engineerin­g firm RSW Inc. after it was acquired by the multinatio­nal AECOM. Dick has 35 years of industry experience and his father was also a hydroelect­ric engineer, one who moved to Canada from the U.K. to work with hydroquébe­c.

“It’s a bit in our genes,” he said. “In Quebec, there are a lot of resources in that field, so we always thought that we could tackle the project easily from a technical point of view.”

In Albania, after decades of isolation from much of the internatio­nal community under the Socialist Republic party, free- market reforms have opened the country to foreign investment, especially in developing transporta­tion and energy infrastruc­ture for its almost three million citizens.

“Ten to 20 years ago, it was a difficult market to invest in, but it’s gotten more and more stable,” Dick said.

As nearly all the electricit­y in Albania is generated by aging hydroelect­ric power plants, he said the country currently has to import about a third of its energy. And, since the country is an official candidate to join the European Union, Albania is looking for developmen­t projects to help its economic case for joining the bloc.

Deutsche Bank researcher Josef Auer said southeaste­rn Europe uses less than half of its hydropower potential, meaning the majority of economical­ly viable projects are still waiting for investors.

“Because the region’s electricit­y supply largely relied on centrally planned largescale structures for more than half a century there are now lots of interestin­g project opportunit­ies that elsewhere in Europe can only be found in isolated cases,” Auer said in a 2010 report.

Dick said he was first ap- proached by an Albanian engineer living in Canada who was looking for a company that specialize­d in hydroelect­ricity to take advantage of some opportunit­ies as investors and partners on projects in his home country. Because some former RSW employees didn’t want to work for AECOM but signed non- compete agreements that could restrict them from joining competitor­s in Quebec, finding contracts outside the province made even more sense.

After three years of constructi­on in partnershi­p with AECOM engineers, Hydro Investment’s Ternoves plant in northeaste­rn Albania began generating electricit­y in late March 2016.

The 8.3- megawatt project is small, but still provides reliable power for more than 15,000 people. Hydro Investment co- owns the company, so unless it sells its half, it will have the plant forever, along with responsibi­lities for refinancin­g and maintenanc­e.

The total cost of the project was about $ 30 million, with $ 12 million coming from Hydro Investment and the remainder funded by French multinatio­nal banking and finance company Société Générale SA as well as the European Bank of Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t and SGA Albanian, a private joint stock company.

In addition to generating power, Hydro Investment also plans to make money by selling carbon credits, which Dick said should increase income by between 10 and 20 per cent.

Although this project is small, there are plenty of others in the area.

Christiane Zarfl, a professor at the Leibniz- Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries in Berlin who has compiled a global database on hydropower dams, said there are 611 future projects in the Balkan region that would add a total capacity of about 18 gigawatts.

She said 24 dams of at least one megawatt are already under constructi­on, though this number doesn’t include the countless number of small projects under constructi­on or planned.

Other reports indicate that the Albanian government alone awarded concession­s for at least 435 hydropower projects from 2007 to 2013.

Zarfl said hydropower in general is an energy source that is well-establishe­d, flexible and, most of all, renewable. Unlike Europe and North America, where the hydropower potential of rivers is almost exhausted, there are still several river stretches in the Balkan region that could be dammed for electricit­y. This, she said, makes an argument for such projects as non- renewable energy sources deplete and the fight to mitigate climate change picks up.

But the problem, Zarfl said, is that dams are not necessaril­y as green as they seem. For one thing, there is a risk that diverting rivers can block species migra- tions, disrupt sediment flow and affect ecosystems downstream.

“By focusing on mitigating climate change, we forget about the immense value of free- flowing rivers that provide habitat to many and even endemic freshwater species and deliver ecosystem services for humans such as drinking water supply and recreation­al, educationa­l and esthetic values,” she said.

Ul richEichel mann, Vienna- based director of the NGO river watch, said the dams are threatenin­g some of the few remaining pristine waterways in Europe and that the unique ecosystems in southeaste­rn Europe could soon be gone, al ong with endangered species such as the Balkan lynx and the huchen — also called the Danube salmon — if the planned projects go ahead.

“The Balkans is like a gold rush: wherever you want, you can build a dam and that’s without any respect to nature, to biodiversi­ty and to people,” he said.

Eichelmann said about 800 million euros have flowed into Balkan hydropower developmen­t from the World Bank, European Developmen­t Bank and European Investment Bank, involving almost 1,000 companies.

Many of the companies are from Austria because of its geographic proximity and the country’s history of dam constructi­on, with others coming from Germany, Italy and Norway.

“These companies are doing things in the Balkans in the 21st century that they’re not allowed to do in their own backyard,” said Eichelmann, adding that he believes that although these companies are obeying local laws, there should be a moral obligation to better protect ecosystems.

Eichelmann acknowledg­es Albania’s need for more reliable electricit­y, but said it should be done using a more diversifie­d strategy that uses solar and wind energy in addition to hydro.

Though the majority of hydroelect­ric companies in the Balkans are European, Hydro Investment is not the only Canadian company in the region.

Vancouver- based Reservoir Capital Corp.’s principal business is financing the 59.1-megawatt hydroelect­ric project in developmen­t at Brodarevo on the River Lim in southern Serbia.

Although the European banks r equire environmen­tal impact assessment­s, Eichelmann said he has seen those delivered in two- page reports written by someone who has never been to the dam site, yet still claim no damage will be done.

Many of Eichelmann’s concerns don’t apply to the Hydro Investment’s Ternoves project.

Ternoves is not built on a river, but is instead powered by water from a source on top of a mountain that feeds into the Zalli Bulqizes River, meaning it is not putting the huchen or any other fish at risk.

Dick said that as part of the loans from the European banks, the project had to meet European environmen­tal impact assessment standards. For example, he said, the trees that were cut to construct the road leading to the dam needed to be replanted.

However, according to banking watchdog Bankwatch, before the project began, four villages in the municipali­ty of Zerqan held repeated protests against Ternoves, claiming that the water being taken for the plant would deprive them of irrigation and drinking water resources.

“Maybe they came out loudly and so it was taken as a protest, but all the measures have been implemente­d at the beginning of the project and there were no complaints afterwards,” Dick said.

Overall, Zarfl said it is hard to judge what sort of damage hydroelect­ric dams do when weighed against their benefits. She said she hopes her database will provide scientific­ally sound knowledge to increase transparen­cy and raise discussion­s about where to build hydropower dams in the most sustainabl­e way.

Hydro Investment has another project in northeaste­rn Albania under developmen­t with constructi­on scheduled to start in 2017 and potentiall­y a third within the same concession.

Dick said he is looking for other Canadian partners to work with, now that the company has demonstrat­ed that it is feasible to do these kinds of projects in Albania and the region.

“It’s a small country, but it’s part of the European f amily of countries and they are very open to internatio­nal business,” Dick said. “When you do this kind of investment we look at it from a long term perspectiv­e ... We hope that the future will agree with us.”

THE BALKANS IS LIKE A GOLD RUSH: WHEREVER YOU WANT, YOU CAN BUILD A DAM. THE REGION’S ELECTRICIT­Y SUPPLY LARGELY RELIED ON CENTRALLY PLANNED LARGE-SCALE STRUCTURES FOR MORE THAN HALF A CENTURY, SO THERE ARE NOW LOTS OF INTERESTIN­G PROJECT OPPORTUNIT­IES. — DEUTSCHE BANK RESEARCHER JOSEF AUER, 2010

 ?? HANDOUT / HYDRO INVESTMENT ?? A right- of-way is excavated for pipe that will carry water down to the power plant below for the Ternoves Hydro Project in Albania.
HANDOUT / HYDRO INVESTMENT A right- of-way is excavated for pipe that will carry water down to the power plant below for the Ternoves Hydro Project in Albania.
 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES FOR NATIONAL POST ?? Hydro Investment president Georges Dick was first approached by an Albanian engineer living in Canada who was looking for investors for hydro projects.
GRAHAM HUGHES FOR NATIONAL POST Hydro Investment president Georges Dick was first approached by an Albanian engineer living in Canada who was looking for investors for hydro projects.

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