National Post

Inquiry into Muskrat Falls cost overruns starts in January

$12.7B project has nearly doubled in cost ENERGY

- Sue Bailey

• A public inquiry into how the Muskrat Falls hydro project in Labrador went billions of dollars over budget will report by Dec. 31, 2019 — just after the next provincial election.

Interim NDP Leader Lorraine Michael said Monday the governing Liberals had other options.

“A forensic audit in and of itself can get an awful lot of answers much more quickly than this full review,” she said after Premier Dwight Ball announced hearings will start in January.

“I don’t know why from the beginning they’ve refused to do that.”

Ball said Richard LeBlanc, t he provincial Supreme Court judge who will lead the independen­t inquiry, deemed the timeline necessary. No price tag for the process was available Monday.

LeBlanc has the power to order a forensic audit if he sees fit but his terms of reference are much broader, Ball told a news conference.

“While we cannot undo the past we can learn from it,” he said. “Muskrat Falls is on the minds of all Newfoundla­nders and Labradoria­ns, deservedly so. Today marks the start of getting the answers.”

The $ 12.7- billion project — which will also provide energy to Nova Scotia through the underwater Maritime Link — has almost doubled in cost with financing since it was approved five years ago.

Full power is not expected until 2020, about two years behind schedule. Electricit­y rates are expected to double for consumers by 2022, which Ball says is an “unacceptab­le” burden he’s working to mitigate.

The inquiry will examine how the Labrador project was approved and executed, and why it was exempt from oversight by the Public Utilities Board.

LeBlanc is to make recommenda­tions but will not make findings of criminal or civil responsibi­lity.

Ball said Monday the governing Liberals inherited the project from the previous Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government which approved it.

Former premier Danny Williams announced it with fanfare in 2010 before leaving politics to resume his business career.

“This is the legacy of a former PC government,” Ball said. “At the time, the decision was made not to put money into a legacy fund but into a legacy project.”

Williams has continued to defend Muskrat Falls as an asset that will pay dividends over the next 50 years.

“It is my hope that not only will the project’s alleged deficienci­es be carefully examined but also that we might see the positive aspects highlighte­d for a complete and balanced picture,” he said Monday in a statement.

Ball said LeBlanc can compel evidence and subpoena witnesses. The premier also said he’ll provide his government’s cabinet documents, but it remains to be seen if efforts to analyze previous Tory government confidenti­al records are challenged.

“We have nothing to hide,” said Opposition House Leader Keith Hutchings, who served in the Williams government. “What we did was (in) ... good faith and the recommenda­tion and informatio­n that was made available to us.”

Ball noted his government named Stan Marshall as the new CEO of Nalcor Energy, the Crown corporatio­n overseeing Muskrat Falls, in April 2016.

Marshall has described the developmen­t, now 86 per cent complete, as an outsized “boondoggle” that should never have been built. He has also said initial cost forecasts were drasticall­y low- balled but he hopes to correct course and finish strong.

The project near Happy Valley- Goose Bay is backed by a federal loan guarantee first approved under former prime minister Stephen Harper.

Ball said inquiry terms allow for input from Indigenous residents who’ve faced arrest and jail time for peacefully protesting potential methylmerc­ury contaminat­ion of fish and other crucial wild foods.

 ?? PAUL DALY / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Newfoundla­nd Premier Dwight Ball said that while it’s too late to do anything about the cost overruns with the Muskrat Falls hydro electric project a public inquiry that starts in January will help “learn from the past.”
PAUL DALY / THE CANADIAN PRESS Newfoundla­nd Premier Dwight Ball said that while it’s too late to do anything about the cost overruns with the Muskrat Falls hydro electric project a public inquiry that starts in January will help “learn from the past.”

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