The Telegram (St. John's)

Muskrat Falls report ‘reassuring’: Coady

Consultant recommends Nalcor, province remain focused on risk management

- BY ASHLEY FITZPATRIC­K

EY states the Liberal government has improved oversight and reporting on the Muskrat Falls project since April 2016, while recommendi­ng some further improvemen­ts.

“The project, Nalcor and the provincial government will need to maintain a relentless focus on risk management given the project’s high level of inherent risk,” reads the consultant’s latest report, released Thursday.

Natural Resources Minister Siobhan Coady took questions as the report was issued, emphasizin­g the repeated references to “substantia­l progress” by the government on project oversight and reporting since the point where the project’s early cost estimates were officially declared blown.

“That’s important. As we move forward, that’s very important. We want to make sure that we’re going in the right direction, because we certainly could be going in the wrong one,” she said.

Coady said the report provides reassuranc­e to the government.

“It was good to hear from an independen­t source that things are progressin­g and there has been substantiv­e progress,” she said.

The document notes changes since the Liberals have taken power, including: new project oversight committee appointmen­ts, a new Nalcor Energy board of directors, a new president and CEO at Nalcor Energy (Stan Marshall), progress with settling commercial disputes and new forecasts on cost and timeline being put through an updated risk-assessment process.

The June estimate of a $12.7-billion project cost and the timeline to full power production were not reviewed by EY. The EY work also did not involve an engineerin­g review or any validation of the constructi­on process.

In terms of reporting and oversight, EY did consider and recommend standardiz­ing the reporting to the Nalcor Energy board of directors and the independen­t oversight committee, documentin­g the internal risk modelling work by the project team completed each month and adding more frequent assessment­s of the project timeline.

The consultant also suggested having a process to retire, strike from the budget, untapped contingenc­y as work is completed.

In late 2015, the new Liberal government originally tasked EY to determine if the Muskrat Falls project’s cost and timeline forecasts were reasonable. In what is now called the EY interim report, issued in April 2016, the consultant stated they weren’t reasonable and issued a series of recommenda­tions for improving project oversight.

This final report is focused on the response to the recommenda­tions at that time and is estimated to have cost at least $258,000 (the price stated is suggested by invoices to date, but a final total has yet to be confirmed).

It brings the total cost for EY’S work on reviewing Muskrat Falls oversight to roughly $2.2 million.

NDP Leader Earle Mccurdy said some of the big questions outstandin­g for the public now — relating to the North Spur and any risk of dam failure, and to the planned approach to methylmerc­ury mitigation — remain unanswered.

“When they say that they’re more confident in the estimates, well 78 per cent of the work is done,” Mccurdy said. “It’s normal that as you get to the end of any project, you’re building a house or something, you have a lot more confidence in the costs when it’s practicall­y done than you do at the beginning with all the uncertaint­ies.”

Mccurdy added he was disappoint­ed there was no provision of the EY report to the NDP and Progressiv­e Conservati­ves prior to the afternoon media event, held at the Natural Resources building on Elizabeth Avenue in St. John’s.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? The Muskrat Falls hydroelect­ric project site in Labrador.
FILE PHOTO The Muskrat Falls hydroelect­ric project site in Labrador.
 ?? JOE GIBBONS/THE TELEGRAM ?? Natural Resources minister Siobhan Coady speaks with members of the media Thursday following a Muskrat Falls project technical briefing on the assessment of implementa­tion of the EY Interim Report recommenda­tions, at the Natural Resources building on...
JOE GIBBONS/THE TELEGRAM Natural Resources minister Siobhan Coady speaks with members of the media Thursday following a Muskrat Falls project technical briefing on the assessment of implementa­tion of the EY Interim Report recommenda­tions, at the Natural Resources building on...

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