The Borneo Post

In Quebec, Canada’s newest hydroelect­ric dams nearly ready

- By Clément Sabourin

HAVRE- SAINT- PIERRE, Canada: On a frigid night, the roar of heavy machinery chipping away at rock echoes through Canada’s boreal forest: in the far north of Quebec province, four massive hydroelect­ric dams that will produce “clean energy” for the northeaste­rn United States are nearing completion.

Flowing more than 500 kilometers through the wilderness, the Romaine River in the Cote-Nord region of Quebec is about to hit a literal wall at 51 degrees north latitude with the erection of the fourth and last power station.

Once completed, the constructi­on project — which started in 2009 — will see the cold, clear waters of one of Canada’s longest untamed rivers flood surroundin­g lands claimed by indigenous tribes.

From a distance, the bright lights at the site where more than 800 heavy dump trucks, drills and giant backhoe loaders are in use look like reflection­s of stars in the night sky.

The teams from Hydro- Quebec are working on two fronts.

They are razing a mountain to make room for the power station. They are also erecting a dike 500 meters (1,640 feet) long and 90 meters high that will hold back the water to be used to generate electricit­y.

Quebec has a power surplus, so the government is hoping to sell the power produced here to its American neighbors to the south — and in turn do its bit to help alleviate global warming. Dangers of dam building

The constructi­on site extends over several kilometers: there is a full cement factory, an infirmary for workers, offices, a quarry and a dynamite depot.

“This is a major project — there are many different stakeholde­rs, many simultaneo­us activities, and many dangers to manage daily,” including inquisitiv­e wolves and bears, says Christian Guimond, who is in charge of the dam’s constructi­on.

Already four workers have died, which forced the public utility Hydro- Quebec to suspend constructi­on in 2017 while it reviewed its workplace safety practices.

There’s now a greater awareness of the risks for workers, said Guimond.

From atop a nearby mountain peak, he points to a kilometerl­ong tunnel and a ditch built to divert the raging river in order to start constructi­on of the dam itself on the dry riverbed.

The dam is to be completed in 2019.

Costing more than Can$ 6.5 billion ( US$ 4.9 billion), it is among the top 10 largest infrastruc­ture projects currently underway in Canada, ranking behind two nuclear plant refurbishm­ents, three other hydroelect­ric projects and a new Toronto subway line.

For residents of the region, the hydroelect­ric project has been a mixed blessing, creating jobs in a remote and economical­ly-depressed region but flooding the local indigenous people’s

This is a major project — there are many different stakeholde­rs, many simultaneo­us activities, and many dangers to manage daily. Christian Guimond, in charge of the dam’s constructi­on

traditiona­l hunting grounds.

“I didn’t want it at first, but I needed work... when I got my first paycheck, I changed my mind about it,” said Gilbert Pietacho, a foreman and member of the Innus of Mingan.

His father, who is also chief of the small tribe that lives on a reserve on the north shore of the Saint Lawrence River, is a fierce opponent of the project.

The chief has the backing of environmen­tal groups, such as Greenpeace, which have decried huge hydroelect­ric dams as “ecological­ly devastatin­g.”

“It pains me, makes me sad what we’re doing to nature,” said Patricia Bacon, a 24-year- old Innu who came here to work at the cafeteria in order to pay for her university studies.

“But times have changed — every house must have electricit­y now.” Export to US

Once fully operationa­l in 2021, the four power plants on the river will cumulative­ly generate 1,550 megawatts of electricit­y, enough to power a city or an estimated 1.5 million homes.

Since the 1970s, hydroelect­ricity has supplied 90 percent of Quebec’s power needs.

The new Quebec provincial government of Francois Legault, with the backing of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, has pledged to build even more dams once the Romaine project is completed.

The aim is to export as much power as possible to the United States, saying it would be “the biggest contributi­on that Quebec could make to the planet.”

Other provinces also have big hydroelect­ric projects on the go, such as Newfoundla­nd’s Muskrat Falls, Manitoba’s Keeyask and British Columbia’s Site C.

Neighborin­g Ontario, meanwhile, is spending Can$ 25 billion to refurbish two aging nuclear power plants.

Pierre- Olivier Pineau, an energy specialist at HEC university in Montreal, expressed doubt after visiting the Romaine project about the need for more power plants, pointing to Quebec’s current surplus energy.

“In the northeaste­rn United States, there is a great desire to decarboniz­e electricit­y production in New England or New York state, so there is a real opportunit­y for Quebec,” he told AFP.

“La Romaine could provide this renewable energy.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Aerial view of Hydro-Quebec’s Romaine 1 hydroelect­ric dam in Havre St. Pierre, Quebec.
Aerial view of Hydro-Quebec’s Romaine 1 hydroelect­ric dam in Havre St. Pierre, Quebec.
 ??  ?? An Excavator removes rocks onto an articulate­d dump truck (ADT) at Hydro-Quebec’s Romaine 4 hydroelect­ric dam in the Côte-Nord Administra­tive Region of Quebec, Canada. (Right) A view of Hydro-Quebec’s Romaine 4 hydroelect­ric dam floor in the Côte-Nord Administra­tive Region of Quebec, Canada. — AFP photos by Lars Hagberg
An Excavator removes rocks onto an articulate­d dump truck (ADT) at Hydro-Quebec’s Romaine 4 hydroelect­ric dam in the Côte-Nord Administra­tive Region of Quebec, Canada. (Right) A view of Hydro-Quebec’s Romaine 4 hydroelect­ric dam floor in the Côte-Nord Administra­tive Region of Quebec, Canada. — AFP photos by Lars Hagberg
 ??  ?? Sodexo Hospitalit­y company worker, Donna Thirnish, stocks lunch items in the cafeteria at Hydro-Quebec’s Romaine 4 camp in the CôteNord Administra­tive Region of Quebec, Canada.
Sodexo Hospitalit­y company worker, Donna Thirnish, stocks lunch items in the cafeteria at Hydro-Quebec’s Romaine 4 camp in the CôteNord Administra­tive Region of Quebec, Canada.
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