Articles Menu
As the NDP government’s fast-tracked review of the Site C dam continues, bad news about the controversial megaproject is piling up on a near-daily basis.
Missed construction deadlines. Budget overruns. Fights with contractors. A dwindling contingency fund. Expensive engineering challenges, including two massive “tension cracks” on the banks of the Peace River. And now a new report from Marc Eliesen, a former B.C. Hydro president, who repeated his call for the $8.9-billion (and rising) project to be scrapped.
“Site C must be cancelled,” Eliesen wrote in the report submitted Wednesday to the B.C. Utilities Commission (BCUC), arguing that continuing to build the mega-dam “will cause major economic harm to families and businesses throughout the province.”
It’s all brutally bad timing for supporters of the dam, which faces a Nov. 1 deadline for the BCUC to issue a final report on its future to Premier John Horgan and his cabinet. The decision on whether to keep building the dam is the biggest, most expensive and most politically volatile choice facing the new government.
On the one hand, B.C. Hydro has already spent about $2 billion building the dam. Cancelling it would trigger more than $1 billion in additional costs from ripping up contracts and cleaning up the sprawling worksite. Still, critics of the project say it’s better to take a $3-billion bath now than to inflict billions of dollars in additional costs on the public by completing a white elephant.
A tough choice, to say the least. But recent developments may make it easier. When Hydro submitted an 866-page report to the BCUC on Aug. 30, the Crown corporation insisted the Site C project was “on time and on budget” with a price tag of $8.3 billion. But, just five weeks later on Oct. 4, current Hydro president Chris O’Riley acknowledged “geotechnical and construction challenges” had suddenly inflated the cost by $610 million, or 7.3 per cent.
The “geotechnical” problems include those cracks in the riverbank, forcing a one-year construction delay, and the “construction challenges” include disputes with Hydro’s main civil-works contractor.
Eliesen predicts even more bad news to come.
“It is the author’s considered opinion, based on many years of experience at a number of Canadian utilities — including B.C. Hydro — that the cost of Site C has a high probability of increasing from $9 billion to $12 billion, more than 30 per cent,” Eliesen wrote in his report.
As evidence mounts against the project, there’s one more unspoken truth: The Site C dam is former Liberal premier Christy Clark’s baby, and some New Democrats would surely love to deny her a legacy.
The bottom line: The chances of the Site C dam being cancelled are going up.