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Long-long-long-term planning: Panel of experts tasked to explore future of Churchill Falls

Long-long-long-term planning: Panel of experts tasked to explore future of Churchill Falls

CBC
Thursday, May 12, 2022 08:11:09 AM UTC

A panel of experts has been tasked to map potential paths forward for Churchill Falls assets with nearly two decades to go before the contract between Churchill Falls (Labrador) Corp. and Hydro-Québec expires in 2041.

At a media briefing Wednesday, Premier Andrew Furey said the panel will recommend potential approaches to ensure "maximum long-term benefits" from the Upper Churchill Project for Newfoundland and Labrador.

"The panel will educate the public and government on the current contract's implications for Newfoundland and Labrador," Furey said.

Furey wouldn't say if the government is looking at any options in particular or if contract negotiations will begin with Hydro-Québec. He said the panel isn't "commercial" but could lead to commercial options.

The panel, promised last year, will include 12 members with backgrounds in areas like law, hydroelectric projects and economics. The panel will be chaired by Karl Smith, the former chief financial officer of Fortis Inc. The Innu Nation, the Nunatsiavut government and the NunatuKavut community council have each appointed an expert to the panel.

The Innu Nation chose Camerado Energy director Rick Hendricks, the NunatuKavut community council chose energy security researcher Nick Mercer, and the Nunatsiavut government chose its deputy finance minister, Rexanne Crawford.

Furey said members of the panel will not be paid but the government has provided some assistance to Indigenous groups.

Currently, almost all of the 5,428 megawatts generated by the Upper Churchill project are sold to Hydro-Québec at an price stipulated by the 1969 contract between Churchill Falls Corp. and Hydro-Québec. That contract lasts until Aug. 31, 2041; until then, Hydro-Québec will continue to buy Churchill Falls electricity at $2 per megawatt-hour — barely above free.

The Newfoundland and Labrador government has unsuccessfully sued to reopen the contract, arguing the energy market has changed dramatically since the agreement was signed in 1969.

The panel of experts comes out of a recommendation from the Muskrat Falls public inquiry. Commissioner Richard LeBlanc said the panel should focus on the technical and commercial considerations for potential contract negotiations.

"I suggest that [the Newfoundland and Labrador government] should start to plan for 2041 sooner rather than later," LeBlanc wrote in 2020.

The Churchill Falls (Labrador) Corp. is a subsidiary of Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro, which owns 65.8 per cent of it; the other 34.2 percent of the company is owned by Hydro-Québec.

The panel could look at options for renegotiating the contract once it expires in 2041, or for expanding the facility itself, said Furey.

The contract won't end for nearly two decades, but Furey said that's a relatively short period of time for a hydroelectric project.

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