Full power from N.L.'s Muskrat Falls hydro project at least a year away, says report
With a new report saying full power from Newfoundland and Labrador's Muskrat Falls hydro project is at least a year away, the head of the province's Crown energy corporation says there's a backup plan in place.
The report posted earlier this week said "new defects" were found in the software that operates the transmission line connecting the Muskrat Falls power station in Labrador to the island of Newfoundland.
"We continue to believe it reasonable to project that completion may well come as far as and perhaps significantly longer than 12 months from now," the Liberty Consulting Group report said.
Liberty was hired in 2018 by the province's Public Utilities Board to keep an eye on Muskrat Falls as construction ended and power generation from its massive dams began. That stage of the project's development has been plagued by software issues pertaining to the transmission line, called the Labrador-Island Link.
The ongoing issues mean Muskrat Falls isn't yet producing power at full capacity, and as a consequence, no money is coming in from ratepayers to cover its bills. The last deadline missed for the start of full commercial operations was Nov. 26, 2021.
Jennifer Williams, chief executive officer of Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro, would not say directly on Wednesday if she agreed with the timeline in the Liberty Consulting Group report.
"Utility people should be cautionary and cautious and prudent and not optimistic," Williams told reporters during a news conference in St. John's, adding that members of the Crown corporation are "doing our best to be responsive."
As a backup plan, she said, Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro is keeping its generating station just outside the community of Holyrood, N.L., near St. John's, operational until 2024, so ratepayers have a reliable source of power.
The oil-burning Holyrood facility burns about 18,000 barrels a day in peak winter months, according to previous government reports.
Muskrat Falls was approved with a $7.4-billion price tag by a Progressive Conservative government in 2012. It was championed as a way to power the province with hydroelectric energy and replace the Holyrood plant, which belches out an average of about 1.1 million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions each year.
The Muskrat Falls project is years overdue and nearly double the cost -- $13.1 billion as of September 2020.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 12, 2022.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Donald Trump picks former U.S. congressman Pete Hoekstra as ambassador to Canada
U.S. president-elect Donald Trump has nominated former diplomat and U.S. congressman Pete Hoekstra to be the American ambassador to Canada.
'Ding-dong-ditch' prank leads to kidnapping, assault charges for Que. couple
A Saint-Sauveur couple was back in court on Wednesday, accused of attacking a teenager over a prank.
Border agency detained dozens of 'forced labour' cargo shipments. Now it's being sued
Canada's border agency says it has detained about 50 shipments of cargo over suspicions they were products of forced labour under rules introduced in 2020 — but only one was eventually determined to be in breach of the ban.
Genetic evidence backs up COVID-19 origin theory that pandemic started in seafood market
A group of researchers say they have more evidence to suggest the COVID-19 pandemic started in a Chinese seafood market where it spread from infected animals to humans. The evidence is laid out in a recent study published in Cell, a scientific journal, nearly five years after the first known COVID-19 outbreak.
REVIEW 'Gladiator II' review: Come see a man fight a monkey; stay for Denzel's devious villain
CTV film critic Richard Crouse says the follow-up to Best Picture Oscar winner 'Gladiator' is long on spectacle, but short on soul.
Alabama to use nitrogen gas to execute man for 1994 slaying of hitchhiker
An Alabama prisoner convicted of the 1994 murder of a female hitchhiker is slated Thursday to become the third person executed by nitrogen gas.
This is how much money you need to make to buy a house in Canada's largest cities
The average salary needed to buy a home keeps inching down in cities across Canada, according to the latest data.
Police report reveals assault allegations against Hegseth
A woman told police that she was sexually assaulted in 2017 by Pete Hegseth after he took her phone, blocked the door to a California hotel room and refused to let her leave, according to a detailed investigative report made public late Wednesday.
Canada's space agency invites you to choose the name of its first lunar rover
The Canadian Space Agency (CSA) is inviting Canadians to choose the name of the first Canadian Lunar Rover.