BC Hydro CEO steps down amid power controversy
Last Updated: Wednesday, November 4, 2009 | 1:31 PM PT
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
External Links
(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window)
BC Hydro CEO Bob Elton stepped down on Wednesday, and is 'transitioning' to a new role with the Crown corporation. (Mike Laanela/CBC)Bob Elton is stepping down after six years as president and CEO of Crown-owned BC Hydro, sparking rumours he may have been pushed out by the Campbell government.
Elton has been at the helm of the provincial power corporation during a time of sweeping changes in government energy policy.
But on Wednesday, board chair Dan Doyle issued a brief statement saying Elton would be "transitioning" to a new role as special adviser to Hydro's board and as executive chair of Powertech Labs Inc., a technology-consulting subsidiary of Hydro.
A BC Hydro spokesman said no one — including Elton — would be available to discuss the reason for the shift, but it's no secret that BC Hydro has been caught in the middle of a controversy over the government's policy with the province's independent utilities commission.
'The CEO of the company clearly didn't see the world the same way that the premier's office did.'—John Horgan, B.C. NDP energy critic
B.C. NDP energy critic John Horgan is drawing his own links to the recent controversy.
"The CEO of the company clearly didn't see the world the same way that the premier's office did, the same way that the minister's office did. Consequently they found another place for him to spend his time for the next year or so until he hits retirement age."
Elton's long-term plan rejected
The B.C. Liberal government has said that by 2020 half of B.C.'s new energy must be met through conservation, and much of the rest should come from private, independent power producers.
Those independent power producers became a hot issue during the May provincial election when environmentalists raised concerns about the environmental impact of plans to build run-of-the-river power plants on many B.C. rivers.
Then in July, the B.C. Utilities Commission, which regulates the Crown corporation, rejected BC Hydro's long-term plan based on the government's policy.
The controversial decision by the independent commission pulled the plug on BC Hydro's plan to buy electricity from dozens of run-of-river and wind-power projects, saying the long-term acquisition scheme is not practical or in the public interest.
The commission directed BC Hydro to make up the needed power insteady by using the Burrard Thermal power plant near Vancouver.
Last week, the province issued a directive telling the regulator and BC Hydro to end reliance on the gas-fired Burrard Thermal plant except in emergencies, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
With files from The Canadian PressShare Tools
Latest British Columbia News Headlines
- Police can't use ICBC facial recognition to track rioters
- ICBC cannot let police use the provincial insurance company's facial recognition technology to identify suspected Stanley Cup rioters without a court order, B.C.'s Information and Privacy Commissioner has ruled. more »
- B.C. failed to maintain province's timber supply says report
- B.C.'s auditor general has issued a scathing report about the government's management of provincial forests. more »
- Seattle stadium plans could draw NBA and NHL teams
- News that Seattle could be getting a new NBA team and maybe an NHL franchise is creating a buzz in neighbouring Vancouver. more »
- 2 small earthquakes rattle Vancouver Island
- A 4.7-magnitude earthquake shivered across northern Vancouver Island late Wednesday, the second to strike the region in two days. more »
Top News Headlines
- Dog kills newborn in Alberta community
- Officials in Airdrie are revealing few details about the fatal mauling of an infant by a family dog in the southern Alberta city. more »
- Underwear bomber sentenced to life in prison
- A Nigerian man who tried to blow up an international flight near Detroit on behalf of al-Qaida has been sentenced to life in prison without parole. more »
- 7 MPs and their fiery quotes
- The election of a majority government was seen by some as a chance for less acrimonious politics on Parliament Hill. But the past week has seen its fair share of inflammatory rhetoric on both sides of the House. more »
- Refugee reforms include fingerprints, no appeals for some
- New, tougher reforms to refugee legislation that hasn't yet come into force are already drawing fire from critics who say they give Canada's immigration minister too much power and risk the lives of claimants. more »
- B.C. house party trial hears from tearful teens
- 2 small earthquakes rattle Vancouver Island
- Unique condo tower proposed for Vancouver downtown
- Legalize pot, say former B.C. attorneys general
- 'Abysmal' B.C. courts see more cases tossed
- Home foreclosures skyrocket in Kelowna
- Man killed in fight at B.C. Hedley concert
- Pickton was not sole suspect in women's deaths
- Ex-husband faces charges in Vancouver woman's death

