NB Power deal collapse could hurt jobs
Last Updated: Wednesday, March 24, 2010 | 6:28 PM AT
CBC News
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IN DEPTH: NB Power sale
Internal links
- SPECIAL COVERAGE: Power Play website
- Quebec balked at NB Power sale costs
- Reaction from NB Power deal collapse
- NB Power deal collapse could hurt jobs
- Quebec's NB Power deal cut to $3.2B
- Province retains control of NB Power in revised deal
- 3 Liberal ministers won't vote for NB Power deal
- Hydro-Québec should not fear changes to NB deal: expert
- Quebec minister changes tune on NB Power deal
- NB Power deal has 'out' clause: energy minister
- Hydro-Québec CEO speaks to Saint John business group
- NB Power controversy helps PCs: poll
- Power rate savings overblown
- Cabinet minister clarifies his NB Power view
- Irving firms benefit from NB Power deal
- N.B. throne speech pushes NB Power sale
- Lord government considered NB Power sale
- N.B. Liberals critical of NB Power deal
- McKenna hails NB Power sale as 'courageous'
- Power rate hikes could pass inflation after 2015
- Hydro-Québec CEO says rate structure not his idea
- Mactaquac Dam could cost NB Power ratepayers
- Industry big winner in NB Power sale
- Energy minister defends NB Power sale
- Long-term power rate cap needed: analyst
- Opposition demands election over NB Power sale
- Dalhousie mayor wants help over power plant closure
- Quebec, N.B. strike $4.8B deal for NB Power
- Energy deal must bring N.B. lower rates: Graham
Audio
- N.B. Liberals at a weekend party conference take questions for 90 minutes on the proposed sale of NB
- Liberal Kelly Lamrock discusses his views of the proposed NB Power deal
Photo gallery
Video
External links
- NB Power's website
- Hydro-Québec's website
- Government of New Brunswick: Lower Rates for New Brunswickers' website
- DOCUMENT: Memorandum of Understanding for proposed NB Power sale
- DOCUMENT: Assessment of the Rate Impacts of the MOU between N.B. and Quebec regarding NB Power
- FAQS: Government of New Brunswick on proposed NB Power sale
- TIMELINE: Government of New Brunswick on proposed NB Power sale
The collapse of the NB Power deal could leave some of the province's largest employers struggling, according to a political analyst.
New Brunswick's largest power users were anticipating a 23 per cent rate cut if the $3.2 billion deal with Hydro-Quebec went forward.
Don Desserud, a political scientist at the University of New Brunswick in Saint John, said the New Brunswick government still must find a way to address industry's concerns of uncompetitive energy prices now that the deal has fallen apart.
"This is a problem these industries are going to be very, very concerned and rightly so," Desserud said.
"The economic welfare of the province depends upon their viability, so something's going to have to happen there."
Quebec Premier Jean Charest told reporters Wednesday his province pulled out after its power utility found unanticipated risks and costs related to matters like dam security and water levels.
Under the proposed deal, industrial users across New Brunswick would have saved $65 million in the first year. Specifically, J.D. Irving's Saint John pulp and paper mill would have saved $14 million.
No one from the major industrial companies in Saint John, including J.D. Irving, agreed to an interview on the failed power deal on Wednesday.
The energy deal would have also included a rate freeze to the province's municipal utilities in Saint John, Edmundston and Perth-Andover.
Eric Marr, the president of Saint John Energy, said the utility's customers can expect a three per cent rate increase every year starting this May.
"And as a customer of NB Power we'll have to take that rate increase and more or less pass it along to customers," Marr said.
New opportunities
But not everyone thinks the energy deal's demise is negative news.
Tim Curry, the president of the Saint John-based Atlantica Centre for Energy, said new options could be found now that the Hydro-Québec option is off the table.
"This may open up other opportunities for development of other sources of energy either within the province or within the region," Curry said.
David Coon, the executive director of the Conservation Council, said he hopes the deal's failure will cause the Liberal government to invite groups together to chart a new path forward for NB Power.
"Finally this gives us a chance to start over and engage New Brunswickers in a discussion on what our energy future should be like, what do people want it to be, what are our priorities," Coon said.
"We are ready to roll up our sleeves and participate in that."
Green Party Leader Jack MacDougall said the controversy surrounding the energy deal has engaged New Brunswickers in a debate over the province's energy future.
MacDougall said it is now the task of all political parties to harness that and continue the debate.
"I want to see the debate continued and take advantage of the great awareness [of energy issues] in New Brunswick," he said.
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