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How a pipelines-for-hydro deal could save Alberta pipelines and B.C.’s Site C dam

Site C was first proposed in the 1980s and would be the third to harvest electricity from the Peace River near Fort St. John. The first, the W.A.C. Bennett Dam, named after the B.C. premier who created BC Hydro, was completed half a century ago.

The $9-billion Site C dam being built in northeast British Columbia should be an environmentalist’s dream. It’ll generate clean, renewable and affordable power and help the country meet its climate change commitments. It would also earn money for BC Hydro, its proponent and also the provincial crown corporation at the heart from the West Coast province’s green image.

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Instead, the hydroelectric mega project is receiving the type of rough treatment most recently reserved for pipeline proposals. First Nations, environmental activists and landowners wish to stop its construction, the lawsuits are flying – including one going prior to the B.C. Court of Appeal in a few days – and also the provincial NDP is gaining fans by threatening to pull the plug around the dam in mid-construction if elected the coming year.

Things are getting so heated that some compare the confrontation to a new War within the Woods – referring to the battle Two decades ago to prevent logging in Clayoquot Sound that inspired a lot more skirmishes against natural resource rise in the province.

There’s even some debate about whether Site C is even needed whatsoever, or at best enough that Premier Christy Clark’s Liberal government made surprise proposal to export Site C capacity to Alberta and asked for $1 billion in authorities help to better connect the two provinces’ electricity systems.

Alberta, which is in early innings of their own controversial transition from coal to renewable energy, has stated it’s not going to buy B.C.’s power unless it may get bitumen pipelines to the B.C. coast – something its western neighbour has given it a lot of grief over.

But if the two provinces and the federal government can accomplish a contract, the end result might be a grand bargain that provides Ottawa more green energy, Alberta its pipelines and B.C. its dam.

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