[Date Prev][Date Next] [Chronological] [Thread] [Archive Top]

[cdn-nucl-l] RE: [cdn-nucl-l] " Le projet d'une ligne Québec-Ontario compromis "



OK, here's some additional info on that powerline story....

 Jaro
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^


http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Artic
le_Type1&c=Article&cid=1073086208434&call_pageid=970599119419
Jan. 3, 2004. 01:00 AM 
Ontario hydro project halted
Quebec pulls back support for line
Rates, delays factor in decision
JOHN SPEARS
BUSINESS REPORTER

A new transmission line that would increase Ontario's ability to import
electricity from Quebec won't be built soon, says Ontario's main
transmission company Hydro One.
In an affidavit filed with the Ontario Energy Board, Hydro One says
Hydro-Québec "is not interested in proceeding with the project at this
time."
The affidavit is a formal admission that the transmission line has stalled.

Ontario has been anxious to increase the flow of power from Quebec to
backstop Ontario's electricity system, which can't generate enough power
internally when demand is high. Quebec's main export lines run north and
south to carry James Bay power to New England.

The proposed Ontario-Quebec link would carry 1,250 megawatts of power -
enough to supply about 5 per cent of Ontario's needs on a day when demand is
very high. By comparison, the Pickering B nuclear station generates just
over 2,000 megawatts of power.

In 2000 when the line was first proposed, Hydro One estimated its share of
the project's costs to be $96.5 million, and Hydro-Québec's to be $208
million.
The Hydro One affidavit says the new connection is "fundamental" to Ontario.
Delays have occurred on both sides. In Ontario, there was a wrangle over the
type of towers that would be used to carry the new transmission lines.

On the other side of the border, Quebec's electricity regulator didn't allow
Hydro-Québec permission to charge the rates it wanted to carry the power to
the Ontario border. The rate decision, combined with the delays, has cooled
Hydro-Québec's interest in the project, according to Hydro One.

As a result, Hydro One wants the Ontario Energy Board to extend the deadline
it set for construction of the line. The board had granted Hydro One
permission to proceed providing construction started by Dec. 31, 2002. The
board then extended the deadline to the end of 2003. Hydro One now wants the
deadline extended another five years.
In an interim decision, the energy board has removed the deadline while it
considers the application. 
======================


>  -----Original Message-----
> From: 	cdn-nucl-l-admin@informer2.cis.McMaster.CA
> [mailto:cdn-nucl-l-admin@informer2.cis.McMaster.CA] 
> Sent:	Friday, January 02, 2004 10:58 PM
> To:	multiple cdn
> Subject:	[cdn-nucl-l] " Le projet d'une ligne Québec-Ontario
> compromis "
> 
> Has anyone seen a more detailed news report on this ?
> According to this report, the power line project for bringing more Quebec
> power to Ontario is dead for now, simply because Hydro-Quebec isn't
> interested in it.
> 
> Thanks
> 
>  Jaro
> 
> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> 
> 

<<attachment: winmail.dat>>