Energy projects in British Columbia, Manitoba and Ontario have been dogged by controversy, ballooned in cost or drastically cut back over the last several years and COVID-19 has put additional pressure on infrastructure spending as the pandemic presses into its second year.
When the Site C project in northeastern B.C. was approved by the province in 2014 it had a cost of $8.8 billion but after years of rising costs, a change in provincial government and legal challenges, in February 2021 B.C. Premier John Horgan announced the project would continue with a price tag of $16 billion.
In Manitoba, Premier Brian Pallister excoriated the previous NDP government after an independent review of the handling of the Keeyask and Bipole III megaprojects revealed political interference which left Manitobans with what Pallister termed a 鈥渕assive debt burden.鈥
By contrast, Ontario Premier Doug Ford discontinued plans for some of the province鈥檚 green energy projects, including the cancellation of the White Pines wind project, which cost $231 million and for which Ford expressed no regrets.
Check out previous stories we鈥檝e written about B.C, Manitoba and Ontario power projects below.
鈥楾he Site C project will be completed鈥: Horgan
Report says optimistic forecasts, lack of oversight led to big debt at Manitoba Hydro
Ontario Power Generation resumes planning for new nuclear reactor at Darlington site
Aecon VPs highlight challenges of Darlington refurb
OPG completes solar plant at former Nanticoke site
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