Independent review will probe cost overruns on Manitoba Hydro megaprojects - Action News
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Manitoba

Independent review will probe cost overruns on Manitoba Hydro megaprojects

The provincial government is committing to an independent review of two Manitoba Hydro megaprojects that have been plagued by substantial cost overruns.

Former B.C. premier Gordon Campbell will investigate why permission was granted for Keeysak, Bipole III

Workers are still building the Keeyask Generation Station, which has faced significant cost overruns. An external review will investigate the decision to build that project and the Bipole III power transmission line, running down the west side of Manitoba. (Manitoba Hydro)

The provincialgovernment is committing to an independentreview of twoManitoba Hydromegaprojects that have been plagued by substantial cost overruns.

Gordon Campbell, the former Liberal premier of British Columbia, has been hired to conduct an economic review of the planning and decision-making processes related to theKeeyask Generating Station and the recently completed Bipole III.

Premier Brian Pallistersuggested months ago areview may benecessary after thePublic Utilities Board granted an electricity rate increase of 3.6 per centless than half of what the Crown corporation sought.

Healso expressed concernforHydro's current and projected debt levels.

"We're going to have to borrow billions of dollars over the next few years to complete Keeyask and the Bipole line,"Pallister said in May.

At the time, he said a review would be considered after the government looked into the approvedrate increase.

The province has offered $2.5 million to conduct the external review, which is slated to begin immediately.

Permission for projects underscrutiny

The BipoleIII transmission linewas completed this summer. The cost for the project was originally pegged in 2007 at $2.2billion, which was adjusted to $3.3. billion in 2011 and $4.6 billion in 2014. In its latest annual report, Hydro says the total estimated cost is$5.04 billion.

The Keeyaskgenerating station projectwas originally estimated to cost $6.5 billion and expected to be in service by November 2019.In March 2017, Hydro revised the cost estimate to $8.7 billion.

A 2017 reportwrittenby Calgary consulting firmMGF Project Services, commissioned by thePublic Utilities Board, found thedam could cost as much as $10.5 billiondue to the "contractor's poor productivity and increased indirect costs" associated with the project.

Campbell has been tasked with investigatingthe direction provided bythe former NDP government, thenecessity of the projects and whether the estimated benefitsexceeded any other options that would have satisfied the province's electrical needs, according to the scope of the investigation.

He will make recommendations on how the province should pursue similar projects in the future and whetheran external review or further regulatory approvals should be in place.

Campbell approved Site C dam, now billionsover budget

Campbell, who was the premier of B.C. from 2001 to 2011,is now the CEO ofHawksmuirInternational Partners, but has his own experience with green-lighting hydro projects that eventually face massive cost overruns.

While premier in 2010, Campbell approved the Site Chydroelectric dam on the Peace River in B.C. It was originally expected to cost $6.6 billion. That number has now ballooned to $10 billion, with an extra $700 million set aside for contingency costs.

Campbell was appointedthis past summer by Ontario Premier Doug Ford to head an independent financial commission of inquiry to probe that province's past spending and accounting practices.

Opposition parties pan review

Manitoba Liberal Leader DougaldLamont scoffed at the idea of reviewing whether Hydro decisions had been politicized, saying that issue has already been identifiedseveral timesand the practice continues under the current government.

"We are going to be paying Gordon Campbell $2.5 million for something I can tell the premier for free," he said.

"Stop politicizing Hydro. Appoint a board that is reasonably independent that has experts on it and start to undo the things the NDP were doing."

Lamont says Manitoba's auditor general, the Public Utilities Board and external consultants paid by Hydro have examined both Bipole III and Keeyask.

Liberal Leader Dougald Lamont accuses both the current and former governments of treating Manitoba Hydro 'like an ATM.' (Jeff Stapleton CBC)

He says instead of doing another review, the PC government could stabilize Hydro's finances by ending years of raiding the company's coffers through water fees and finance charges adding up to hundreds of millions of dollars every year.

"Stop treating it like an ATM. That's the fundamental thing that this government hasn't done, and it is the fundamental thing the NDPwere doing this whole time," they were in power, Lamont told CBCNews.

NDPMLA Andrew Swan had questions about whatform Campbell's review would take, noting the former B.C. premier has been given powers under Manitoba's Evidence Act and hasbeen named a commissioner.

"Does that mean this commissioner is going to have an inquiry? Is the commissioner going to interview witnesses?" Swan asked.

Hydro debt

Its most recent financial report shows it is more than $19 billion in debt as it works to completevarious infrastructure projects. Billions more will end up on its books as Keeyaskis completed and other work, such as the Manitoba-Minnesota Transmission Line, is started.

The Progressive Conservative government has accused the previous NDPgovernment ofmismanagement that left the Crown corporation in a precarious financial state something Swan denied.

"Developing Hydro cost money. When you build Hydro capacity, the worst day is the day that capacity opens. You've invested the money and you haven't started earning any of the revenue from it," he said.

The PC government declinedto make Crown Services Minister Colleen Mayer or any other spokesperson available to answer questions about the review.

With files from Ian Froese.