Lower Churchill Falls hearings set to begin - Action News
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Lower Churchill Falls hearings set to begin

Hearings into the fate of the massive Lower Churchill Falls hydroelectric project are slated to get underway Thursday, despite earlier attempts to stall the meetings.
Hearing are set for Thursday on the plans to harness Muskrat Falls, central Labrador, to create hydroelectric power for Atlantic Canada. ((cbc))

Hearings into the fate of the massive Lower Churchill Falls hydroelectric project are slated to get underway Thursday, despite earlier attempts to stall the meetings.

An environmental assessment panel is expected to hear submissions over the next 45 days from dozens of people in some nine communities. The first stop is in Happy Valley-Goose Bay.

N.L.'s Crown-owned Nalcor Energy and N.S.'s Emera Inc. agreed in November on a $6.2 billion plan to generate 824 megawatts of power at Muskrat Falls on Labrador's Churchill River.

According to the deal, electricity will be moved first to Newfoundland with much of it later relayed through Nova Scotia by underwater cables.

The provinces have asked the federal government for a loan guarantee to help with the project which was before a Senate energy committee hearing in Halifax earlier this week.

Nalcor is expected to present its case on Thursday evening.

"This project is of significant importance to our province, to our economic future [and] to a sustainable future for the project as a whole," said Gilbert Bennett, the vice-president in charge of the project.

On Tuesday, NunatuKavut, the group formerly known as the Labrador Metis Nation, filed an injunction to stop the hearings from beginning this week.

Members of NunatuKavut said the hearings must be stopped because the Newfoundland and Labrador owned energy company, Nalcor, hasn't consulted them about the proposed development.

Andsome groups see few long-term benefits for people living in the area and are worried about the huge project's environmental impact.

Clarice Blake Rudkowski, a member of environmental group Grand Riverkeeper, is calling on the panel to block the project.

"We'll dance for glee if they did, but if not, how do we minimize the impact that's the big issue?" she said.

Earlier this week, former premier Roger Grimes also called on the people of Newfoundland and Labrador to weigh carefully the consequences of the project slated for Labrador's Muskrat Falls. Grimes said people are not asking enough questions about the $6.2 billion deal.