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Ottawa defers $844M in Muskrat Falls payments, almost all due by end of year

The federal government again said it will take measures to make Newfoundland and Labrador's Muskrat Falls hydroelectric project financially stable, including waiving $844 million in payments due from Crown corporation Nalcor Energy. But there are few details on how the project will affect the province's ratepayers.

Federal government again said it will help make hydroelectric project stable, but offered few details

Top down view of a hydro dam in Labrador on a nice sunny day.
Earlier this year, the much-delayed Muskrat Falls hydroelectric project was delayed another four months due to the COVID-19 pandemic. (Nalcor Energy)

The federal government is again saying it will take steps to make Newfoundland and Labrador's Muskrat Falls hydroelectric project financially stable including waiving immediate payments due from Crown corporation Nalcor Energy but there are few exact details on how the project will affect the province's ratepayers.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Andrew Fureymade the announcement Thursday morningin a live news conference on the prime minister's official Twitter account"to help ensure that the Lower Churchill projects are financially sustainable," according to a newsrelease.

Muskrat Falls was first touted in 2010 as a way for Newfoundland and Labrador to generate its own hydroelectric energyand export excess power to other provinces.Multiple delays, including recent ones due to COVID-19, and ballooning costs have pushed thepricetagto $12.7 billion doubletheoriginalestimate and the project is proving to be a source of angst for ratepayers faced with footingthe bill.

Debt and financing payments owed by Nalcor, which operates the Lower Churchill project inLabrador, will be delayed. Since the project isn't yet regularly producing power, Ottawa has temporarily waived the payment obligations to "help reduce immediate financial pressures on Newfoundland and Labrador," according tothe release.

The province would have been on the hookto pay $844 million, $780 millionof which would have beendue by the end of Decemberand added to the provincial debt, Furey said.

He said deferral of those payments relieves the "immediate fiscal pressures" the province was facing,but is just a short-term part of the future ofMuskrat Falls.

Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Andrew Furey says 'everything is on the table to be discussed' in Muskrat Falls negotiations with Ottawa. (CBC)

Fureysaid negotiations starting Thursday with Ottawa are a step to "right the direction of Muskrat Falls" and address a financially strained project "that has been like an anchor" for people of the province.

Specifics on what taxpayers can expect weren't outlined in Thursday's announcement, but Fureysaid "rates won't double on my watch."

"I know people are afraid, I've heard the anxiety about the electricity rates at the doors," Furey said. "This is the first step in changing the deal, in changing the framework, so that we have the ability to keep rates where they need to be."

As of September, it is expected the project willbe completed by mid-2021.

The next phase will be talks on restructuring the finances of the project to lower hydro rates, but Furey said an agreement will be in place by the time Muskrat Falls is commissioned. He expects it will be drafted and signed in the spring of 2021, and enacted in the fall.

Furey said it's possible the federal government may take an equity stake in the project.

Ottawa announces leadnegotiator

Trudeau said Ottawa is committed to working with the province to ensure the project "remains on stable financial footing," appointing Serge Dupont as senior executive advisor working on negotiations for finance on the Atlantic Loop.

Last year, Dupont was hiredas the senior executive advisor for the Trans Mountain Expansion Project (TMX). Previously, he was the deputy minister for the federal Natural Resources Department, as well as Intergovernmental Affairs.

Federal Natural Resources Minister Seamus O'Regansaid Dupont is a big namein Ottawa circles, with 35 years of experience in energy and finance.

He saidDupont had been particularly effective in getting TMX built and that it was"a big deal" that he's been appointed as the federal government's lead negotiator.

"He is absolutely perfectly suited to help us find a solution to this problem," O'Regan said Thursday afternoon.

Negotiations will be between Dupont's federalteam and the province's Brendan Paddick, who was CEO of Nalcor until he wasappointedas Newfoundland and Labrador'slead negotiatoron Muskrat Falls rate mitigation in September.

Federal Natural Resources Minister Seamus O'Regan says Serge Dupont, the federal government's recently appointed lead negotiator for the deal, is Ottawa's 'go-to guy' for tough projects like the Trans Mountain Expansion Project. (CBC)

Dupont will also be tasked with looking at the Atlantic Loop, as well as the "electrificationof the province" andfurther uses for the "abundance of electricity" to be generated, O'Regan said.

The Atlantic Loop was mentioned in September'sspeech from the throneas a planthat willusehydroelectric power from Labrador and Quebecto connectthe Maritimes with surplusclean power as ittransitions away from coal.

Trudeau started his statementThursday by citing last week's announcement of Ottawa's strategy to dramatically reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 and the $2.5 billion earmarked for clean power.

"There's more to be done," Trudeau said, adding that the federal and provincial government"need to keep working to ensure a sustainable financial future for Muskrat Falls."

In February, then-premier Dwight Ball andO'Regan announced the federal and provincial governments hadagreed on a plan for Muskrat Falls, aimed at keeping electricity rates affordable.

The agreement was replacedwith a traditional cost-of-service agreement expected to cut $74 billion in costs down to $30billion, which will be passed on to ratepayers.

The details of that agreement were expected to be worked out in the months following the February announcement, but were delayed due to theCOVID-19 pandemic.

WATCH | Premierhopeful Muskrat Falls deal will be done by fall 2021:

N.L. targeting Muskrat Falls financial restructuring deal by fall 2021

4 years ago
Duration 0:51
Premier Andrew Furey says his government is hoping a deal with the Federal government to restructure the finances of the Muskrat Falls hydroelectric project will be executed by fall 2021.

Deferrals 'minor step,' critic says

A long-time critic of the project said Thursday's announcement contained little new information and was short on details ofhow exactly the federal government will help.

"I really thought it was a nothing-burger," said Ron Penney, chair of the Muskrat Falls Concerned Citizens Coalition.

"I thought we'd get a very big Christmas present, but instead all that we got was setting out the federal negotiating team and the objective of the exercise, but nothing really practical in terms of how the problem is going to be resolved."

Ron Penney, chair of the Muskrat Falls Concerned Citizens Coalition, said Thursday's announcement was short on details of how exactly the federal government will help. (Sherry Vivian/CBC)

Penney said he thinks Ottawa becoming a stakeholder in Muskrat Falls is "the only solution to this problem," referring to the potential doubling of hydro rates due to the cost of the project.

The deferral of hundreds of millions of dollars in payments that were due this month is a "very minor step" in addressing the financial strain of the project, hesaid.

"I'm not minimizing that, it's important for this fiscal year, but this is a 50-year problem," Penney said.

He said there's no way residents can afford to paya doubled electricity bill next yearand he's worried amajor financial burden will fall on generations to come.

"I'm concerned about my children and grandchildren."

The long, winding, expensiveroad to first power

The Muskrat Falls project has long been a source of debate and controversyin the province, mired in delays and financial overruns in the billions of dollars.

It was first pitched in2010 byformer Progressive Conservative premier Danny Williams as a $6.2-billion green energy solution that would bring power generated in Labrador to the island of Newfoundland andNova Scotia through a series of subsea cables.By the time it was sanctioned in 2012,the cost estimate had risen to $7.7 billion.

In September 2020, the project's price tag had grown to$12.7 billion and Nalcor CEO Stan Marshall said that by the time theproject is completed in mid-2021, it could tip the scales into the $13-billion range.

Muskrat Falls is a constant topic of political discussion, and with Newfoundland and Labrador heading to the polls in 2021, it will remain in the public discourse for some time.

Delays caused by the COVID-19 pandemic arethe latest in a series of hindrances in the Lower Churchill saga. It delayed first power by 10 months, while adding another $400 million to the project's cost.

The COVID-19 pandemic has also been cited as the reason for delays implementingsweeping recommendations made by an extensive inquiry into the Muskrat Falls project.

Of the 17 recommendations, only three have been implemented, and none of the seven key recommendations have been adopted.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Mark Quinn and Cec Haire