Showing posts with label nb power. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nb power. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

AECL and NB sitting in a tree, K-I-S-S-I-N-G...

According to this sunny news release, AECL (or more enthusiastically, TEAM CANDU!) is prepared to conduct a feasibility study on a second Lepreau.

AECL is about to write (and pay for) a report that suggests NB should go ahead with a fancy-pants new reactor, primed to deliver over 1,000 MW of electricity to the United States.

Considering how the federal crown corporation is about to examine the export-worthiness of its own product, perhaps it is too much to ask for due diligence. But it would be really nice if someone at the provincial crown corporation, NB Power, thought hard about this:

  • With a utility debt of over $2.9 billion, and average earnings from exports falling in at around a meagre $300 million annually, NB Power isn't necessarily in the best position to expand its load capacity.
  • Lepreau I may have been a good investment, but it was built over 25 years ago. Since that time, NB Power generation assets have certainly had a spottier record of performance (Coleson Cove? Belledune?....anyone? Bueller?)
  • The Americans are considering building over 25 new nuclear reactors, all with the financial assistance of Congress. Perhaps the New England energy market may not be as lucrative as AECL hopes (prays?) for.

All this to say that a Lepreau II feasibility study is certainly warranted, but perhaps not one that will be written by the folks who want to build the darn thing. Unless, of course, AECL offers to move Deep River, Ontario here to NB. At least that would help this province's population strategy...

UPDATE: According to the optimists, this project - if it goes ahead - won't cost NB taxpayers a dime, and NB Power may not in fact be the operator. Developing...

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Go East, Not West (at least for a power bill decrease)

The last post showed how NB Power could look west to Ontario to see how they could decrease, (and not increase by 9.6%!!) their residential charge.

It turns out they didn't even have to leave Atlantic Canada. Newfoundland Hydro also reduced their rates this year.

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Here comes the Hydro Hammer

NB Power, the utility that never saw a rate increase it didn't like, has just applied for a 9.6% increase.

Our Ontario cousins, meanwhile, benefit from a regulator-approved decrease in their electric bill.

Someone tell David Hay to start shopping for electric power in Ontario. New Brunswickers could use the discount.