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  #1  
Old Posted Sep 17, 2009, 9:24 PM
amor de cosmos amor de cosmos is offline
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BC Northwest power line & Hwy 37

here's a map of the region:


Quote:
Northern BC Communities Electrified Over Federal $130 Million Investment in the Northwest Transmission Line
Sep 17, 2009

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TERRACE, BRITISH COLUMBIA – Communities across central and northern British Columbia were unanimous in their thanks to Prime Minister Stephen Harper and the Government of Canada for its announcement of $130 million to ensure that the Northwest Transmission Line is built along Highway 37.

“This will enable tremendous industrial development and needed jobs in the northwest, as well as economic benefits to all of BC,” said Terrace Mayor Dave Pernarowski. He’s ecstatic that there is now a combined commitment of $390 million including the $260 million committed by Premier Campbell at the Union of BC Municipalities Conference in September 2008 for construction and environmental assessments. “This federal investment will ensure that the line can be constructed in a few short years. In Terrace today, there are no longer any major industrial employers and development in the region north of us will have a huge positive impact on our retail, service and supply sectors.”

Mayor Cress Farrow of Smithers, a northwest mining supply community noted, “This announcement will have great spin-offs to the Bulkley Valley communities and validates our decision to lengthen our airport runway for mine expediting and tourism. It is great to have a relationship between BC and Ottawa that is visionary in terms of green transmission development.”

Hazelton has one of the highest unemployment rates in BC. Mayor Alice Maitland noted that Northwest Community College has taken a leadership role in developing the Northwest School of Exploration and Mining to train young people for jobs that will be made possible by the powerline and mine development in the “Golden Triangle” of BC with its wealth of world class mineral deposits.

Even Prince George, the largest centre in the North is poised to take full advantage of the development of the transmission line and the wealth and jobs it will bring to the north. “This is green infrastructure that can power a bio-energy economy in northwest forests utilizing manufacturing technology based in Prince George for wood-pellet plants. It will also enable tremendous carbon savings over mines that would otherwise have to depend on diesel,” said Mayor Dan Rogers. “Prince George sees almost $30 million in spending annually from just the Kemess Mine alone, and we welcome additional industrial development across the north.”

The development of a major power transmission line up Highway 37 has been the focus of discussion for at least the last twenty years. Currently, a small capacity hydro line links Terrace and Meziadin Junction, but the power needs of the communities of Bob Quinn, Iskut, Dease Lake and Telegraph Creek are serviced by costly diesel generators.

Bruce Sutherland, Chair of the Northern Development Initiative Trust, a regional economic development corporation noted, “The tremendous potential for development of the northwest with a potential ten new mines as customers and seven independent power projects delivering clean, green energy into the BC Hydro grid could generate up to 5,500 direct jobs and over 18,000 indirect jobs over the next several decades. Although a number of these projects are at early stage and have a high degree of uncertainty about timing and scope of project development, one thing is certain, without this announcement and a transmission line to deliver and receive additional hydro power, they will not happen. Potential capital investments of $15 billion over the next couple of decades could be enabled by this strategic piece of infrastructure.”

Northern Development Initiative Trust CEO Janine North co-chairs the Northwest Powerline Coalition along with Gitxsan Hereditary Chief Elmer Derrick. The coalition is a grass roots assembly of forty communities and forty-nine other groups and companies, including First Nations, mining and power companies, equipment suppliers, contracting and engineering companies, mining industry associations and First Nations joint venture companies. The Coalition has published “Delivering Green Power to Northwest BC”; a study to understand the business case for the construction of a major transmission line development from Terrace north to the Highway 37 corridor which is inclusive of all potential mines and power projects in the region.

Janine North confirms, “Mine development has the strongest potential for economic diversification of central and northwest BC in the short to medium term. Mining and renewable energy projects present an opportunity for sustainable economic development on First Nations traditional lands including joint ventures and contracts that are so important to the supply sector in northern communities, but, only if there is power. Along with other major stimulus investments across northern BC, this is the right investment at a time when it’s needed most.”
http://northerndevelopment.bc.ca/new...nsmission-Line

stephen harper's backgrounder:
Quote:
Backgrounder: Northwest transmission line in British Columbia
16 September 2009

The Government of Canada is supporting a green infrastructure project in northern British Columbia involving the construction of a 335-kilometre transmission line that will contribute to the development and use of green energy in the area. This project has been selected as a priority for funding under the new federal Green Infrastructure Fund.

The Northwest Transmission Line will extend British Columbia’s high voltage transmission grid into the Northwest portion of the province. The transmission line will benefit local communities by providing them with the potential to access clean electricity in the future, thereby reducing their reliance on diesel generation, resulting in more reliable energy service for the communities and a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions.

The area surrounding the project has a significant potential to generate green power. There is currently an estimated 2000 megawatts of renewable energy in the area from small hydro, geothermal, wind and biomass sources. A number of potential generation projects in the area are already being considered under British Columbia’s current Clean Power Call, representing almost 500 megawatts of renewable energy that would be immediately served by the Northwest Transmission Line project. These projects depend on access to robust transmission infrastructure for their development.

The project is also a key step in a potential interconnection between southeast Alaska and the North American transmission grid via British Columbia.

This project, estimated at $404 million, and is expected to be ready for construction in the spring of 2010.

The Government of Canada will set aside funding of up to a maximum of $130 million for this project.

Federal financial support for this green infrastructure project is conditional on the signing of a contribution agreement with the British Columbia government under the Green Infrastructure Fund.
http://pm.gc.ca/eng/media.asp?id=2820
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  #2  
Old Posted Sep 18, 2009, 1:25 AM
amor de cosmos amor de cosmos is offline
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government spends a little, private sector spends a LOT. according to these reports, the power line could catalyze 11 mining projects with $15 billion(!) in new investment & create 10,700 jobs:
http://northerndevelopment.bc.ca/new...g-Announcement

the cbc radio story mentions all that, and the developments can generate up to $300 million in annual tax revenues (much more details in this one):
http://northerndevelopment.bc.ca/new...nsmission-Line

Last edited by amor de cosmos; Sep 18, 2009 at 3:09 PM.
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  #3  
Old Posted Sep 18, 2009, 8:37 AM
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hollywoodnorth hollywoodnorth is offline
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as per usual Gordo plows ahead with making this province all it can be! This is an amazing project that has been on the drawing boards for decades and I'm stoked for it to be going ahead.
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  #4  
Old Posted Aug 26, 2011, 1:27 AM
amor de cosmos amor de cosmos is offline
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Quote:
Northwest unprepared for boom times
By Staff Writer - Terrace Standard
Published: August 25, 2011 10:00 AM
Updated: August 25, 2011 5:07 PM

THE NORTHWEST needs a way to provide municipal, educational, social and other services that will be required arising from billions of dollars of major projects, says a member of a committee looking at the impact of development.

The challenge is that mines, power projects, and other developments take place outside of municipal jurisdictions, meaning there is no way to finance services for those working on the projects, says Rick Brouwer from the Skeena-Nass Center for Innovation in Resource Economics.

Brouwer sits on a committee of industrial, educational and government players examining the development potential from the Northwest Transmission Line and other projects.

It says there's no plan in place to prepare and train northwest residents for the thousands of jobs that will result, leaving companies forced to import workers into an area that ironically is beset by high unemployment.

A report prepared for the committee suggests between $8 billion and $25 billion will be spent within the next decade, requiring between 9,500 and 32,500 person years of employment during construction.
http://www.bclocalnews.com/news/128399693.html
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  #5  
Old Posted Dec 4, 2013, 9:49 PM
amor de cosmos amor de cosmos is offline
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Quote:
Northwest Transmission Line work intensifies
by Staff Writer - Terrace Standard
posted Dec 4, 2013 at 6:00 AM

THE company building BC Hydro's massive Northwest Transmission Line expects to have the wmajority of its towers complete by the end of the year leading to a planned completion date of late spring next year.

Speaking recently, Valard president Adam Budzinski described the project, which will run 344 kilometres from BC Hydro's Skeena Substation just south of Terrace to a new substation under construction at Bob Quinn alongside Bob Quinn on Hwy37 North, as one of the more challenging the Edmonton-based company has undertaken.

“It's not really one project, it's three or four,” said Budzinski of work going on simultaneously along the line's route.

Being installed for the 287 kilovolt line are 1,100 towers to carry 2,100 kilometres of conductor wire to both provide electricity to projects in the north and to feed power generated by hydro-electric projects into the provincial grid. Building access roads to tower locations has been challenging as has the need to establish camps along the route for workers, Budzinski said.



Valard has assembled a workforce of approximately 450 people for the project of which nearly 350 come from the northwest.

Latest available statistics put the aboriginal component at 165 workers, a key part of Valard's workplan.

“We've been going direct to the villages,” he said of Valard's aboriginal hiring program. And he said a project undertaken in Prince Rupert earlier gave the company a foothold in putting together its northwest work force.

Typically, newer hires begin work on crews putting in foundations for transmission towers.

If the work itself has been complex, so has the financial aspect of the transmission line.

From a projected cost of $404 million when announced in 2009, the price tag has been steadily rising to a new figure, released this spring, of $746 million.

BC Hydro said some of the added expense came in the form of building access roads into more challenging terrain than first thought and in adding project components not factored in when the budget was first set.
http://www.bclocalnews.com/news/234404211.html
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