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Save Our Rivers Society

  • In The Grip of Corruption

    The press release from the Ministry of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources last week might have you thinking the Burrard Thermal generating plant in Port Moody will soon be shut down and our air quality will be much improved as a consequence.

    Burrard Therman in Port MoodyWrong on both counts.

    I think this press release was more about the BC Liberal government creating energy policies to favour its supporters in the private power industry.

    BC Hydro?s Burrard Thermal plant on Port Moody?s north shore has the capacity to generate up to 10% of Hydro?s electricity output. Built between 1961 and ?75, and upgraded in the 1990s, this plant burns natural gas to produce electricity. It has rarely been used at full capacity and remains in good operating condition.

    Since 2002, the plant has been used mostly to supply electricity during our peak demand period in the winter, when it is cold and dark. Since that time, it has provided, on average, slightly less than 300 gigawatt hours (GWh) per year, a mere 5% of its full capacity.



  • BC Hydro CEO "Transitioned"

    Bob Elton, President and CEO of BC Hydro, wasn't reading from the same page as the Campbell government on energy policy. As a result, he has been "transitioned" out of his job. Story from CBC News: BC Hydro CEO steps down amid power controversy

    Excerpt: "The B.C. Liberal government has said that by 2020 half of B.C.'s new energy must be met through conservation, and much of the rest should come from private, independent power producers.

    "Those independent power producers became a hot issue during the May provincial election when environmentalists raised concerns about the environmental impact of plans to build run-of-the-river power plants on many B.C. rivers.

    "Then in July, the B.C. Utilities Commission, which regulates the Crown corporation, rejected BC Hydro's long-term plan based on the government's policy.

    "The controversial decision by the independent commission pulled the plug on BC Hydro's plan to buy electricity from dozens of run-of-river and wind-power projects, saying the long-term acquisition scheme is not practical or in the public interest."

    Vaughn Palmer of the Vancouver Sun wrote that Elton may have been "transitioned" instead of fired so they would have to give him severance pay. Link to article: This looks like a sideways move

    Excerpt: "The B.C. Liberals have been concerned that investors were losing confidence in the province as a place to develop power projects, particularly since a recent ruling by the BC Utilities Commission that blocked Hydro's last call for proposals from private operators.

    "So last week the cabinet eliminated that regulatory obstacle, ensuring that even as BC Hydro invests billions in upgrading its publicly owned assets, it will also be buying power on contract from private operators.

    "The action was cheered by independent power producers. 'There's been a certain degree of investor fatigue with B.C. because of an uncertain investment climate,' said the CEO of one of the largest producers, Donald McInnes of Plutonic Power, in an interview with the Dow-Jones news service this week."



  • BC Premier Campbell From Behind Green Curtain

    A press release from the Save Our Rivers Society:

    SAVE OUR RIVERS SOCIETY

    PRESS RELEASE 
    November 3, 2009

    BC PREMIER CAMPBELL FROM BEHIND GREEN CURTAIN

    Today at the SFU WOSK Centre for Dialogue in the Delta Suites Hotel on Vancouver?s Hastings Street a two day GREEN ENERGY conference begins which is billed as open to the public. A ticket is $200.00.

    Premier Campbell assumed absolute power over the Province of British Columbia in 2001.  On May 12, 2009 he and his BC Liberal party were elected to lead the Province for another four year term.  Throughout history political scholars have warned of a flaw in our system of governance where a charismatic political leader of a duly elected majority government has the power equal to a dictator.

    Since the May 2009 the hard truth of unreported financial mismanagement has surfaced in many sectors of the BC economy. Undisclosed changes affecting every taxpayer include benefits turned to losses, public services cut, public assets transferred, public electricity, renewable energy resources, civil rights, Aboriginal rights taken and now the news of $30 or $40 billion dollars of public guarantees in purchase orders issued to thirty or forty of a potential seven hundred private power licenses. Yesterday appearing at a private power licensee meeting in Vancouver the Premier announced a review of his 2002 BC Energy Plan to be conducted by four committees whose members he will name. The Premier used a similar format in 2001. The David Suzuki Foundation and the Alcan Aluminum Company were two noteworthy participants who submitted similarly detailed recommendations, blueprints for public policy privatizing public assets, Crown land, watersheds, rivers, profitable public energy systems and renewable energy assets licensed away for less than 1% of their value into the hands of companies, General Electric, banks and Alberta oilsands companies all done FROM BEHIND THE PREMIER?S GREEN CURTAIN.

    Premier Gordon Campbell promised the citizens of BC in 2002 that they would be involved and consulted regarding private power developments occurring in BC, the last Canadian province with a rich public power monopoly. BILL 30, July 2006, barred the public and local governments from consultation in private power projects.   A few private power licenses have become hundreds as exposed in volunteer built and operated website www.ippwatch.info.   The Premier?s private investment opportunities have been revealed as banks making loans for construction of private renewable energy facilities, guaranteed as profitable by citizens committed to pay very high prices for forty years for unneeded electricity that will be dumped into the USA at half the price paid by the public.  As the public begins to enter this controversy the Premier will deny access to the facts. Known facts are and will be available at the website listed above and at www.saveourrivers.ca.

    -30-



  • BC Government Overrules Independent Regulator and Lines Pockets of Private Power Producers

    Western Canada Wilderness Committee logoPress release from the Western Canada Wilderness Committee:

    Vancouver, BC ? The Wilderness Committee today condemned the BC government's decision to order BC Hydro to buy an additional 6,000 gigawatt hours of electrical power from private power producers, in direct opposition to what the BC Utilities Commission (BCUC) has recommended.

    ?Requiring BC Hydro to purchase power that it doesn?t need is an idiotic decision and a gift to the private power industry. Three months ago, the BCUC said buying this power was not in the public interest, and yet the BC government is ignoring their own regulatory watchdog and ordering BC Hydro to spend billions of dollars on power we don?t need. This decision won?t reduce greenhouse gas emissions in BC by one iota, but it will damage a lot of streams and rivers in the process,? said Gwen Barlee, policy director with the Wilderness Committee.

    ?Private power coming from so-called ?run of river? projects comes mostly at the wrong time of year for British Columbians, is costing us far above market rates, and threatens our rivers and streams. Ratepayers are already on the hook for $31 billion in energy agreements to the likes of General Electric. The BC government's decision to order Hydro to buy even more of this power is irrational and unacceptable,? said Wilderness Committee campaign director Joe Foy.

    The BC government justified the decision to purchase more expensive private power by over-ruling the BCUC and reducing the ?planning? capacity of Burrard Thermal, a gas-powered plant in Port Moody.  Since 2002, Burrard Thermal has run at about five per cent of capacity, being used almost exclusively to provide firm emergency peak power backup in winter months. Ironically, Burrard Thermal will continue to operate in the same manner it has for the last seven years despite the government?s recent announcement.

    The BC government has come under intense criticism since the introduction of the BC Energy Plan in 2002 which prohibited BC Hydro from producing new sources of hydroelectricity.  The Energy Plan resulted in a gold rush which has seen over 800 water bodies, including lakes, staked by private power corporations. Private hydro projects have been heavily criticized for low environmental standards, lack of public input, and a lack of provincial or regional planning process.

    ?It is sadly ironic that while the BC government is bailing out the private power industry under the ruse of addressing climate change it is blasting ahead with contradictory plans to promote carbon-producing coal mines such as Klappan and Groundhog in northern BC, axing Live Smart BC, radically increasing subsidies to the oil and gas sector, and promoting massive highway expansion. People recognize hypocrisy when they see it and are aware that this gift to the private power sector has nothing to do with addressing global warming,? said Barlee.

    Click here for original



  • Save-the-Cedar League Working to Protect Morkill Falls

    Across British Columbia, communities are doing everything they can to raise public awareness to take action to stop governments and businesses from ruining natural watershed environments in the name of green energy.

    From the annual report of the Save-the-Cedar League, based in Crescent Spur, BC: "The Crescent Spur-Loos Community Association, The West Coast Environmental Law Society, The Western Canada Wilderness Committee, The Save Our Rivers Society, The Dome Forest Information Committee, The Valhalla Wilderness Society, Applied Conservation GIS, The Purcell Alliance for Wilderness, STCL, and others continued our collaborative project to stop the destruction of the magnificent Morkill River Waterfalls, and the proposed habitat destruction of endangered Mountain Caribou, at-risk Grizzly Bear, Bull-Trout, and Chinook Salmon by BC Hydro?s Independent Power Producer?s (IPP) Run of the River Project.  The Ptarmigan Creek/Robson Valley Power Corporation submitted their proposal to government to dry-up Morkill Falls and build 50 km of power lines through endangered Mountain Caribou Reserves and Old Growth Management Areas during 2009.  Your generous support in 2010 will help us stop this ridiculous project that proposes to break the law, yet was still advertised by government for public review.  See STCL's official response to the application submitted to government at: http://savethecedarleague.org/STCL%20Submission%20On%20The%20Morkill%20IPP.pdf.