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Reviving large-scale projects; La relance des grands chantiers

Abstract

For the past decade, most large-scale hydro development projects in northern Quebec have been put on hold due to land disputes with First Nations. Hydroelectric projects have recently been revived following an agreement signed with Aboriginal communities in the province who recognized the need to find new sources of revenue for future generations. Many Cree are working on the project to harness the waters of the Eastmain River located in the middle of their territory. The work involves building an 890 foot long dam, 30 dikes enclosing a 603 square-km reservoir, a spillway, and a power house with 3 generating units with a total capacity of 480 MW of power for start-up in 2007. The project will require the use of 2,400 workers in total. The Cree Construction and Development Company is working on relations between Quebec's 14,000 Crees and the James Bay Energy Corporation, the subsidiary of Hydro-Quebec which is developing the project. Approximately 10 per cent of the $735-million project has been designated for the environmental component. Inspectors ensure that the project complies fully with environmental protection guidelines. Total development costs for Eastmain-1 are in the order of $2 billion of which $735 million will cover work on  More>>
Authors:
Publication Date:
Jun 01, 2003
Product Type:
Journal Article
Resource Relation:
Journal Name: Forces; Journal Issue: 139; Other Information: Bilingual journal in which all articles are printed in both French and English; PBD: Jun 2003
Subject:
13 HYDRO ENERGY; 24 POWER TRANSMISSION AND DISTRIBUTION; HYDROELECTRIC POWER; HIGH-HEAD HYDROELECTRIC POWER PLANTS; PLANNING; LAND USE; TREATIES; AMERICAN INDIANS; EMPLOYMENT; EXPORTS; QUEBEC
OSTI ID:
20376087
Country of Origin:
Canada
Language:
English; French
Other Identifying Numbers:
Journal ID: ISSN 0015-6957; FORCDB; TRN: CA0301351
Availability:
Available from Transcontinental Media Inc., 1100 Rene-Levesque Blvd. West, 24th Floor, Montreal, Quebec, H3B 4X9
Submitting Site:
CANM
Size:
page(s) 29-30, 32, 34, 36, 38
Announcement Date:
Sep 12, 2003

Citation Formats

Desiront, A. Reviving large-scale projects; La relance des grands chantiers. Canada: N. p., 2003. Web.
Desiront, A. Reviving large-scale projects; La relance des grands chantiers. Canada.
Desiront, A. 2003. "Reviving large-scale projects; La relance des grands chantiers." Canada.
@misc{etde_20376087,
title = {Reviving large-scale projects; La relance des grands chantiers}
author = {Desiront, A}
abstractNote = {For the past decade, most large-scale hydro development projects in northern Quebec have been put on hold due to land disputes with First Nations. Hydroelectric projects have recently been revived following an agreement signed with Aboriginal communities in the province who recognized the need to find new sources of revenue for future generations. Many Cree are working on the project to harness the waters of the Eastmain River located in the middle of their territory. The work involves building an 890 foot long dam, 30 dikes enclosing a 603 square-km reservoir, a spillway, and a power house with 3 generating units with a total capacity of 480 MW of power for start-up in 2007. The project will require the use of 2,400 workers in total. The Cree Construction and Development Company is working on relations between Quebec's 14,000 Crees and the James Bay Energy Corporation, the subsidiary of Hydro-Quebec which is developing the project. Approximately 10 per cent of the $735-million project has been designated for the environmental component. Inspectors ensure that the project complies fully with environmental protection guidelines. Total development costs for Eastmain-1 are in the order of $2 billion of which $735 million will cover work on site and the remainder will cover generating units, transportation and financial charges. Under the treaty known as the Peace of the Braves, signed in February 2002, the Quebec government and Hydro-Quebec will pay the Cree $70 million annually for 50 years for the right to exploit hydro, mining and forest resources within their territory. The project comes at a time when electricity export volumes to the New England states are down due to growth in Quebec's domestic demand. Hydropower is a renewable and non-polluting source of energy that is one of the most acceptable forms of energy where the Kyoto Protocol is concerned. It was emphasized that large-scale hydro-electric projects are needed to provide sufficient energy to meet both domestic needs and annual exports. 7 figs.}
journal = []
issue = {139}
journal type = {AC}
place = {Canada}
year = {2003}
month = {Jun}
}