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Point Lepreau Refurbishment Delay drives nuclear station outage costs, forcing Maritime Electric in PEI to buy replacement power. IRAC reviews rate impacts, while Atomic Energy of Canada and federal responsibility debates intensify amid energy costs.
The Important Points
Extended outage from refurbishing Point Lepreau forces pricier replacement power and prompts IRAC oversight in PEI.
- Point Lepreau shutdown extends return to 2012 from 2009/2011.
- Maritime Electric relied on 20% supply from the station.
- Replacement power costs add $1-$2M monthly, up to $50M by 2011.
A further delay to the refurbishment of New Brunswick's Point Lepreau Nuclear Generating Station will cost PEI millions of dollars, the province's utility said.
Maritime Electric normally buys about 20 per cent of its energy from the plant. It has said the cost of buying replacement energy would reach $50 million by 2011, and the latest delay means that price tag will only grow.
The nuclear station was originally supposed to be back online by September 2009. That was previously pushed back to 2011, after a refurbishment delay was reported, and now Atomic Energy of Canada announced it could be 2012 before power flows from the station again.
PEI Energy Minister Richard Brown said it is a major problem for the province, as PEI electricity costs continue to be affected. The Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission, which sets Island power rates, is also concerned, he said.
"All I can say is each month that there's a delay due to fuel tube problems in this Point Lepreau project, Maritime Electric has to go out and purchase replacement power. That can cost anywhere between an additional $1 million to $2 million a month, depending on the month," he said.
"It is a major concern, as IRAC has indicated. They want a complete review of it filed with them. I want that review filed with me at the same time, and we want to see what the issue here is and what we can do, including whether PEI wind projects can help."
In July, IRAC granted Maritime Electric a rate increase so it could recoup the extra costs from consumers over a 30-year period.
Fred O'Brien, chief executive of Maritime Electric, said he does not have any immediate plans to ask for another rate hike.
O'Brien and Brown said the federal government should be footing the bill, citing a NB Power compensation decision on a related reactor issue, because it hired Atomic Energy of Canada to refurbish the power plant.
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