Quebec government says it is open to studying whether to restart nuclear reactor - Action News
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Montreal

Quebec government says it is open to studying whether to restart nuclear reactor

The new CEO of Hydro-Qubec, Michael Sabia, has asked for an assessment of the Gentilly-2 nuclear plant, which was mothballed in 2012. Now the province's energy minister says he agrees with the plan and that it would "irresponsable" to ignore the potential of nuclear power.

Crown utility confirmed last week it was assessing possible revival of Gentilly-2

Aerial view of small nuclear facility.
Quebec's only nuclear facility, Gentilly-2, was decommissioned in 2012 by the Parti Qubcois government. (Hydro-Qubec)

Quebec Energy Minister Pierre Fitzgibbon said Monday he agrees with Hydro-Qubec's decision to study a possible reopening of the province's only nuclear power plant.

Fitzgibbon was reacting to last week's news that the power utility is looking into restarting the Gentilly-2 reactor in Bcancour, Que., as a response to growing energy demand. He told reporters in Montreal that as Quebec moves away from fossil fuels, all alternative sources of energy should be studied.

It would be "irresponsible," he said, to reject nuclear power outright, adding that any new energy projects should be "socially acceptable and economically profitable."

Last week, Hydro-Qubec confirmed that its new CEO, Michael Sabia, has an "open mind" on nuclear energy. The utility said it would assess the plant's current condition in order to "evaluate our options and inform our thinking about Quebec's future energy supply."

Hydro-Qubec's announcement was met with criticism from environmental group Greenpeace Canada and from opposition politicians, who called on the government to launch a national discussion on Quebec's energy future.

In 2012, the provincial government closed Gentilly-2, located on the south shore of the St. Lawrence River about halfway between Montreal and Quebec City, in part because of the high cost of refurbishing the plant, which opened in 1983.

But Quebec's energy situation has changed since then.

Demand for power will soon outstrip supply

Fitzgibbon and other officials have warned that the demand for electricity from companies seeking to launch industrial projects in the province exceeds Hydro-Qubec's current capacity.

The minister has also suggested that Quebecers will need to reduce their energy consumption, but the government hasn't released details on how that goal will be achieved.

On Monday, Fitzgibbon said Sabia is considering the imbalance between supply and demand of energy in the province.

"And (Sabia) is saying that we have to look at the energy sources available, which include nuclear, but we are far from having decided; no decision has been made, either by Hydro-Qubec or the government."

He said in order for Quebec to successfully transition away from fossil fuels, the province will need to increase its renewable energy capacity and residents will need to change the way they consume energy.

He also said the number of cars on the road has to be cut in half and that the cars that remain should be electric.

Fitzgibbon added, "we need to capture the carbon that already exists, in the sea or in the sky, and sequester it."

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