Ontario's biggest hydro dams to get $1B life extension - Action News
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Toronto

Ontario's biggest hydro dams to get $1B life extension

Ontario says it will spend $1 billion toextend the life of the biggest hydroelectric dams in the province.

Sir Adam Beck generating stations on Niagara River supply nearly one-tenth of province's electricity

Aerial photo of a hydroelectric power plant.
The century-old Sir Adam Beck I generating station along the Niagara River. (Patrick Morrell/CBC)

Ontario says it will spend $1 billion toextend the life of the biggest hydroelectric dams in the province.

The project involves refurbishing the Sir Adam Beck I and II generating stations along the Niagara River, which between them account for nine per cent of all electricityproduced in Ontario each year.

Energy Minister Todd Smith announcedthe plan at the Sir Adam Beck site Tuesday morning. CBC Toronto was given details of the announcement in advance.

"If we want to keep producing clean electricity at this station, then we have to invest in its future," Smith said.

Ontario Power Generation (OPG) is contractingGE Vernovafor the work. GE Vernova is the name of a newly created energy company spun off from the multinational GE Corp.

The project will see nearly all of the two plants' existing generating units replaced with new equipment such as turbines. The work is to beginin 2025 and is expected to stretch over 15 years, to minimize the number of units are that out of production at any one time.

The refurbishment will extend the life of about 1,700 megawatts of hydrosupply, enough to power about 1.7 million homes, the province says.

A cluster of tall high tension power lines and transformers.
The province's Independent Electricity Systems Operator forecasts that demand for electricity in Ontario will jump 59 per cent by 2050. (Patrick Morrell/CBC)

Tuesday's announcement is just the latest in Ontario's plans formajorrefurbishments and expansions of electricity generating facilities, including what could become the biggest-everexpansion of nuclear power production in Canada.

  • The province has announced plansto nearly doubleproduction at the Bruce Power nuclear generating station, and to buildfour new small modular reactors at OPG's Darlington plant.
  • OPG wants to refurbish four units at the Pickering nuclear generating station.
  • Several expansions ofgas-fired power plantsare in the works, despite criticism that this will boost carbon emissions from Ontario's electricity system.

The province's Independent Electricity Systems Operator forecasts that demand for electricity in Ontario will jump 59 per cent by 2050, driven both by population growth and the expected reduction in fossil fuel use for powering industry and vehicles.