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Demand for cheap, clean hydropower is soaring. Can Quebec keep up?
CBC
On a stretch of the St. Lawrence River, just southwest of Montreal, the steady hum of turbines reverberates through the air.
Every second, eight million litres of water rush through the Beauharnois Generating Station — enough to fill three Olympic-sized pools — producing energy to power almost 400,000 homes.
Quebec is a hydroelectric powerhouse, with 61 generating stations in rivers and reservoirs across the province, and in a normal year, it's the top exporter of electricity in the country.
With demand expected to surge in the coming years both in Canada and in the northeast U.S., will Hydro-Quebec be able to keep up?
Experts forecast a period of rapid growth in electricity consumption to meet the growing needs of data centres, factories and residential consumers, positioning Quebec as what Premier François Legault has called "the battery of North America."
But the public utility's reservoir levels fell far below average in 2023, during an unusually hot and dry year across Canada, raising concern about the future of hydro electricity in the face of climate change.
Overall, exports to the U.S. from Canada fell nearly 25 per cent last year, to the lowest level since 2016.
In its annual report, Hydro-Quebec blamed "scant snow cover" as well as "lower-than-usual spring runoff and modest summer and fall precipitation in northern Quebec" for the lower than usual "inflows to the company's large reservoirs." That meant the public utility was forced to cut back exports last year to 23 Terawatt hours (TWh) — about nine per cent less than the year prior.
B.C. Hydro was even worse off, and was forced to import more power from the U.S. last year because of dry conditions. Manitoba's hydro production also dropped by 12 per cent.
Despite these challenges, demand is expected to surge in the years ahead.
During a recent tour of Beauharnois, Hydro-Quebec spokesperson Lynn St-Laurent said fluctuation in water levels is something the public utility has "been monitoring for several decades" and is prepared to deal with.
She pointed to 2014 research that suggests Quebec could receive more precipitation as the world warms.
"There were lower levels in 2023 for certain, but water inflow variability is actually very well understood in the hydropower industry," said St-Laurent. She said there will be years where "water inflows will decrease — because there is variability — but the general trend is to see them increase over the next decade."
Christopher McCray, a climate simulations specialist at Ouranos, a Quebec climate research group, said models show more annual precipitation in Quebec in the decades to come — but more variability, too.
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