One of the potentially most valuable revenue sources would be a new tax on electricity production that could yield upwards of $450 million a year. The bulk of the tax would be paid by Emera and Hydro-Quebec, both of which currently profit from free or near-free electricity through two patently unfair agreements.
The basic problem of the Lower Churchill was always
how to pay for it.
Everyone who tried to build it before wanted people outside the province to use the electricity and pay for the whole project, with the profit flowing to the people of Newfoundland and Labrador. When they couldn't get that to work, they simply didn't pursue the project.
The politicians and bureaucrats behind what became Muskrat Falls were smarter. They decided in a meeting at The Rooms in April 2010 they would force the people of Newfoundland and Labrador to pay for the entire project through their electricity rates, even though they would use very little of it. The benefits would flow outside Newfoundland and Labrador.
The politicians and bureaucrats behind what became Muskrat Falls were smarter. They decided in a meeting at The Rooms in April 2010 they would force the people of Newfoundland and Labrador to pay for the entire project through their electricity rates, even though they would use very little of it. The benefits would flow outside Newfoundland and Labrador.
The Dwight Ball-Ches Crosbie rate mitigation scheme is
still about having Newfoundlanders and Labradorians alone pay for Muskrat Falls with others reaping the benefit. On top
of that, the Ball-Crosbie approach includes money that doesn’t exist. Their scheme
also doesn’t address other problems with Muskrat Falls that are as troublesome
as the problem of the government’s proposed scheme to have only one small group
of people bear the whole cost. So, it won't work.