
Future of Site C megaproject fuels debate in British Columbia election campaign
The divisive $8.8-billion Site C dam is fuelling debate in British Columbia’s election campaign, pitting Liberal promises of jobs and clean energy against the NDP’s cautious approach of calling for an independent review.
Christy Clark used the megaproject in northern British Columbia as a backdrop Tuesday to campaign on the Liberal government’s record on employment and economic growth. She said Site C has been a job creator, with more than 275 B.C. businesses involved in construction.
“We need reliable power, we need affordable power and we need it to be clean power,” Clark said at a concrete company in Fort St. John. “And the only way to achieve that is through the Site C clean energy project.”
The dam will be the third on the Peace River, flooding an 83-kilometre stretch of valley, and local First Nations and farmers have fiercely opposed the project. But job fairs for the project have also drawn hundreds eagerly seeking work.