B.C. must learn from Site C dam before starting new projects, says environmentalist
VICTORIA — An environmental group is condemning plans by the British Columbia government to consider building two new hydropower dams, including a fourth dam on the Peace River, saying the province first needs to “come to grips” with the negative impact of the recently completed Site C dam.
Joe Foy with the Wilderness Committee said damming and diverting big rivers had big negative impacts, which continue far into the future.
He said the John Horgan Dam on the Peace River — as the Site C project is now known- had massive cost overruns leading to public debt, huge losses of farmland and wildlife habitat and unacceptable impacts to Indigenous rights.
Energy Minister Adrian Dix announced on Monday that B.C. was “seriously” looking into plans for dams at another Peace River site known as Site E near the border with Alberta, as well as at Bute Inlet on the central coast.


