the projected shortfall isn’t enough to deter industrial users, fitzgibbon insists.
“the good news is that a lot of companies i’m talking to, both foreign and local, are saying they’re ready to wait,” he said. “they want green energy at a reasonable price. they’re ready to wait and to be more efficient.”
demand for power in quebec has set new highs in recent years, hitting 43,000 megawatts in march 2023, the minister said. that’s higher than hydro-québec’s
installed capacity, which totalled about 38,000 megawatts at the end of 2023.
“if we can reduce this peak, there will be more power available,” fitzgibbon said. “companies are saying maybe they’ll self-produce a little bit of energy, maybe they’ll change their manufacturing processes or maybe they’ll remove themselves from the network in january. in the past, these discussions did not exist.”
companies “are prepared to wait four or five years,” the minister added. “it’s not the end of the world because we’re going to have a fertile environment for projects in quebec.”
hydro-québec is months into a
12-year, $185-billion plan to boost capacity by up to 9,000 megawatts and significantly reduce power outages. about 99 per cent of the energy that the utility produces is classified as clean.