VANCOUVER, British Columbia, June 25, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The BC Government’s announcement that BC Hydro is actively examining two new large hydroelectric dam projects is a dramatic acknowledgment that the province’s electricity needs are far greater than previously admitted.

“For years, British Columbians have been told that we have an abundance of electricity to support widespread electrification of transportation, buildings and industry,” said Barry Penner, KC, Chair of the Energy Futures Institute. “But now BC Hydro is studying two new mega-dams and going back to natural gas-generation to meet peak demand. This is a stark admission that fundamental assumptions behind the CleanBC policy were off the mark.”

The BC Government announced that BC Hydro will study the feasibility of two major hydroelectric projects: the proposed Site E project on the Peace River and the proposed Homathko project near Bute Inlet. Together, the projects could provide more than 1,600 megawatts of new generating capacity and produce roughly 6,000 to 7,500 gigawatt hours (GWh) of electricity annually, according to preliminary BC Hydro estimates, but likely take more than a decade to consult with the public and First Nations, obtain permits and financing, and complete construction.

“We’ve been ringing alarm bells for years that electricity demand was being underestimated, while government policies were pushing up electricity consumption,” Penner noted.

Mixed Signals about Natural Gas

This announcement comes just weeks after BC Hydro advised the BC Utilities Commission (BCUC) that they need to reverse plans to phase out gas-fired generation at the Island Generation facility in Campbell River and the McMahon Generating Station in Taylor for approximately 400 megawatts of combined dispatchable capacity while also identifying a future need for additional dispatchable resources to meet winter peak demand by 2030. After extensive media coverage, BC Hydro later issued a “clarification” stating it was not currently pursuing new natural gas peaking plants but did not specify how the identified peak demand gap would be addressed. Then last week at a BCUC workshop (p. 255), BC Hydro stated there are few other options for reliably meeting future winter peak electricity demand.

It’s policy, more than LNG, driving the squeeze

“A significant portion of future electricity demand, which government is now scrambling to address, originates from BC Government policy itself,” says Penner. “BC Hydro’s own analysis indicates that building-sector electrification policies alone could require two Site C dams worth of additional electricity production by 2050. When projected electric vehicle demand is included, that increases the need to three more Site C dams.”

In documents (p. 2-37) filed with the BCUC, BC Hydro estimated that province-wide implementation of the Zero Carbon Building Code and equipment standards restricting the sale of natural gas space heating and water heating equipment, as called for in the 2021 CleanBC Roadmap, will increase annual electricity demand by 10,300 gigawatt-hours (GWh) by 2050. BC Hydro has separately estimated that electric vehicles could add a further 6,150 GWh of demand by 2050. Combined, these government policy-driven measures would increase electricity demand by approximately 16,450 GWh annually by 2050 — equivalent to more than three Site C dams (the $16 billion Site C dam can generate 5,100 GWh annually under normal water conditions, whereas a dam at Site E on the Peace River is thought to be capable of generating 3,000 GWh annually). By comparison, BC Hydro’s updated February 2026 Reference Load Forecast projects that electricity demand from the oil and gas sector, including LNG (p. 21) will increase by approximately 7,800 GWh between 2025 and 2050. This means the projected increase in electricity demand associated with CleanBC building and transportation electrification policies is more than twice the anticipated increase in demand from the Oil and Gas sector, including LNG.

“The search for new mega-projects is not just the result of population growth or economic development,” said Penner. “It’s largely due to policy choices made in Victoria. If you want to know what is really straining the grid, follow the policy, not the export terminals.”

Firm, dispatchable power is fundamental

“Only a few years ago, government policy assumed that wind, solar, conservation measures and imports would be sufficient,” Penner noted. “Today, BC Hydro is openly discussing new hydro dams, continued natural gas generation and more dispatchable capacity because reliability is ultimately non-negotiable.”

All options on the table?

Penner observed that while the BC Government claims to be willing to consider all available electricity supply options, it has pre-emptively excluded consideration of modern nuclear energy which is being pursued by Ontario and supported by a new federal nuclear energy strategy released yesterday. Penner said the government should conduct a broader review of the assumptions underlying provincial energy policy.

“One thing is now clear: the era of assuming British Columbia has unlimited clean and affordable electricity is over,” said Penner. “The debate has shifted from whether British Columbia needs more electricity to how many more Site C-sized projects may ultimately be required to support the government’s policy choices.”

Media Contact:
Simon Turner
simon@resourceworks.com
672-833-3775

Background:

Barry Penner served as BC’s Minister of Environment, Minister of Aboriginal Relations and Attorney General during his four terms as a MLA in the BC Legislature from 1996 to 2012. During this time, he also served as both President and Vice President for the Pacific Northwest Economic Region (PNWER). As Minister of Environment, Penner introduced BC’s first climate action plan which included North America’s first revenue-neutral carbon tax. In December 2023, Penner was named Chair of the Energy Futures Institute which is a project of the not-profit Resource Works Society.

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at: https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/2f1bc890-52b6-4f1f-9cd7-0b3a2b84cd6e

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