BC's Rivers at Risk

Rainbow, Burnt Bridge, Chipmunk, Tzoonie, Volcano and Statlu are not just colourful names they are some of the many wild creeks and rivers found throughout British Columbia. They are also just a few of the 600 water bodies that have been staked by private power corporations over the last seven years in BC.

The rush to stake our streams and rivers was triggered by the 2002 Energy Plan when the provincial government forbade BC Hydro, our very profitable crown corporation, from producing new sources of hydroelectricity as part of a government shift to deregulate the electricity sector in BC. Since that time there has been a 1040 percent increase in waterpower license applications, with mining companies, stock promoters and even U. S. giant General Electric looking to develop BC streams and rivers for power.

The proliferation of private hydro projects, also know as Independent Power Projects (IPPs), appears green and sustainable at the outset but is fraught with problems:

  • There is no provincial planning and local governments, through the enactment of the infamous Bill 30 have had their zoning authority removed.
  • Most projects do no undergo an environmental assessment and even if they do the cumulative impacts of the transmission lines, logging, road networks, and river diversions which accompany these projects are not evaluated by the provincial government. 
  • Not surprisingly, there is growing public concern regarding the wisdom of turning over our rivers and the production of hydroelectricity to the private sector.

The Wilderness Committee recognizes that we have something unique in British Columbia: a public utility which produces low-carbon energy, provides for BC’s energy security, promotes conservation initiatives, can engage in low-term planning and is answerable and accountable to the people of our province.  

In an era of climate change it is essential that we think ahead and make wise decisions. There is a right way and a wrong way to produce green power – let’s make sure we do it the right way.  Join the Wilderness Committee in calling for a moratorium on river power projects until they are regionally planned, environmentally appropriate, acceptable to First Nations, and publicly owned.

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Save the Bute Inlet

Stand Up for the Tzoonie River

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Recent Developments

Wednesday, January 20, 2010 (All day)

The last time we e-mailed our members and supporters about the fight to save the wild rivers of Bute Inlet, we had one simple request.

We asked you to write a letter to Premier Campbell to tell him how strongly you wanted those wild rivers in the Bute Inlet area protected from plans to dam and divert them to produce hydropower for General Electric and Plutonic Power Inc.  Well, the people on our email action list continue to amaze and delight us! Turns out that you folks write some mighty powerful letters.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009 (All day)

Last Friday November 20th, a day of the week normally reserved for bad-news announcements, the BC Government quietly announced the handpicked appointees to the Green Energy Advisory Task Force.

Monday, November 16, 2009 (All day)

I was recently contracted by the Wilderness Committee to take their ancient beast of a truck out into the field to investigate logging and IPP (Run of River Hydro) developments in areas managed for the protection of the most endangered animal in Canada, the spotted owl.

Take Action

Write a Letter to Save Bute Inlet

Bute Inlet is one of the most stunning areas of the BC coast, a remote place full of towering mountains, beautiful rivers and abundant wildlife.

The area has mountain goat, marbled murrelet and grizzly bear habitat, and is home to 23 varieties of fish, including all five major types of Pacific salmon.

Plutonic Power and US-based corporate giant General Electric want to build a private power megaproject that would involve building 17 dams and river diversions, more than 100 bridges, over 250 km of roads, and over 440 km of transmission lines. This project would be the largest private power project in British Columbia.

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WC In the News

Wednesday, March 3, 2010 (All day)
Globe & Mail
Thursday, February 11, 2010 (All day)
Victoria Times Colonist
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