Long power outages expose Quebec’s lack of readiness for energy transition: expert
MONTREAL — Lengthy power outages that have left some Quebecers in the dark for days have exposed the province’s lack of preparedness for the green energy transition to come, an expert said Wednesday.
The province needs to improve its infrastructure and emergency planning, as Quebec society increasingly replaces fossil fuels with electricity to reach emissions targets, Normand Mousseau, scientific director of the Institut de l’énergie Trottier at Polytechnique Montréal, said in an interview.
On Wednesday afternoon, more than 11,800 Hydro-Québec customers were still without power about five days after a winter storm slammed Eastern Canada — down from nearly 20,000 that morning. The Quebec City region had the most clients without power, followed by Côte-Nord and Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean.
The lengthy outage “shows to what point we remain fragile and we aren’t prepared,” he said. Mousseau, who is also a physics professor at Université de Montréal, added that the impact of outages will only worsen as the province’s reliance on electricity grows.


