Feds, two Atlantic premiers agree to ‘modified’ Atlantic Loop project
OTTAWA — Nova Scotia and New Brunswick scaled back plans for the Atlantic Loop electricity grid Monday to expanding just one existing connection between their two provinces, rather than also building multiple new lines linking their provinces with Quebec and Newfoundland and Labrador.
What they are now calling a “modified Atlantic Loop” is part of a joint policy statement agreed to Monday in Ottawa during a meeting between federal Energy Minister Jonathan Wilkinson and the premiers of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.
The agreement commits the provinces and Ottawa to co-operate on eliminating coal as a source of power in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick by 2030 and entirely eliminating greenhouse gas emissions from their electricity by 2035. The first part of that starts with the modified loop, limiting the massive project to only upgrading an existing connection between Salisbury, N.B., and Onslow, N.S., and extending it west to Point Lepreau, west of Saint John.
The full Atlantic Loop project has been bandied about for years and Ottawa had committed up to $4.5 billion, mostly through loans to Nova Scotia, to help fund it. But last week, Nova Scotia backed away from including the full Atlantic Loop in its plans to decarbonize its electrical grid, saying it was too expensive, would increase electricity rates too much and Quebec wasn’t committing to sending more power.

