  
                           Hydro-Quebec buying energy transmission assets
                          Oct 30, 2009 - The Associated Press 
                          North America's largest utility company Hydro-Quebec has announced it  will pay 4.7 billion Canadian dollars ($4.4 billion) for transmission  lines of New Brunswick Power, a deal that would help the company secure  greater access to electricity markets in the U.S. 
                          Hydro-Quebec announced Thursday that it expects to spend up to 25  billion Canadian dollars ($23 billion) over the next decade to boost  its hydro electric output by 4,500 megawatts a year. 
                          Much of that  will be exported to the United States and Ontario since growth in the  Quebec economy is not expected to need that much power. 
                          The New  Brunswick Power transmission lines will enable Hydro-Quebec to transmit  power to the northeastern U.S. Hydro-Quebec and New Brunswick Power are  both province-owned. 
                          Quebec premier Jean Charest said in a  statement that the agreement creates an unprecedented energy  partnership in Canada and provides the company with a strategic  geographic position with the eastern Canada and New England markets. 
                          The  president of the New England Power Generators Association said American  utilities are not afraid of competition, but would have little chance  squaring off against a massive utility like Hydro-Quebec. 
                          "Now  (Hydro-Quebec) has control over everything - it's a monopoly in the  purest sense and I don't think that's supportive of competition," said  Angie O'Connor, president of the the New England power group. 
                          She  said Hydro-Quebec, which supplied more than seven percent of New  England's power last year, already has the advantage of using a  limited, less-transparent regulatory process in Canada. 
                          Pierre-Olivier  Pineau, an energy expert at Universite de Montreal's business school,  said Hydro-Quebec's cleaner, cheaper electricity has a competitive  advantage over many power producers in the U.S. 
                          He noted that New  Brunswick's transmission line to Maine connects with New York City,  establishing access to an "interesting and lucrative" market. 
                          "If  you are a power producer, you're never happy to see another competitor  come in with a cheaper source of electricity, which is the case with  Hydro-Quebec," Pineau said. 
                          "If you are consumers, or if you  operate the market, then you're happy to see an additional player with  a different source of electricity." 
                          Pineau added that the transmission line has a limited capacity, effectively capping Hydro-Quebec's exports to New England. 
                          "Hydro-Quebec is a big player in the States, but it's not a dominant player," he said.  
                             
                              
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