PICKERING, ONT. – The Ontario authorities and Ontario Energy Era (OPG) have introduced a plan to proceed with the refurbishing Pickering Nuclear Producing Station’s B models, numbers 5 to eight.
Primarily based on OPG’s preliminary schedule, the refurbishment is anticipated to be accomplished by the mid-2030s.
OPG will now proceed with the Mission Initiation Section of refurbishment which can final by means of the tip of 2024. The federal government is funding OPG’s $2 billion funds for the part which incorporates engineering and design work in addition to securing long-lead parts.
The announcement was made Jan. 30 by Minister of Vitality Todd Smith.
“With global business looking to expand in jurisdictions with reliable, affordable and clean electricity, a refurbished Pickering Nuclear Generating Station would help Ontario compete for and land more game-changing investments,” mentioned Smith. “The refurbishment of Pickering would create thousands of new jobs and help produce at least another 30 years of safe, reliable and clean electricity to power the next major international investment, the new homes we are building and industries as they grow and electrify.”
The undertaking can also be anticipated to create about 11,000 jobs per 12 months. Submit-refurbishment operation of the ability would additionally create and maintain about 6,410 Ontario jobs per 12 months.
OPG CEO Ken Hartwick commented, “Our experience refurbishing Darlington, a highly complex project that remains on time and on budget, will be invaluable as we begin the work necessary so Pickering can continue to help meet the growing electricity demands of this thriving province for another three-plus decades.”
The Unbiased Electrical energy System Operator concluded the Pickering refurbishment would offer higher total ratepayer worth by way of prices and dangers, in comparison in opposition to non-emitting era options, said the discharge.
Ontario will observe a multi-phase approvals course of. The refurbishment can also be topic to regulatory approval by the Canadian Nuclear Security Fee.
The announcement was welcomed by the Society of United Professionals, the union for 9,000 Ontario skilled power sector staff, which said that 1000’s of union jobs shall be created.
“Today’s announcement protects good union jobs, and will help our province produce low-cost, emissions-free power as we electrify our economy into the future,” mentioned Michelle Johnston, president of the society. “We’re glad to see the government choosing to refurbish our CANDU reactors, which support a strong, unionized, made-in-Canada supply chain.”









