New award given to team operating
Churchill Falls generating station
during wildfire in June.
TORONTO, Nov. 26,
2024 /CNW/ - For their bravery and innovation in the
face of a catastrophic wildfire, the Churchill Falls team at Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro have been
awarded Electricity Canada's first-ever Extraordinary Service
award.
Last June, a rapidly intensifying forest fire near Churchill Falls escalated from Category 4 to
6, prompting officials to issue an evacuation order for the town.
Churchill Falls, home to 750
residents and one of the world's largest underground hydroelectric
generating stations, faced a dual crisis: ensuring residents'
safety while maintaining critical power generation.
As the town evacuated, a dedicated crew stayed behind,
prioritizing the province's power needs over their own safety. Over
the following days, they worked tirelessly to keep the plant
operational, ensuring uninterrupted electricity for customers
locally and beyond. Their efforts included creating fire and
bulldozer breaks to protect the town and infrastructure and
preparing contingency plans to address risks like smoke impacting
power lines or plant shutdowns.
When the fire jumped the Churchill River, a "last person
standing" protocol was enacted, leaving the plant unattended for
the first time in history. Despite this unprecedented situation,
successful planning, innovative solutions, and remote monitoring
ensured continuous power generation.
The Churchill Falls team's
extraordinary resilience and resourcefulness exemplified their
commitment to safety, teamwork, and pushing operational limits
under extreme conditions. In honour of this incredible achievement,
Electricity Canada has created this new award.
The Extraordinary Service award was presented to executives,
management and frontline workers from Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro at Electricity
Canada's Powering Partnerships summit, held in Toronto on November
26.
QUOTES
"Electricity Canada is proud to
present its inaugural Extraordinary Service award to Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro's team at
Churchill Falls for their bravery
and selflessness. Their work saved lives, but also demonstrated the
reliability of the electricity system. They showed incredible
courage, incredible innovation and thoughtful planning and
execution. This team is the very best of us in the electricity
sector."
- Francis Bradley,
President and CEO, Electricity Canada (TBC)
"The team that effected this positive outcome (with significant
help from others in the organization, our government colleagues and
an incredibly supportive community around us) and what our
employees had to do in every minute and every hour during the fire
risk can only be done by people who truly care about what they do
every day. They care about the provision of electricity; they care
about those that we serve and they care about the assets that we
manage and they care about each other. That's who these people are.
That was proven for all to see this summer. We are grateful to
Electricity Canada for this award. Their acknowledgement of the
incredible people I work alongside truly means so much."
- Jennifer
Williams, President and CEO, Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro
About Electricity Canada:
Founded in 1891, Electricity Canada (formerly the Canadian
Electricity Association) is the national forum and voice of the
evolving and innovative electricity business in Canada. The Association supports, through its
advocacy efforts, the regional, national, and international success
of its members. Electricity Canada
members generate, transmit, and distribute electrical energy to
industrial, commercial, residential, and institutional customers
across Canada. Members include
integrated electric utilities, independent power producers,
transmission and distribution companies, power marketers, and
system operators, who together deliver electricity to all
Canadians, in every province and territory.
SOURCE Electricity Canada