Manitoba 'repatriating' some hydro exports from U.S., premier says
2 American contracts totalling 500 megawatts set to expire anyway, Hydro says

Premier Wab Kinew said he has ordered Manitoba Hydro not to renew 500 megawatts worth of expiring hydroelectricity export contracts to the United States.
The provincial Crown corporation, however, said it had no plans to renew the contracts, which are slated to expire at the end of the month.
Kinew held a press conference Monday to announce Manitoba is "repatriating" two contracts with Northern States Power as trade tensions with the U.S. drag on, he said.
"We saw that there's 500 [megawatts] of export contracts that are expiring at the end of the month, and so we've decided as Canadians and as Manitobans [that] we are going to use that power to build up our own economy here at home," he said at the Manitoba Legislative Building.
Manitoba Hydro spokesperson Peter Chura said the contracts set to expire involved the sale of 375 megawatts of summer power (325 megawatts during the winter) as well as125 megawatts of annual power to Northern States Power, which is part of Xcel Energy, a NASDAQ-traded private utility based in Minneapolis.
Kinew said that he informed Minnesota Governor Tim Walz about the move months ago and said the governor was understanding.
Manitoba will still sell electricity to the U.S. and buy it during the winter, Kinew said.
"We're still going to be good partners, and reliable partners, for our American export market," Kinew said. "But the reality is, we're also going to step up to a new level of engagement in terms of leading the energy conversation in Canada."
'Appetite' for a big Canadian trade, energy project
While Manitoba Hydro's rates are frozen for this year, it has applied for a series of three annual electricity rate hikes of 3.5 per cent, beginning in 2026.
Drought and low water levels over the last two years have caused Manitoba Hydro's revenues to dip, the Crown corporation said in its recent rate application to the Public Utilities Board. Hydro is now carrying $24.6 billion worth of debt.
Hydro's rate application also states Manitoba Hydro faces a $31-billion tab for increasing its generating capacity and repairing aging infrastructure. Two out of its three main transmission lines have lost 20 per cent of their capacity to carry electricity, the application stated.
Hydro plans to spend $1.4 billion to build a new 500-megawatt fuel-burning energy plant by 2030 to stave off winter power shortages and plans to partner up with Indigenous-owned businesses to develop 600 megawatts of wind farms.
No intention to renew contracts: Hydro
PC Hydro critic Lauren Stone, the MLA for Midland, said Kinew failed to consider the financial implications of selling this power in Canada instead of to U.S. customers
Kinew said Hydro has already factored this decision into its rate application.
Hydro's Chura said that is correct because the corporation had no intention of renewing the Nothern States Power contracts.
"We've known for some time now these contracts were expiring and they wouldn't be renewed. So that capacity that's coming back into our system, we've already accounted for in our planning."
Kinew said he wants Manitoba Hydro to set aside 50 megawatts of power to be dedicated to a transmission line to Nunavut in the north.
"Can we put a transmission line there? Can we attach broadband to it? Can we connect that Churchill along the way and open up opportunities here in Manitoba? I think we can," he said.
Representatives from Nunavut will be in Manitoba on Wednesday to sign an agreement, and Kinew says he hopes the federal government will be on board after the federal election later this month.
The remaining 450 megawatts could be used to power a potential trade corridor heading into eastern or western Canada, Kinew said.
"I think there's an appetite to approve a big energy and trade project that crosses provincial and territorial borders," he said.
"We know that those trade corridors are going to need power."
Hydro has warned for two years it already lacks the excess capacity to serve new major industrial customers.
Kinew said the thermal plant, Indigenous-owned wind farms and the new power repatriation will create or free up a combined 1,600 megawatts of capacity.
Manitoba Hydro's existing capacity is 6,240 megawatts, albeit only when all its infrastructure is functioning properly and water levels on Lake Winnipeg, the utility's main reservoir, are high enough.
With files from Bartley Kives