Quebec Innu community seeks $2.2B from Hydro-Québec for Churchill Falls destruction
MONTREAL — A Quebec Innu community is suing Hydro-Québec for $2.2-billion, claiming the Churchill Falls hydroelectric station has destroyed a significant part of their traditional territory.
The lawsuit filed Friday in Quebec Superior Court by the Innu of Uashat Mak Mani-Utenam claims the megaproject’s reservoirs and more than 1,000 kilometres of transmission lines “flooded and destroyed” part of their traditional territory and disrupted the community’s traditional activities.
The band council says construction of the 5,428-megawatt station in Labrador and its transmission facilities in the 1960s and early 1970swas donewithout the consent of the community near Sept-Îles, Que.
A 1969 agreement that allows Hydro-Québec to purchase the majority of the electricity generated at the station and reap most of the profits ends in 2041.