Back to Bills

BC Controls Crypto Power, First Nations Partnerships

Full Title:
Energy Statutes Amendment Act, 2025

Summary#

  • This bill changes BC’s energy laws to do two main things. First, it lets BC Hydro and First Nations co‑own parts of a new high‑voltage transmission line on the North Coast. Second, it gives the provincial cabinet power to control how much electricity goes to crypto mining, big data and AI centers, and hydrogen made for export.

  • The goal is to share ownership and benefits with First Nations and to manage very large new electricity demands so the grid stays reliable and affordable.

  • Key changes:

    • Allows the government to approve partnership deals where BC Hydro and First Nations co‑own parts of a new 500‑kilovolt line from near Prince George to Fraser Lake, to Terrace, and to Bob Quinn Lake.
    • Confirms these partnership agreements are valid, lets BC Hydro transfer assets to them, and allows BC Hydro to pay the partnership for use of the shared facilities.
    • Lets cabinet pause, limit, or set special rules and prices for electricity used for crypto mining, data/AI centers, and hydrogen produced for use outside Canada.
    • Allows caps on how much power can go to those uses and sets a fair process to choose who gets service if supply is limited.
    • Lets utilities recover costs or forecasted lost revenue from customers if cabinet’s rules affect utility income.
    • Cabinet’s rules would override normal utility rules and past decisions while they are in effect.

What it means for you#

  • Residents

    • You would not see changes to everyday home service from this bill alone.
    • The government could limit big new power demands from crypto, data/AI centers, or hydrogen for export. That could help keep more power available for homes and essential services.
    • If the utility is allowed to recover lost revenue from customers, some costs could show up on bills. The size of any change depends on future regulations.
  • Small and medium businesses

    • Regular business power needs are not targeted by this bill.
    • If you plan a data center or AI facility, you could face limits, delays, or special rates. In some periods, service could be paused.
    • Clear selection rules may apply if demand is higher than what the grid can serve right away.
  • Large power users in listed sectors

    • Crypto miners could be paused from getting new service, face a cap, or pay different (likely higher) rates set by regulation.
    • Data centers and AI compute could face similar limits or special rates, and a queue or selection process.
    • Hydrogen projects that make hydrogen for export could face service limits or special rules. Hydrogen made for use within Canada is not listed.
  • First Nations along the North Coast line

    • You may have the option to co‑own parts of the new transmission line through limited partnerships with BC Hydro.
    • This can bring ownership income, a role in operations, and potential local jobs. The exact benefits depend on each agreement.
  • Northern communities

    • The new line is meant to boost grid capacity and support economic activity from Prince George to the northwest.
    • Co‑ownership with First Nations could increase local benefits. Construction may also bring short‑term job opportunities.
  • All BC Hydro and other regulated utility customers

    • Cabinet can set different rules for different places and times. That means conditions for large new loads can change by region.
    • Any costs or forecasted lost revenue caused by these rules could be collected from customers, depending on how regulations are written.

Expenses#

No publicly available information.

Proponents' View#

  • Co‑ownership with First Nations advances reconciliation by sharing control, revenue, and long‑term benefits from major grid projects.
  • Clear legal authority for partnerships reduces risk and helps build the North Coast transmission line on time.
  • Managing power for crypto, large data/AI centers, and export hydrogen protects grid reliability and keeps clean power available for homes and core industries.
  • Special rates and the option to pause service help prevent very energy‑hungry projects from driving up demand and straining the system.
  • Allowing utilities to recover costs avoids unexpected financial hits that could threaten maintenance and upgrades.

Opponents' View#

  • The bill gives cabinet broad power to override the usual independent rate‑setting process, which could reduce regulatory certainty.
  • Limits or pauses on service may deter investment in data centers, AI, crypto, and hydrogen, leading to fewer jobs and slower growth.
  • Letting utilities recover “forecasted lost revenue” could raise bills for other customers, even when service is denied to certain projects.
  • Retroactive validation of partnership deals and asset transfers may weaken public oversight of large energy projects.
  • Caps and special rules for hydrogen made for export might slow the development of a clean‑fuels industry in BC.