CBC reported
the issue in June 2016. Flabbergasted by what he had read, James L. Gordon, the
Canadian engineer who has written repeatedly on the Uncle Gnarley Blog,
contacted renowned transmission line designer J.P. Schell, P. Eng. (Ret’d) and
asked him to examine the issue. Mr. Schell wrote a piece entitled Design
Engineer Baffled By Extent of Muskrat TL Flaw Reported by CBC for this
Blog.
The
transmission cable (170 km X 2 lines = 340 km of D.C. conductor wire) was spun
at the factory, shipped, stored and erected before anyone at Nalcor
noticed — testimony to a management ill-equipped for the roles they fill.Wire - now scrap - arriving at Newco Metal Yard (Happy Valley-Goose Bay) |
In typical Nalcor fashion, Nalcor remained silent as to how its management processes and/or its personnel had been so badly negligent.
In a similar vein, in May 2015 the Uncle Gnarley Blog published the first
pictures (see: The Photos Nalcor Don't Want You To See) of the Muskrat Falls Integrated Cover System known as the “Dome”.
The "Dome" in the scrap yard |
Undoubtedly, as has been discussed many times on this Blog, the current project estimate of $12.7 billion can be attributed, in part, to deceit and low-balling — and possibly fraud, too.
But a significant part of that cost is also due to an incompetent project management team that has run the project from the very beginning — which CEO Stan Marshall retains.
The photographs above and below, taken by two keen Muskrat watchers in Goose Bay, show some of the scrapped faulty cable.
The photographs above and below, taken by two keen Muskrat watchers in Goose Bay, show some of the scrapped faulty cable.
All photos - Newco Metals yard, Happy Valley-Goose Bay |
Perhaps Stan Marshall or Gilbert Bennett will confirm the source of the dumped cable and voluntarily tells us how many tens of millions this one mistake has cost the people of the province. Was it even higher than the originally budgeted $120 million for the "Dome" — which some engineers say actually cost a lot more?
Stan should send out Gilbert to account, especially since the screw-up occurred on his watch.
Of course, the public shouldn't count on that.
But they should worry that the state of Quality Assurance/Control exhibited by the faulty cable is represented on many other components of the Muskrat Falls project.