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Today in Canada > News > N.L. turns down the lights as progress made on downed hydro station
News

N.L. turns down the lights as progress made on downed hydro station

Press Room
Last updated: 2026/01/25 at 9:02 AM
Press Room Published January 25, 2026
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N.L. turns down the lights as progress made on downed hydro station
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The audio version of this article is generated by AI-based technology. Mispronunciations can occur. We are working with our partners to continually review and improve the results.

Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro says that ice removal efforts at the Bay d’Espoir power plant have been “very successful.”

On Friday, Hydro announced that a buildup of frazil ice, a slushy mix of ice crystals suspended in water, had blocked the intake at the plant, forcing it to entirely shut down for the first time since 1967.

A team of divers was deployed into the frigid water with air compressors to try and clear the ice.

On Sunday morning, the utility provided an update on social media saying that the effort was working and that several units at the plant had been restarted. 

However, to ensure stability of the grid they were being brought back online gradually.

Power Warnings remained in place Sunday, with both Hydro and Newfoundland Power continuing to ask customers to conserve power and prepare for the possibility of rotating outages. 

A man in a suit and tie speaks in front a blue backdrop.
N.L. Hydro’s Rob Collett said in an update Saturday that rotating outages, lasting up to 60 minutes, are possible. (CBC)

Not DarkNL, but dimmer

Municipalities and businesses across the island part of the province reacted swiftly to the request to conserve power to avoid another DarkNL

The January 2014 event saw tens of thousands of customers in Newfoundland and parts of Labrador without electricity for days, amid frigid temperatures.

Now, several municipalities have closed facilities entirely. The City of Corner Brook announced Saturday that they would be closing all city buildings until further notice. This included the Civic Centre and City Hall.

As well, the City switched their water treatment plant to generator mode, removing its load on the grid, but also to avoid possible interruptions in service the event of an outage

Mount Pearl and CBS have likewise switched public works to generator power, and closed several facilities, including the Glacier, the Summit centre, and the CBS Recreation Complex, which the town calls its “greatest consumer of electricity.”

St. John’s and the town of Paradise are largely keeping facilities open, but in a state of reduced power consumption. Those measures include reduced heating and lighting and in some cases switching to generator power.

Businesses, too, are doing their part.

The Avalon Mall in St. John’s announced to its shoppers it would be reducing lighting for the remainder of the power warning.

Download our free CBC News app to sign up for push alerts for CBC Newfoundland and Labrador. Sign up for our daily headlines newsletter here. Click here to visit our landing page.

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