FortisBC
FortisBC is a regulated utility company headquartered in Surrey, British Columbia, Canada, that delivers natural gas, electricity, propane, and renewable natural gas to nearly 1.3 million customers across 135 communities and 58 First Nations communities in the province.[1] As a wholly owned subsidiary of Fortis Inc., the largest investor-owned utility company in North America by market capitalization, FortisBC operates through entities such as FortisBC Energy Inc. for natural gas distribution—the largest in British Columbia—and FortisBC Inc. for electricity services, employing over 2,700 people to maintain infrastructure including extensive pipeline networks and hydroelectric generating facilities.[2][3][1] With roots tracing back more than a century to early hydroelectric and gas distribution operations in the region, the company focuses on reliable energy supply, energy efficiency programs, and integration of lower-carbon options like RNG, which it was the first North American utility to automatically designate for all customers in 2024.[1][4]
Company Profile
Ownership and Corporate Structure
FortisBC operates as a group of regulated utilities that are indirect wholly-owned subsidiaries of Fortis Inc., a diversified North American utility holding company headquartered in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador.[2][5] Fortis Inc., publicly traded on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX: FTS) and New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: FTS), oversees a portfolio of electric and gas utilities serving approximately 3.4 million customers across Canada, the United States, and the Caribbean as of December 31, 2023.[6] The core entities within the FortisBC group include FortisBC Energy Inc., which handles natural gas distribution, transmission, and related services, and FortisBC Inc., responsible for electricity generation, transmission, and distribution primarily in British Columbia's Lower Mainland and Vancouver Island.[2][7] These operating companies fall under FortisBC Holding Inc. (FHI), a British Columbia-based holding entity that owns all shares of FortisBC Energy Inc., with Fortis Inc. holding full ownership of FHI.[6] FortisBC Inc. similarly reports as an indirect subsidiary, paying dividends to its intermediate parent, FortisBC Pacific Holdings Inc., which aggregates $54 million in 2024 from electricity operations alone.[5] This structure enables decentralized operations with local management while aligning with Fortis Inc.'s overarching regulatory and financial oversight, including compliance with British Columbia Utilities Commission requirements for rate-setting and capital investments.[8] Fortis Inc.'s ownership model emphasizes regulated assets, with FortisBC contributing to about 10% of the parent's total rate base as of 2023, supporting stable revenue through long-term infrastructure investments rather than speculative ventures.[6]Service Areas and Customer Base
FortisBC delivers natural gas to approximately 1.09 million customers across 135 communities in British Columbia, spanning the Lower Mainland, Vancouver Island, the Interior (including Thompson-Okanagan and Kootenays), and parts of the Cariboo region, as well as 58 First Nations communities within 150 Traditional Territories.[9][10] The gas distribution network covers urban centers like Vancouver, Surrey, Kelowna, and Victoria, extending to rural and remote areas via over 51,700 kilometers of pipelines sourced primarily from western Canadian supply basins.[9] Its electricity utility operates in the southern interior, serving around 185,000 customers in the West Kootenay, East Kootenay, and Okanagan regions, including communities such as Trail, Castlegar, Nelson, Penticton, and Kelowna.[8] This service area supports approximately 7,350 kilometers of transmission and distribution lines, focusing on hydroelectric generation from facilities on rivers like the Kootenay and Pend d'Oreille.[9] The overall customer base totals nearly 1.3 million, predominantly residential users, followed by commercial, industrial, and wholesale entities, with natural gas comprising the majority of connections.[8][9] FortisBC's operations emphasize reliable supply to diverse sectors, including public institutions and Indigenous communities, without extending to northern British Columbia or major northern gas markets dominated by other providers.[9]Operational Scale and Infrastructure Overview
FortisBC maintains a vast natural gas infrastructure consisting of approximately 51,700 kilometers of transmission and distribution pipelines, enabling the delivery of natural gas primarily sourced from production fields in northeastern British Columbia and Alberta, with additional supply flexibility provided through interconnections to U.S. storage facilities via FortisBC Huntingdon Inc. (HIPCO).[11][12][13] This network supports reliable distribution across its service territory, incorporating two liquefied natural gas storage facilities for peak demand management and marine fueling applications.[14] In electricity operations, FortisBC oversees roughly 7,350 kilometers of transmission and distribution power lines, complemented by four owned and operated hydroelectric generating plants located on the Kootenay River, boasting a combined capacity of 225 megawatts.[11][15] These facilities generate approximately 45 percent of the annual electricity required by FortisBC's customers, underscoring the utility's reliance on renewable hydroelectric resources for baseload power while integrating supplementary sources to meet growing demand.[14] The infrastructure's scale reflects FortisBC's role in providing integrated energy services to nearly 1.3 million customers, with ongoing expansions such as new pipeline segments to enhance capacity and reliability.[1]Historical Development
Origins in Gas and Electric Utilities
The origins of FortisBC's electric operations trace to the West Kootenay Power and Light Company Ltd. (WKPL), incorporated on May 8, 1897, to supply hydroelectric power to mining operations and communities in British Columbia's Kootenay region.[16] WKPL achieved a milestone that year by transmitting electricity over 13 kilometers from Bonnington Falls on the Kootenay River to Rossland, marking one of the earliest long-distance hydroelectric deliveries in the region and enabling industrial growth in mining camps.[17] Over the subsequent decades, WKPL expanded its generation capacity through dams such as Upper Bonnington (commissioned 1912), Lower Bonnington (1923), and Corra Linn (1940s), harnessing the Kootenay River's flow to serve approximately 60,000 customers by the late 20th century with a focus on reliable, low-cost renewable hydropower.[17][18] Ownership changes reflected industrial consolidation: WKPL was acquired by Cominco Ltd. in 1916 to support zinc mining electrification, then sold to UtiliCorp United Inc. in 1987 and renamed West Kootenay Power Ltd.[17] In 2002, it became part of Aquila Networks Canada (British Columbia) Ltd., before Fortis Inc. purchased Aquila's British Columbia and Alberta electric utilities for approximately $1 billion CAD on May 31, 2004, renaming the British Columbia operations FortisBC Inc. and integrating WKPL's assets into a portfolio of seven hydroelectric plants totaling 285 megawatts of capacity.[19] This acquisition preserved WKPL's legacy while subjecting operations to British Columbia Utilities Commission regulation, emphasizing maintenance of aging infrastructure like the Bonnington facilities, which continue to generate power from original turbine designs.[20] FortisBC's natural gas operations originated with Inland Natural Gas Co. Ltd., incorporated in 1952 to distribute gas from Alberta supplies to interior British Columbia communities amid post-war demand for heating and industrial fuel.[21] Inland expanded through the 1950s–1980s, acquiring smaller distributors like the Lower Mainland's operations and building pipelines such as the Westcoast Transmission connection, serving growing residential and commercial loads in areas outside BC Hydro's coastal focus.[21] On July 1, 1989, Inland amalgamated with other entities under British Columbia's Company Act to form FortisBC Energy Inc. (then under different ownership), establishing a unified structure for 48,000 kilometers of eventual pipeline infrastructure.[22] Further consolidation occurred with Fortis Inc.'s $3.7 billion CAD acquisition of Terasen Inc. in 2007, which included Terasen Gas (a major Lower Mainland distributor founded from BC Hydro divestitures in the 2000s), merging it into FortisBC Energy Inc. and expanding service to over 1 million customers province-wide.[18] This integrated gas utility emphasized supply diversification, including the 2000 Southern Crossing pipeline to Alberta hubs, while adhering to regulatory mandates for safe distribution and rate stability.[23] Unlike the electric side's renewable hydro focus, gas origins prioritized fossil fuel infrastructure reliability, with early pipelines designed for high-pressure transmission from Rocky Mountain sources.[22]Key Mergers, Acquisitions, and Rebranding
In June 2004, Fortis Inc. acquired the British Columbia electric distribution utility from Aquila Inc., which served approximately 150,000 customers in the southern interior, and rebranded it as FortisBC Inc.[18] This transaction, valued at part of a broader $1.5 billion deal including Alberta assets, marked Fortis Inc.'s entry into significant British Columbia electricity operations, building on the utility's historical roots tracing to the West Kootenay Power and Light Company established in 1897.[24] On May 17, 2007, Fortis Inc. completed the acquisition of Terasen Inc., including its natural gas distribution subsidiary Terasen Gas, from Kinder Morgan Inc. for C$3.7 billion, substantially expanding Fortis's gas infrastructure to serve over 1.6 million customers across British Columbia, Washington, and Oregon.[25] The deal integrated approximately 45,000 kilometers of pipelines and storage facilities, positioning Fortis as Canada's largest investor-owned gas and electric utility at the time.[26] Effective March 1, 2011, Terasen Gas and related Fortis entities in British Columbia unified under the FortisBC brand, streamlining operations and customer-facing identity while retaining separate regulatory structures for gas and electric services.[27] This rebranding followed the 2007 acquisition and aimed to consolidate branding amid growing provincial presence, without altering service delivery.[28] In June 2013, FortisBC acquired the City of Kelowna's electrical distribution system, adding 25,000 customers and 1,700 kilometers of lines to its portfolio for C$100 million, enhancing service continuity after the municipal asset's prior taxpayer ownership.[29] This purchase expanded FortisBC's electric footprint in the Okanagan region without significant infrastructure overlap.Post-2010 Expansions and Modern Milestones
In 2011, FortisBC completed construction and opened the Mt. Hayes natural gas storage facility near Ladysmith on Vancouver Island, a $200 million project designed to store liquefied natural gas for peak demand periods and improve supply reliability across the region.[30][31] The facility, spanning 20 hectares and connected to existing pipelines, holds up to 1.2 million cubic meters of LNG, equivalent to about 30 days of average winter demand for Vancouver Island customers.[32] That same year, FortisBC launched its renewable natural gas (RNG) program, initially offering voluntary biomethane injection from landfills and farms into the natural gas distribution system for customers in the Lower Mainland, Fraser Valley, Interior, and Kootenays.[33] The program, approved for permanence in 2012 following a post-implementation review, expanded over the decade through partnerships with suppliers, achieving projections of nearly 5% RNG blending in supply by 2022 and further growth via purchase agreements.[34][35] In March 2024, regulators approved mandatory RNG designation for a portion of all FortisBC natural gas customers' supply, increasing accessibility beyond voluntary opt-ins.[36] In the electricity sector, FortisBC secured long-term capacity from the 335 MW Waneta Expansion hydroelectric project through a 2010 agreement approved by the British Columbia Utilities Commission, with the facility entering commercial operation in April 2015.[37][38] Although Fortis Inc. divested its 51% ownership stake in 2019 to Columbia Power and the Columbia Basin Trust, FortisBC retained operational responsibilities and rights to purchase surplus power, supporting regional load growth without direct ownership expansion.[39] FortisBC has pursued iterative expansions at its Tilbury LNG facility in Delta, originally operational since 1971, to meet rising demand for small-scale LNG in marine and trucking applications.[40] In December 2024, the company filed an environmental assessment application for the Tilbury Phase 2 expansion, aiming to increase daily production capacity by over 50% to 7,700 tonnes, with potential construction starting in 2026 and operations by 2028 if approved.[41][42] This follows earlier upgrades enabling LNG supply to vessels starting in 2016, positioning the facility as a hub for lower-emission fuels in coastal shipping.[43] In March 2025, FortisBC received approval for the Okanagan Capacity Mitigation Project, a phased LNG storage initiative set to begin construction in 2026 to address winter peaking in the Interior.[10]Natural Gas Operations
Distribution Network and Supply Sources
FortisBC Energy Inc. operates an extensive natural gas distribution network spanning approximately 51,700 kilometres of transmission and distribution pipelines across British Columbia.[11] This infrastructure delivers natural gas to approximately 1,086,500 customers, including residential, commercial, and industrial users in the Lower Mainland, Vancouver Island, the Interior, and parts of the Kootenays.[44] The system includes high-pressure transmission lines that transport gas from entry points to regional gate stations, where pressure is reduced for distribution through mains and service lines to end-users.[9] The primary supply of natural gas originates from the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin, predominantly in Alberta, where FortisBC contracts with upstream producers for volumes meeting peak daily demands of around 1,442 terajoules.[45] Gas enters British Columbia via Enbridge's Westar and T-South pipeline systems, with roughly three-quarters received at Enbridge's Station 2 compressor station near Hope, and the remainder from southern British Columbia market hubs or interconnections.[23] To ensure reliability during winter peaks, FortisBC maintains storage capabilities, including the Mt. Hayes natural gas storage facility near Ladysmith with capacity for seasonal balancing, and accesses additional underground storage in the United States through FortisBC Huntingdon Inc. (HIPCO) interconnections at the Sumas border crossing.[13] Liquefied natural gas (LNG) from facilities like Tilbury provides supplemental peaking supply, vaporized as needed.[32] In recent years, FortisBC has integrated renewable natural gas (RNG) into its supply mix, sourced from landfills, agricultural waste, and wastewater facilities within British Columbia and Alberta.[46] As of July 1, 2024, one percent of delivered gas to customers is automatically designated as RNG, with plans to expand this portion through procurement contracts and facility developments aiming for at least one petajoule annually.[4] Annual system demand averages 155 petajoules, managed through a combination of contracted base-load supplies, storage withdrawals, and efficiency measures to match seasonal variations.[45]Liquefied Natural Gas Facilities
FortisBC owns and operates two liquefied natural gas (LNG) facilities in British Columbia: the Tilbury Island facility in Delta and the Mt. Hayes facility near Ladysmith on Vancouver Island. These facilities store and produce LNG primarily for peak demand management during winter months, reducing reliance on imported gas and stabilizing supply for the provincial distribution network.[32] The Tilbury facility, operational since 1971, initially focused on peak shaving by vaporizing stored LNG to supplement pipeline supplies during high-demand periods.[32] The Tilbury Island facility has undergone significant expansions to meet growing demand for LNG as a marine fuel, transportation feedstock, and export product. Phase 1, completed in 2018, added a 46,000 cubic metre storage tank capable of supporting the equivalent of 19,000 homes for 45 cold days, along with liquefaction capacity reaching up to 0.65 million tonnes annually.[47] [32] Phase 1A, commissioned in 2019, provided 0.25 million tonnes per annum of liquefaction capacity.[48] The facility is powered by renewable hydroelectricity, resulting in LNG production with approximately 30 percent lower carbon intensity compared to the global average supply.[49] Phase 2 expansion, proposed to increase production to 7,700 tonnes per day (equivalent to about 2.8 million tonnes annually) and total storage to 216,400 cubic metres, aims to enhance system resiliency and serve lower-carbon fuel markets, with environmental assessments ongoing as of December 2024.[50] [51] The Mt. Hayes facility, spanning 20 hectares and operational since 2011, provides 1.5 billion cubic feet of LNG storage capacity to mitigate peak winter demands on Vancouver Island's gas system.[32] Developed at a cost of $195 million, it operates as a joint venture with equity partnerships held by the Stz’uminus First Nation and Cowichan Tribes since 2012, enabling truck loading for distribution at rates of 1,100 to 1,500 litres per minute.[52] [32] This storage supports cost reductions during high-demand periods by allowing FortisBC to liquefy and store gas during off-peak times for later regasification.[32] Both facilities adhere to stringent safety standards, including government and industry codes, with features like double-walled storage tanks, continuous monitoring, and emergency response protocols to minimize risks associated with LNG handling at -162°C.[53] They contribute to FortisBC's broader strategy of integrating LNG for reliable energy delivery, including marine bunkering via the Tilbury marine jetty approved in 2024.[48]Renewable Natural Gas Integration
FortisBC's Renewable Natural Gas (RNG) program, launched over a decade ago, integrates biogas upgraded to pipeline-quality methane into its natural gas distribution system, sourced primarily from organic waste decomposition at landfills, agricultural operations, wastewater facilities, and food processing sites. The process captures methane-rich biogas, removes impurities like carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulfide through purification technologies, and injects the resulting RNG directly into the existing pipeline infrastructure, which is chemically indistinguishable from conventional natural gas and requires no modifications to customer appliances or meters. This blending approach leverages FortisBC's 48,000 kilometers of distribution pipelines to deliver RNG proportionally to subscribed customers or, since 2024, automatically to all users at specified percentages.[54][34] Key supply partnerships include agreements with producers such as Fraser Valley Biogas, American Organics, and EverGen Infrastructure, drawing from diverse feedstocks like dairy manure, landfill gas, and food waste. FortisBC owns and operates two RNG upgrading facilities at landfills, while contracting with five external suppliers for additional volumes. In November 2021, the company added approximately 800,000 gigajoules (GJ) of RNG from three projects, including EverGen's Net Zero facility processing Metro Vancouver food waste, a landfill gas initiative, and agricultural biogas upgrades, representing an incremental supply boost equivalent to the annual heating needs of about 8,000 homes. By 2022, FortisBC projected that renewable sources would constitute nearly 5% of its total gas supply, or roughly 9 petajoules (PJ), displacing equivalent fossil natural gas volumes and reducing associated upstream emissions.[55][56][57] Regulatory approvals from the British Columbia Utilities Commission (BCUC) have facilitated program expansion, including voluntary subscription options and mandatory blending mandates. On June 27, 2024, FortisBC implemented the first automatic RNG designation in North America, allocating 1% of all natural gas customers' usage as RNG with no net cost increase for the average residential bill, funded through avoided fossil gas purchases and supplier revenues. Voluntary subscribers beyond this blend incur a biomethane rate of $9.23 per GJ as of July 1, 2025, reflecting production and transportation costs. Integration challenges, such as ensuring RNG's higher renewability thresholds under BC's Low Carbon Fuel Standard, are addressed via verified carbon intensity scores typically below 20 gCO2e/MJ, compared to 50 gCO2e/MJ for conventional gas.[4][58][36] Recent infrastructure developments underscore scaling efforts. Construction of FortisBC's largest RNG project to date began in September 2023 at the City of Vancouver's Delta landfill, aiming to process landfill gas into injectable RNG via an owned upgrading facility. The Hartland Landfill facility near Victoria, interconnected by FortisBC in early 2025, commenced RNG production in May 2025, fully funded by biogas sales revenues and adding to system-wide supply without ratepayer subsidies. These initiatives, detailed in FortisBC's 2024 Sustainability Report, support broader decarbonization goals, with ongoing procurement targeting further volume growth amid BC's renewable gas potential estimated at over 20 PJ annually from untapped waste streams.[59][60][61]Electricity Generation and Distribution
Hydroelectric Power Plants
FortisBC owns and operates four hydroelectric generating plants situated along the Kootenay River in southeastern British Columbia, collectively providing a total installed capacity of 225 megawatts (MW).[20] These run-of-river facilities generate approximately 1,609 gigawatt-hours (GWh) of electricity annually, meeting about 45 percent of the company's customer energy needs in its service area.[62][14] The plants, developed between the late 19th and early 20th centuries to support regional mining and industrial growth, include the Upper Bonnington plant, commissioned in 1907 with a capacity of 65 MW across six generating units; the Lower Bonnington plant, rebuilt and recommissioned in 1925 following an original 1898 installation, offering 54 MW from three units; the South Slocan plant, brought online in 1928 with 55 MW capacity; and the Corra Linn plant, operational since 1932 at 51 MW from three turbines.[63][20][64] These facilities emphasize low-head generation, with structures like the 15-meter-high concrete-gravity dam at Upper Bonnington facilitating power production at a rated head of 21 meters.[65]| Plant Name | Commissioning Year | Capacity (MW) | Number of Units |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upper Bonnington | 1907 | 65 | 6 |
| Lower Bonnington | 1925 | 54 | 3 |
| South Slocan | 1928 | 55 | Not specified |
| Corra Linn | 1932 | 51 | 3 |
Transmission, Distribution, and Reliability Metrics
FortisBC operates an integrated electricity transmission and distribution system spanning approximately 7,350 kilometers of power lines, serving over 183,000 customers primarily in the southern interior of British Columbia, including the Okanagan, Similkameen, and Kootenay regions.[11] Transmission infrastructure connects hydroelectric generation facilities to substations, operating at higher voltages (typically 69 kV to 138 kV) for efficient long-distance power delivery, while distribution lines step down voltage to levels suitable for residential, commercial, and industrial end-users.[69] The system is regulated by the British Columbia Utilities Commission (BCUC), with FortisBC responsible for maintenance, expansion, and reliability within its designated service territory, interconnecting with BC Hydro's provincial grid where necessary.[70] Reliability is assessed using industry-standard metrics, including the System Average Interruption Duration Index (SAIDI), which quantifies the average total duration of outages per customer in minutes (or hours when reported), and the System Average Interruption Frequency Index (SAIFI), which measures the average number of sustained interruptions per customer annually. FortisBC normalizes these indices to exclude major events like extreme weather or unplanned outages beyond utility control, aligning with BCUC performance standards to incentivize service quality.[71] In its 2024 Sustainability Report, FortisBC reported SAIDI values fluctuating due to environmental factors: 2.88 hours (earlier baseline year), rising to 3.04 hours, then 2.42 hours, peaking at 4.27 hours in 2023 amid extreme weather impacts, and improving to 3.17 hours in the subsequent period.[61] SAIFI metrics similarly track interruption frequency, with FortisBC's performance generally meeting or exceeding targets set in regulatory filings, such as historical goals of around 2.0-2.5 interruptions per customer after normalization. Investments in smart grid technologies, automated metering (deployed since 2017), and vegetation management have contributed to resilience, though unnormalized SAIDI increased in 2023 due to wildfires and storms affecting remote lines.[72] Overall, the utility maintains outage durations below many North American peers when adjusted for major disruptions, supported by proactive transmission integrity programs including inspections and upgrades.[69]Additional Energy Services
Propane Supply and Delivery
FortisBC Energy Inc. maintains a specialized off-grid propane distribution system in Revelstoke, British Columbia, designed to serve customers in locations too remote for integration into the primary natural gas pipeline network.[7] Propane supply is procured from commercial sources and transported to the region primarily by railcar and tanker truck, after which it is off-loaded into dedicated storage tanks for vaporization prior to distribution.[7] The delivery infrastructure consists of an underground piped network that conveys vaporized propane directly to end-users, enabling applications such as space heating, water heating, cooking, and other domestic or commercial needs.[73] [7] This system supports approximately 1,500 residential and commercial customers as of 2020.[74] Operations are regulated by the British Columbia Utilities Commission, which in October 2020 approved FortisBC's application to integrate Revelstoke propane portfolio costs with its broader natural gas supply costs, facilitating aligned commodity pricing and delivery efficiencies.[74] Propane is odorized with a sulfur-based agent to aid leak detection, mirroring natural gas safety protocols, and customers are advised to employ certified contractors for installations and maintenance.[73]Marine Sector LNG Applications and Innovations
FortisBC supplies liquefied natural gas (LNG) to the marine sector primarily through its Tilbury Island facility in Delta, British Columbia, enabling vessel operators to fuel with a lower-emission alternative to heavy fuel oil and marine diesel.[75] Since 2017, the company has provided LNG bunkering services via truck-to-ship transfers, serving customers including BC Ferries, which operates the largest ferry fleet in North America with eight LNG-powered vessels as of 2019 and plans for seven additional ones by 2024, and Seaspan Ferries for coastal cargo transport.[76][77] Over 6,000 successful truck-to-ship bunkering events have been completed, demonstrating operational reliability.[78] A key innovation is FortisBC's development of the world's first truck-to-ship onboard LNG bunkering system, customized in collaboration with customers to facilitate safe and efficient refuelling directly into vessel tanks.[77] This method avoids the need for dedicated bunkering vessels in early adoption phases, supporting fleet conversions in regions with limited infrastructure. The Tilbury LNG facility produces LNG with lifecycle greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions up to 30% lower than global averages, attributed to local sourcing from British Columbia's natural gas reserves and production powered by clean electricity.[75] To expand capacity and capabilities, FortisBC is advancing the Tilbury Marine Jetty project, approved by the Government of Canada on July 4, 2024, located adjacent to the existing facility on the Fraser River's south arm.[79] This infrastructure will enable ship-to-ship or direct vessel bunkering, positioning Vancouver as a regional LNG marine fuel hub and supporting larger-scale applications for international shipping. The provincial government endorsed a related refuelling facility expansion in December 2019, projecting annual GHG reductions of up to 400,000 tonnes through increased LNG adoption in marine transport.[76] LNG use in marine vessels yields significant pollutant reductions compared to conventional fuels: sulphur oxides (SOx) emissions approach zero, nitrogen oxides (NOx) decrease by 85-95% depending on engine cycle, particulate matter (PM) by up to 96%, and lifecycle GHG emissions by up to 27%, per a 2021 Sphera life-cycle analysis for Vancouver Port supply.[80][81] These benefits stem from LNG's cleaner combustion and reduced methane slip in modern engines, though full lifecycle accounting includes upstream production and potential venting. FortisBC integrates renewable natural gas (RNG) options, as demonstrated by Seaspan Ferries' carbon-neutral operations using RNG blends.[82]Energy Efficiency Initiatives
Conservation Programs and Incentives
FortisBC administers a range of conservation programs and incentives aimed at reducing natural gas and electricity consumption through rebates for high-efficiency equipment, building upgrades, and targeted assistance for vulnerable customers. These initiatives, funded by customer rates and approved by regulators, encourage adoption of technologies such as heat pumps, insulation, and efficient heating systems, contributing to lower energy use and greenhouse gas emissions.[83] In 2024, FortisBC's energy-efficiency programs achieved lifetime savings of over 1.6 million gigajoules (GJ) of natural gas—equivalent to the annual energy needs of approximately 15,700 homes—and 34.1 gigawatt-hours (GWh) of electricity, sufficient for about 2,700 homes, alongside nearly 1 million tonnes of CO₂ equivalent emissions reductions.[84] The company invested $172 million in these efforts, with key contributions from rebates for window and lighting upgrades, high-efficiency heating and cooling systems, dual fuel systems, new construction incentives, and a deep energy retrofit pilot.[84] For residential customers, rebates include $5,000 for dual fuel heating systems that pair an electric heat pump with a gas furnace, enabling efficient space heating and cooling while replacing older gas-only units.[85] Additional incentives cover insulation upgrades, high-efficiency appliances like clothes washers and dryers, and connected thermostats for optimized usage. Income-qualified households benefit from the Energy Conservation Assistance Program (ECAP), which delivers free home energy evaluations, installation of energy-saving products such as draft-proofing and water-efficient devices, and rebates up to $12,000 for upgrading to high-efficiency air source heat pumps.[86][87] In December 2024, FortisBC expanded targeted support for low-income customers, including free Energy Saving Kits with items like LED bulbs and faucet aerators, alongside hands-on upgrades to address immediate efficiency gaps.[88] Commercial and industrial customers access the Custom Efficiency Program, which funds up to 75% of pre-approved energy studies (maximum $37,500 for certain lighting projects) and provides implementation incentives up to $500,000 or $1.5 million based on projected savings, capped at $6 per GJ of gas or $0.03 per kWh of electricity saved over the measure's life or 75% of project costs.[89] Eligible projects in commercial, industrial, agricultural, or multi-unit residential buildings must demonstrate annual savings of at least 1,000 GJ of gas or 50,000 kWh of electricity, with applications requiring consultation with FortisBC advisors and prior written approval. Non-profits receive tailored rebates for building envelope improvements, heat pumps, refrigeration, and foodservice equipment to cut operational costs.[90] In Indigenous communities, programs offer up to 50% rebates for heating, ventilation, and envelope upgrades, plus $15,000 for dual fuel systems in existing homes, with enhanced incentives for new constructions.[91] Businesses can also claim up to $2,000 through the CleanBC EV Charger Rebate for installing electric vehicle charging stations, supporting electrification transitions.[92] These programs emphasize verifiable savings, with industrial sector rebates alone yielding over 885,000 GJ of gas reductions in 2024, equivalent to energy for about 8,600 homes, underscoring their role in demand-side management amid growing regional energy needs.[84] FortisBC continues piloting innovative measures, such as deep retrofits, to expand efficiency options while ensuring incentives align with long-term measure performance.[84]Investments and Pilot Projects
In February 2024, the British Columbia Utilities Commission approved FortisBC to invest a record $695.8 million over four years (2024–2027) in energy efficiency and conservation programs aimed at reducing customer energy use across natural gas and electricity services.[93] This funding supports rebates, assessments, and technology deployments to achieve measurable savings, building on prior investments exceeding $630 million from 2020 to 2024 that yielded annual greenhouse gas reductions equivalent to removing over 100,000 vehicles from roads.[94] FortisBC's Innovative Technologies team conducts pilot programs to evaluate emerging technologies for residential and commercial energy savings, with successful trials transitioning to broader incentives.[95] Notable examples include gas heat pumps demonstrating up to 35% natural gas reductions in field tests, smart thermostats averaging 2.6 gigajoules of gas and 488 kilowatt-hours of electricity savings per participant, and ice rink dehumidification systems optimizing humidity control to cut energy demands.[96] The Peak Saver pilot, which rewarded participants for integrating demand-response technologies, evolved into a permanent program following verified load-shifting outcomes.[97] A flagship initiative is the $50 million Deep Energy Retrofit Pilot launched in March 2024, targeting older buildings to test comprehensive upgrades like enhanced insulation, airtight envelopes, and efficient mechanical systems.[98] Involving 20 single-family homes and four multi-unit residential structures across British Columbia—including the Lower Mainland and Vancouver Island—the program measures real-world performance data on energy consumption and emissions post-retrofit, with initial completions reported in August 2025 showing reduced gas usage in retrofitted sites.[99][100] Complementing these efforts, the Clean Growth Innovation Fund received approval for its next phase in June 2025 to fund further pilots accelerating low-carbon innovations in building efficiency.[101]Achieved Efficiency Gains and Cost Savings
FortisBC's energy efficiency programs, including rebates for high-efficiency appliances, insulation, and heating systems, achieved 1,604,752 gigajoules (GJ) in natural gas savings in 2024, representing 42% progress toward a 3.8 million GJ target by 2027.[61] These gains stemmed from initiatives like the Dual Fuel Heating Systems program, which saw over 3,000 adoptions and delivered 66,500 GJ in annual savings, alongside $35 million in rebates.[61] Deep Energy Retrofits, with $24 million invested in 2024, targeted 50% energy reductions in participating buildings, achieving up to 58% in audited cases such as the Forte building.[61] On the electricity side, demand-side management (DSM) efforts yielded 34.1 gigawatt-hours (GWh) in savings for 2023 activities reported in 2024, surpassing planned targets by 124% through commercial and industrial programs that accounted for 15.0 GWh and 12.5 GWh respectively.[102] Total DSM expenditures reached $13.857 million, with a total resource cost (TRC) benefit-cost ratio of 1.7, indicating that societal benefits from avoided energy costs and emissions exceeded program expenses.[102] Earlier gas conservation programs demonstrated consistent progress, saving 1,032,721 GJ in 2020 and 1,142,533 GJ in 2021, reflecting scaled investments amid regulatory mandates from the British Columbia Utilities Commission.[103] These efficiency gains translated to customer cost savings via direct rebates and reduced consumption, with overall DSM investments hitting a record $172.8 million in 2024 across gas and electric services.[61] Pilot innovations, such as gas absorption heat pumps, delivered up to 35% gas usage reductions compared to standard boilers, informing scalable cost-effective measures.[96] Cumulative outcomes, verified in annual DSM reports, supported lower utility bills for participants—equivalent to avoiding purchases of higher-cost energy—while aligning with provincial goals for emissions reductions exceeding 109,123 tonnes of CO2 equivalent in 2024.[61]Regulatory and Economic Impact
Rate Setting and Regulatory Approvals
FortisBC's electricity and natural gas rates are regulated by the British Columbia Utilities Commission (BCUC), which reviews and approves revenue requirements to ensure utilities recover prudent costs, including operations, maintenance, capital investments, depreciation, taxes, and a regulated return on equity while protecting ratepayer interests.[104] The process combines cost-of-service regulation with performance-based elements, requiring FortisBC to submit detailed applications forecasting needs, subject to public input, intervener participation, and evidentiary hearings.[105] Approvals often include interim rates (refundable if final rates differ) followed by final determinations, with multi-year frameworks used to promote efficiency and reduce annual filing burdens.[106] For FortisBC Inc. (FBC, the electric utility), rates are set through annual reviews under a performance-based regulation model established in prior BCUC orders, focusing on revenue requirements for distribution and transmission services excluding commodity costs passed through directly.[107] In the 2025 Annual Review application, FBC sought approval for increased revenues to cover forecasted costs, resulting in BCUC approval of a 5.65% general rate increase on an interim basis effective January 1, 2025, applied to basic charges and energy rates for residential and commercial classes.[108][109] This followed a 2025 Cost of Service Allocation study to allocate costs across customer classes, ensuring rates reflect usage and load characteristics.[110] FortisBC Energy Inc. (FEI, the gas utility) employs a similar framework for delivery rates, decoupled from volatile commodity costs via deferred accounts, with recent shifts to multi-year plans for stability.[106] The 2020-2024 Multi-Year Performance Based Rate Plan concluded with annual delivery rate adjustments, transitioning to a 2025-2027 Rate Setting Framework application filed in April 2024, proposing streamlined annual processes with predefined efficiency targets and capital deferral accounts.[111][104] BCUC approved interim delivery rate increases of 7.75% effective January 1, 2025, while cost-of-gas rates remained unchanged at $2.230 per gigajoule for the remainder of 2025, reflecting stable supply costs and RNG blending mandates.[112][113] Rate design applications, such as the 2023 FEI Cost of Service Allocation, further refine structures by class, incorporating marginal cost pricing for high-usage tiers to encourage conservation.[114] Regulatory approvals emphasize verifiable forecasts and efficiency gains, with BCUC rejecting imprudent expenditures; for instance, the 2025-2027 framework incorporates lessons from the BCUC's Regulatory Efficiency Initiative to expedite reviews without compromising oversight.[71] FortisBC must file compliance reports post-approval, and rates are adjusted via riders for specific variances like weather or fuel costs.[105]Financial Performance and Capital Expenditures
FortisBC Energy Inc., the primary natural gas distribution arm of FortisBC, recorded consolidated revenues of $1,646 million in 2024, down $291 million or 15% from $1,937 million in 2023, attributable largely to lower natural gas commodity prices and reduced transportation volumes offset partially by higher delivery rates.[115] Operating income rose modestly to $479 million from $470 million, reflecting improved margins on deliveries despite the revenue decline.[115] Net earnings attributable to the controlling interest decreased to $285 million from $337 million, influenced by higher finance charges and depreciation expenses amid ongoing infrastructure investments.[115] In contrast, FortisBC Inc., the electric utility subsidiary, achieved revenues of $527 million in 2024, an increase of $14 million from $513 million in 2023, driven by higher power supply costs passed through to customers, elevated electricity sales volumes of 3,513 GWh (up 1% from 3,478 GWh), and third-party transmission work.[116] Operating income grew to $158 million from $149 million, supported by expanded regulated asset base and favorable sales variances.[116] Net income advanced to $70 million from $66 million, bolstered by regulatory-approved returns on incremental investments.[116] These results occurred under British Columbia Utilities Commission oversight, where 2024 electric rates rose 6.74% to address a forecasted $28.87 million revenue deficiency tied to rising costs and capital needs.[70] Capital expenditures across FortisBC operations emphasize infrastructure sustainment, expansion for reliability, and low-carbon transitions. For the gas utility, 2024 outlays reached $1,022 million (inclusive of allowance for funds used during construction, excluding customer contributions in aid of construction), up significantly from prior years to fund pipeline reinforcements, compressor stations, and connections like the Woodfibre LNG project.[115] The electric utility invested $132 million in 2024 (similar inclusions/exclusions), compared to $127 million in 2023, targeting generation upgrades, distribution enhancements, and demand-side management rate base additions projected at $83 million over 2023-2027.[116] Forward projections indicate $1,070 million for gas and $187 million for electric in 2025, aligning with multi-year plans approved by regulators to support load growth and decarbonization without compromising service standards.[115][116]| Metric | FortisBC Energy Inc. (Gas) | FortisBC Inc. (Electric) |
|---|---|---|
| 2024 Revenue ($M) | 1,646 | 527 |
| 2024 Net Earnings ($M) | 285 | 70 |
| 2024 Capex ($M) | 1,022 | 132 |
| 2025 Capex Proj. ($M) | 1,070 | 187 |