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Site C is slated to become the third hydro electric dam on northeast B.C.’s Peace River. It will provide enough energy power 410,000 homes.

Ernst and Young said the availability of workers in the Peace River region has increased since 2014 due to decreasing investments in the oil and gas sector and Alberta’s jobless rate of 8.6 per cent.

The project is expected to create 7,650 construction jobs. Last July, there were more than 1,700 workers on site.

Dave Conway, Site C’s community relations manager, said economic woes in the nearby oil patch are paying dividends for the dam.

“One of the factors is the present downturn in the economy has been a plus for the project,” he said. “Certainly, interest rates are one, cost of materials is a second, but the third is labour, and it certainly is the availability of a larger labour pool to draw on at this time.”

One energy analyst said three years ago — when B.C. was basking in the promise of thousands of possible LNG jobs — that labour shortages could hold up some projects.

The most recent July 2016 workforce data provided by B.C. Hydro pegged the workforce at 1,721, with 1,411 of those workers from B.C.

But the report warned Site C could face cost pressures because of the low value of the Canadian dollar, currently at about 76 U.S. cents.

Opposition New Democrat Leader John Horgan said he can’t put much stock in a report that the Crown corporation paid consultants to produce.

“This was a government that made the decision to proceed with this project without any third-party oversight,” he said.

Site C has been embroiled in several court challenges from area First Nations, environmentalists and local residents. Amnesty International recently called for a stop work order on the project, saying it threatens indigenous rights.

Site C will create an 83-kilometre reservoir in the Peace River Valley area, flooding more than 5,550 hectares of land of which at least 3,800 hectares is agricultural land. It will flood First Nations heritage sites and force up to 20 families, most of them lifelong ranchers, to move.