The equipment failure that left thousands of Montrealers without power during this weekendâs bitter cold originated at a substation that Hydro-Québec has been aiming to replace since at least 2018.
Project documents show the utility has long identified the Hampstead substation as a weak link in the local grid.
Pascal Poinlane, a Hydro-Québec spokesperson, said the outage was caused by the failure of a breaker at the substation â an issue that is ânot as easy to fix as a problem caused by a snowstorm.â
âWhen it happens in a substation with equipment like that, it takes more time,â he told CBC. He said generators were installed to restore power as quickly as possible.
François Bouffard, an associate professor of engineering at McGill University who closely follows the public utility, said that replacing a failed breaker is a complex task even under ideal conditions.Â
âThis is the kind of repair that can take several weeks to complete â in the summertime,â he said.
Without knowing the details of the malfunction, Bouffard said aging pieces of equipment are âbound to fail eventuallyâ after being in use for more than half a century.
At the outageâs peak, more than 20,000 customers were without electricity on Saturday in Montreal and Côte Saint-Luc. Service was expected to be restored to all residents and businesses by the end of the day Monday, but as of 10 p.m., some streets in Côte Saint-Luc and in Montreal’s Notre-Dame-de-Grâce neighbourhood were still without power.
The City of Montreal said Monday that more than 50 people had used a warming centre in Côte-des-Neiges, some of them staying overnight.
Why itâs taking days to restore power to some Montrealers on the coldest days of the year
While Hydro-Québec has a plan to completely rebuild the aging station, the project has faced delays and is not scheduled for completion until 2029. Further upgrades to the power lines servicing Côte Saint-Luc wonât be finished until 2031.
The plan calls for converting the facility from 120 kilovolts to 315 kilovolts to meet growing demand. The substation will also be renamed the Côte Saint-Luc substation to reflect its actual location, which is Côte Saint-Luc â not Hampstead.
A 2019 public notice stated that the rebuild was necessary to replace âaging equipmentâ and ensure the reliability of the power grid.
The substation has been in service since 1955. At the time, Hydro-Québec documents describe the site as being almost in the âmiddle of a field.â While the area was bordered to the southeast by a Canadian Pacific railway line, the surroundings were largely agricultural.
In the decades that followed, the areaâs rural character gave way to dense, suburban development.
That shift has complicated the upgrade process â and driven up demand. New, larger transmission lines will run through residential neighbourhoods and required extensive consultations.
The replacement substation is part of an overall effort to provide more power, more reliably, in the years ahead, Bouffard said.
âItâs a big challenge for Hydro-Québec to build up its capacity in a restricted amount of space,â he said.
Hydro-Québec began public consultations for the project in 2018, but the timeline was delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the utility.
Nessim Malka, a Côte Saint-Luc resident with a baby who just turned one, said the outage has been difficult for his family. He believes Hydro-Québec should have been better prepared and communicated more clearly with residents.
âWe knew this was coming. We knew we were going to have the coldest days this winter, and it seems like Hydro-Québec was not prepared,â he said.
Poinlane acknowledged that Hydro-Québec must improve its communications. He conceded that the utilityâs outage-tracking site, Info-pannes, provided incorrect restoration timelines for some customers.
âWe apologize for that,â he said. âWe know that some people were waiting for their power to be restored and it did not happen as indicated.â
David Tordjman, the mayor of Côte Saint-Luc, said he will work with Hydro-Québec to make sure they have measures in place to ensure power is re-established more quickly â before the infrastructure is replaced.
He pointed out that the lines into his community will only be completed five years from now, in 2031.Â
âWeâre going to work on mitigation measures to make sure we donât go through something like this again,â he said.










