
B.C. hydro rates to increase in 2025, 2026 but remain among lowest in North America
VANCOUVER — British Columbia is setting annual rate increases for electricity for the next two years in response to rising demand for power along with economic uncertainty stemming from actions south of the border, Energy Minister Adrian Dix said.
Dix announced Monday that the New Democrat government is submitting a “rate stability direction” to the B.C. Utilities Commission for approval of a BC Hydro rate increase of 3.75 per cent on April 1, followed by the same bump next year.
The cost of power in B.C. remains among the lowest in North America, the minister said, and each of the two annual increases will come to about $3.75 per month for the average residential household that currently pays about $100.
BC Hydro needs the increases to help cover costs of the rising demand for electricity and to complete the Site C dam project on the Peace River, Dix said.