Document:

Management, Operating and Maintenance Agreement

 Exhibit 10.2 

Management, Operations 

and 

Maintenance Agreement 

NEWPAGE PORT HAWKESBURY CORP. 

– and – 

NOVA SCOTIA POWER INC. 

April 1, 2010 

 

 

 TABLE OF CONTENTS 

 

							
	1.0 DEFINITIONS AND INTERPRETATION	  	2
				
		 	1.1	  	Definitions	  	2
				
		 	1.2	  	Interpretation	  	16
				
		 	1.3	  	Conflicting Provisions	  	17
		
	2.0 TERM AND TERMINATION OF THE AGREEMENT	  	17
				
		 	2.1	  	No Fault Termination	  	17
				
		 	2.2	  	Term	  	18
				
		 	2.3	  	Termination by Owner	  	18
				
		 	2.4	  	Termination by Operator	  	18
				
		 	2.5	  	Effect of Termination Notice	  	19
				
		 	2.6	  	Termination Rights	  	19
		
	3.0 APPOINTMENT	  	20
				
		 	3.1	  	Appointment	  	20
				
		 	3.2	  	Acknowledgements	  	20
				
		 	3.3	  	General Obligations of Operator	  	20
		
	4.0 TRANSITION PHASE SERVICES	  	20
				
		 	4.1	  	Overview	  	20
				
		 	4.2	  	Transition Phase Plan	  	21
				
		 	4.3	  	Amending the Transition Phase Plan	  	21
				
		 	4.4	  	Operating Manuals and Agreed Procedures	  	21
				
		 	4.5	  	Expenses and Consideration	  	22
				
		 	4.6	  	Performance Deposit	  	22
		
	5.0 OPERATION PHASE SERVICES	  	23
				
		 	5.1	  	Overview	  	23
				
		 	5.2	  	Annual Operating Plan	  	23

  

 ( ii ) 

							
		 	5.3	  	Review and Approval	  	24
				
		 	5.4	  	Amending the Annual Operating Plan	  	25
				
		 	5.5	  	Updating Procedures	  	25
				
		 	5.6	  	Payment	  	25
		
	6.0 SHARED SERVICES	  	26
				
		 	6.1	  	Overview	  	26
				
		 	6.2	  	Common Systems	  	26
				
		 	6.3	  	Payment	  	26
				
		 	6.4	  	Notice of Rights	  	26
		
	7.0 STEAM, CONDENSATE AND SHARED SERVICES	  	26
				
		 	7.1	  	Overview	  	26
				
		 	7.2	  	Construction	  	26
				
		 	7.3	  	Operation and Maintenance	  	27
				
		 	7.4	  	Benchmark	  	27
				
		 	7.5	  	Risk of Steam, Condensate and Compressed Air	  	27
				
		 	7.6	  	Effect of Use of Steam	  	27
		
	8.0 DISENGAGEMENT SERVICES	  	27
				
		 	8.1	  	Overview	  	27
				
		 	8.2	  	Operation Phase Services	  	28
				
		 	8.3	  	First Disengagement Plan	  	28
				
		 	8.4	  	Contents of Disengagement Plan	  	28
				
		 	8.5	  	Amending the Disengagement Plan	  	29
				
		 	8.6	  	Notice	  	30
				
		 	8.7	  	Term of Disengagement Phase	  	30
				
		 	8.8	  	Payment	  	30
				
		 	8.9	  	Steam, Fuel and Shared Services Agreement	  	30
				
		 	8.10	  	Right to Assignment	  	30

  

 ( iii ) 

							
		 	8.11	  	Right to Make Offers	  	30
		
	9.0 GENERAL OPERATOR OBLIGATIONS	  	31
				
		 	9.1	  	Public Relations	  	31
				
		 	9.2	  	Labour Negotiations	  	31
				
		 	9.3	  	No Liens	  	31
				
		 	9.4	  	Access	  	31
				
		 	9.5	  	Contingency Plan	  	31
				
		 	9.6	  	Procurement	  	32
				
		 	9.7	  	Title to Assets	  	32
				
		 	9.8	  	Documentation	  	32
				
		 	9.9	  	Modifications to the Facilities	  	32
				
		 	9.10	  	Governmental Approvals	  	33
				
		 	9.11	  	Construction of the Utility Plant	  	33
				
		 	9.12	  	Operation of Facility	  	33
		
	10.0 ORGANIZATION	  	33
				
		 	10.1	  	Organization	  	33
				
		 	10.2	  	Plant Manager, Supervisory Staff and Personnel	  	33
				
		 	10.3	  	Removal and Replacement	  	34
				
		 	10.4	  	Owner Personnel	  	34
		
	11.0 JOINT OPERATING COMMITTEE	  	34
				
		 	11.1	  	Appointment	  	34
				
		 	11.2	  	Regular Meetings	  	35
				
		 	11.3	  	Voting	  	35
				
		 	11.4	  	Quorum	  	35
				
		 	11.5	  	Responsibility	  	36
		
	12.0 BUDGETING AND EXPENSES	  	36
				
		 	12.1	  	Annual Budget	  	36

  

 ( iv ) 

							
		 	12.2	  	Annual Budget Review	  	36
				
		 	12.3	  	Budget Overruns	  	36
				
		 	12.4	  	Limitations	  	37
				
		 	12.5	  	Revisions	  	37
				
		 	12.6	  	Disputes Regarding Annual Budget	  	37
				
		 	12.7	  	Additional Capital Expenditures	  	38
				
		 	12.8	  	Five-Year Forecast	  	38
				
		 	12.9	  	Balance Principle	  	38
		
	13.0 CHANGE MANAGEMENT	  	38
				
		 	13.1	  	Right to Make Changes	  	38
				
		 	13.2	  	Process	  	38
				
		 	13.3	  	Obligation to Make Changes	  	39
				
		 	13.4	  	Change in Law	  	39
		
	14.0 ENVIRONMENT	  	39
				
		 	14.1	  	Certification	  	39
				
		 	14.2	  	Renewable Energy Credits	  	39
				
		 	14.3	  	Fuel	  	40
				
		 	14.4	  	Hazardous Materials	  	40
		
	15.0 RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF OWNER	  	40
				
		 	15.1	  	General	  	40
				
		 	15.2	  	Modifications to the Utility Plant	  	40
				
		 	15.3	  	Access to Utility Plant	  	40
				
		 	15.4	  	Inspection	  	41
				
		 	15.5	  	Governmental Approvals	  	41
				
		 	15.6	  	Owner’s Representative and Agents	  	41
				
		 	15.7	  	Owner’s Right to Perform Services	  	41
				
		 	15.8	  	GIA	  	42

  

 ( v ) 

							
	16.0 PAYMENTS	  	42
				
		 	16.1	  	Currency of Payments	  	42
				
		 	16.2	  	Billing and Payments	  	42
				
		 	16.3	  	Disputes and Adjustments of Invoices	  	42
				
		 	16.4	  	Set-Offs	  	43
				
		 	16.5	  	Due Date Adjustment	  	43
		
	17.0 RECORDS AND REPORTING	  	43
				
		 	17.1	  	Record Keeping Obligations	  	43
				
		 	17.2	  	Security of Records	  	44
				
		 	17.3	  	General Reporting	  	44
				
		 	17.4	  	Incident Reports	  	44
				
		 	17.5	  	Regular, Periodic Reports	  	44
				
		 	17.6	  	Notification	  	44
				
		 	17.7	  	Other Requested Information	  	45
				
		 	17.8	  	Audit	  	46
		
	18.0 SUBCONTRACTORS	  	46
				
		 	18.1	  	Consent	  	46
				
		 	18.2	  	Subcontracts	  	46
				
		 	18.3	  	Responsibility	  	47
		
	19.0 INSURANCE	  	47
				
		 	19.1	  	Operator’s Insurance	  	47
		
	20.0 INDEMNITY AND LIABILITY	  	50
				
		 	20.1	  	Limitation on Liability	  	50
				
		 	20.2	  	Liability Under the Construction Contract	  	51
				
		 	20.3	  	Indemnities	  	51
				
		 	20.4	  	Liquidated Damages	  	53
		
	21.0 DISPUTE RESOLUTION	  	53

  

 ( vi ) 

							
		 	21.1	  	Step Negotiation	  	53
				
		 	21.2	  	Third Party Technical Expert	  	53
				
		 	21.3	  	Arbitration	  	53
				
		 	21.4	  	Continued Performance	  	54
				
		 	21.5	  	Technical Disputes	  	54
		
	22.0 FORCE MAJEURE	  	54
				
		 	22.1	  	Effect of Force Majeure Event	  	54
				
		 	22.2	  	Notice of Force Majeure Event	  	54
				
		 	22.3	  	Mitigation of Force Majeure Event	  	55
		
	23.0 INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY	  	55
				
		 	23.1	  	Owner Intellectual Property	  	55
				
		 	23.2	  	Operator Intellectual Property	  	55
				
		 	23.3	  	Third Party Intellectual Property	  	55
		
	24.0 REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES	  	56
				
		 	24.1	  	Representations and Warranties by Each Party	  	56
				
		 	24.2	  	Additional Representation and Warranty by the Operator	  	57
		
	25.0 GUARANTEE	  	57
		
	26.0 MISCELLANEOUS	  	57
				
		 	26.1	  	Amendments	  	57
				
		 	26.2	  	Governing Law	  	57
				
		 	26.3	  	Notices	  	58
				
		 	26.4	  	Assignment	  	59
				
		 	26.5	  	Waivers	  	62
				
		 	26.6	  	Independent Contractor	  	62
				
		 	26.7	  	No Third Party Beneficiaries	  	62
				
		 	26.8	  	Entire Agreement	  	62
				
		 	26.9	  	Partial Invalidity	  	62

  

 ( vii ) 

							
		 	26.10	  	Surviving Rights	  	62
				
		 	26.11	  	HST	  	63
				
		 	26.12	  	Counterparts	  	63
				
		 	26.13	  	Facsimile Signatures	  	63
		
	SCHEDULES	  	
			
		 	Schedule 1 – Site and Facility	  	
			
		 	Schedule 2 – Transition Phase Services	  	
			
		 	Schedule 3 – Operation Phase Services	  	
			
		 	Schedule 4 – Shared Services	  	
			
		 	Schedule 5 – Disengagement Services	  	
			
		 	Schedule 6 – Measurement of Net Output	  	
			
		 	Schedule 7 – Payment for Operation Phase Services	  	
			
		 	Schedule 8 – Fuel Specifications	  	
			
		 	Schedule 9 – Operator’s Use of Purchased Assets	  	
			
		 	Schedule 10 – Operator’s use of Steam from the Utility Plant	  	
			
		 	Schedule 11 – Sample Calculations for Fuel Costs	  	
		
	EXHIBITS	  	
			
		 	Exhibit A – Monthly Report Form	  	
			
		 	Exhibit B – Form of Parent Guarantee	  	

 A copy of the Schedules and Exhibits will be furnished supplementally to the Commission upon request. 

 

 ( viii ) 

 MANAGEMENT, OPERATIONS AND MAINTENANCE 

AGREEMENT 
 This
Management, Operations and Maintenance Agreement (the “Agreement”) dated as of April 1, 2010 is made by and between NewPage Port Hawkesbury Corp., an unlimited company organized under the laws of Nova Scotia, with its principal
place of business at Point Tupper, Nova Scotia (“Operator”) and Nova Scotia Power Inc., a company organized under the laws of Nova Scotia, with its principal place of business in Halifax, Nova Scotia (“Owner”); the
Owner and the Operator are individually referred to herein as “Party” and collectively as “Parties”. 

WHEREAS, the Owner is undertaking the development of a Biomass co-generating station and associated facilities, with an anticipated gross capacity
of 63.8 MW to produce electricity using Owner assets and certain of the Operator’s assets; 
 AND WHEREAS, the Utility Plant will be
integrated into the Combined Facility and certain services and assets will be shared between the Parties; 
 AND WHEREAS, the Operator
will manage, operate and maintain the entire Combined Facility, including the Utility Plant, and will supply all required Biomass fuel to the Utility Plant; 

AND WHEREAS, the Operator will use steam from the Utility Plant for the operation of its pulp and paper mill; 

AND WHEREAS, the Owner and the Operator have entered into an Asset Purchase Agreement pursuant to which the Owner has purchased, or will purchase,
certain assets, comprising certain real property and equipment on the Site; 
 AND WHEREAS, the Operator will be responsible to produce
Energy for the System that meets the requirements of the RES in a safe, environmentally compliant and cost-effective manner for the Owner’s customers while benefiting from the sharing of steam, condensate and other resources with the Owner;

 AND WHEREAS, the Owner wishes to ensure that the Utility Plant is capable of operating independently of the Operator’s Mill in
the event this Agreement is terminated or the Operator is no longer operating the Operator’s Mill, and the Operator wishes to ensure that it will have access to steam and condensate and both Parties wish to ensure they will have access to
Shared Services in the event this Agreement is terminated and the Operator’s Mill remains in operation; 
 AND WHEREAS, the
Owner and the Operator now desire to set forth the terms pursuant to which the Operator shall provide Services for the Utility Plant and the operation of the Combined Facility generally. 

 

 1 

 NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual covenants contained herein and other good and valuable
consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of which are hereby acknowledged, the Parties, intending to be legally bound hereby agree as follows: 

1.0 DEFINITIONS AND INTERPRETATION 
  

	1.1	Definitions 

 Except as otherwise defined
in this Agreement, capitalized terms used in this Agreement have the respective meanings assigned to them as follows: 
 “Actual Cost of
Fuel” has the meaning set out in Schedule 11. 
 “Affiliate” means, with respect to any entity, any other entity that,
directly or indirectly, through one or more intermediaries, Controls, or is Controlled by, or is under common Control with, such entity. 

“Agreed Procedures” means the policies, practices, procedures, systems and programs for the operation and maintenance of the Utility
Plant developed in accordance with Section 4.4. 
 “Agreement” has the meaning given to that term in the first paragraph
hereof. 
 “Alternative RES Energy” has the meaning set out in Schedule 7. 

“Annual Budget” means the annual budget for Sustaining Capital required for the operation and maintenance of the Utility Plant prepared
by the Operator and approved by the Owner for the relevant Operational Year pursuant to Section 12.1. 
 “Annual Operating
Plan” means the annual plan for operation and maintenance of the Utility Plant prepared by the Operator and approved by the Owner for the relevant Operational Year pursuant to Sections 5.2 and 5.3. 

“Applicable Law” means, with respect to any Person, all laws, statutes, codes, acts, treaties, ordinances, orders, judgments, writs,
decrees, injunctions, rules, regulations, interpretations, Governmental Approvals, directives, and requirements of all Governmental Authorities, in each case applicable to or binding upon the Project, such Person to the extent engaged in activities
hereunder, or any of its property used in connection with the Project. 
 “Asset Purchase Agreement” means the asset purchase
agreement between the Owner and the Operator dated April 1, 2010 pursuant to which the Owner purchased, or will purchase, certain assets from the Operator. 

“Base Output Requirement” means a Net Output of 388,000 MWh per Operational Year. 

“Biomass” has the meaning set out in Schedule 8. 

“Biomass Index Rate” has the meaning set out in Schedule 7. 

“Budgeted Expense” means any Sustaining Capital incurred by the Operator in the operation and maintenance of the Utility Plant which has
been approved by the Owner in the Annual Budget, as applicable, or in any revision thereto which has been approved by the Owner in accordance with this Agreement. 

 

 2 

 “Business Day” means any day other than a Saturday, Sunday or official public holiday in
Halifax, Nova Scotia. 
 “Certification” means certification as a new renewable energy generation facility pursuant to the RES.

 “Change” means a material variation in the scope or quality of the Services, including, without limitation any material
amendment, modification, substitution, deletion, cancellation or addition to the Services. 
 “Change in Law” means:

  

	 	(i)	the adoption or modification after the Effective Date of any Applicable Law, or 

 

	 	(ii)	the imposition after the Effective Date by a Governmental Authority of any term or condition applicable to any Governmental Approval, 

in each case that establishes new mandatory requirements for the construction, operation or maintenance of the Utility Plant that are materially adverse
to the affected Party. 
 “Charged Property” has the meaning set out in Section 6.4. 

“Combined Facility” means the Utility Plant, the Operator’s Mill and the Site. 

“Commercial Operation Date” has the meaning set out in the Construction Contract. 

“Common Systems” means any assets other than NSPI Assets that are required to operate the Utility Plant and any other element of the
Facility as described in Schedule 1. 
 “Condensate Points of Delivery” are those points labelled as such in the Construction
Contract. 
 “Construction Contract” means an agreement for the engineering, procurement and construction of the Utility Plant
and its tie-in to the Operator’s Mill, by and between the Owner and the Operator, and initially consists of a binding term sheet between the Parties, until it has been replaced by a full engineering, procurement and construction contract
between the Parties at which time the full contract will be the Construction Contract. 
 “Control” means, with respect to any
Person at any time, (a) holding, whether directly or indirectly, as owner or other beneficiary (other than as the beneficiary of an unrealized security interest) securities or ownership interests of that Person carrying votes or ownership
interests sufficient to elect or appoint fifty percent (50%) or more of the individuals who are responsible for the supervision or management of that Person, or (b) the exercise of de facto control of that Person, whether direct or
indirect and whether through the ownership of securities or ownership interests, by contract, trust or otherwise. 
  

 3 

 “Convention” means the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and such
amendments, additions or substitutions thereto which may be in effect from time to time throughout the Term. 
 “CPI” means
Statistics Canada’s consumer price index for Nova Scotia: all items, or any successor index.  
 “CPI Ex Energy”
means Statistics Canada’s consumer price index for Nova Scotia: all items excluding energy, or any successor index. 

“Crown Lease Consent” means the consent dated
January 6th, 2010 from the Minister of Natural
Resources (Nova Scotia) with respect to the harvesting of fibre from Crown lands and other rights in respect of the Project. 

“Damages” means any and all losses, costs, damages, expenses, obligations, injuries, liabilities, insurance deductibles and excesses,
claims, proceedings, actions, causes of action, demands, deficiencies, lawsuits, judgments or awards, penalties and interest, including reasonable attorney’s fees, but excluding any indirect, incidental, exemplary, consequential or punitive
damages. 
 “Deemed Cost of Fuel” has the meaning set out in Schedule 11. 

“Designee” means the entity (which may or may not be an Affiliate) which the Owner may designate by Notice to the Operator from time to
time to exercise certain specific rights or duties of the Owner under this Agreement, provided that if the Operator is operating the Operator’s Mill and is not in any Winding-Up or sale procedure when the Designee is appointed, the Designee
shall have the experience, competence and capability to operate the Utility Plant and shall not be a material competitor of the Operator. 

“Diesel Rate” means Statistics Canada’s Table 329-0047 Atlantic Region Diesel Fuel (1997 = 100) index, or any successor index.

 “Disengagement Phase” means the period starting on the date that the Joint Operating Committee estimates to be 24 months
prior to the date of termination of this Agreement and ending on the date of termination or expiry of this Agreement. 
 “Disengagement
Plan” means the plan to ensure the orderly, stepped procedure to achieve the independence of the Utility Plant from the Operator’s Mill upon the termination or expiry of this Agreement and for the transition of the Services to the
Owner or its Designee. 
 “Disengagement Services” means the services described in Article 8.0 and Schedule 5 and all other
services inherent or incidental thereto. 
 “Documentation” means all Agreed Procedures, Operating Manuals, design and
engineering documentation, schedules and drawings in respect of the Utility Plant, including all as-built drawings as they may be modified from time to time. 

“Dollars” or “$” means the lawful currency of Canada. 

 

 4 

 “Draft Procedures” has the meaning set out in Section 4.4. 

“Effective Date” means the date this Agreement is executed and delivered. 

“Emergency” means any event of emergency affecting or endangering the safety or protection of individuals, equipment, or the environment
at the Facility or surrounding environs, or any emergency affecting or endangering all or any part of the Utility Plant or any property located at the Site (but not the Operator’s Mill). 

“Emissions Reductions and Renewable Energy Credits” means: 

 

	 	(i)	those credits, benefits or other intangibles that now, or at any time in the future, convey a right in respect of those attributes (fungible or non-fungible), whether
or not tradable, pertaining to the generation of energy pursuant to this Agreement, representing the renewable aspect of the source of such energy, and include “green tags”, “tradable renewable energy credits”, or “renewable
portfolio standard tags”; and 

  

	 	(ii)	all rights, title and interest in and to all benefits, rewards, credits, premiums, incentives, and other advantages related, in whole or in part, to GHG Emission
Reductions, whether in existence as of the Effective Date or arising during the Term to the extent related or attributable to the operation of the Utility Plant for the generation of Energy or otherwise, including: 

 

	 	1.	any credit issued or granted by a Governmental Authority in connection with GHG Emission Reductions; 

 

	 	2.	any tradable allowance or allocated pollution right issued or granted in connection with GHG Emission Reductions; 

 

	 	3.	the sole right to claim credit in any reporting program established or maintained by any Governmental Authority relating to GHG Emission Reductions;

  

	 	4.	the sole right to register, claim, file or bank GHG Emission Reductions in any registry system established or maintained by any Governmental Authority or
non-governmental organization or entity; 

  

	 	5.	the sole right to any form of acknowledgment by a Governmental Authority that actions have been taken by any Person in connection with GHG Emission Reductions that
result in the reduction, avoidance, sequestration or mitigation of anthropogenic GHG; 

  

	 	6.	the sole right to claim or use GHG Emission Reductions for any and all purposes and in any manner or form whatsoever now or in the future; 

 

	 	7.	the sole right to any form of acknowledgment by a Government Agency to claim tradable GHG allowance allocations when those tradable allowance allocations can be:

  

	 	a.	banked for credit in the event of regulation requiring any reduction, avoidance or mitigation of, or compensation for, GHG, 

 

 5 

	 	b.	claimed for credit against any compliance requirement, or 

  

	 	c.	put to any other sanctioned use; 

  

	 	8.	the sole right to any form of acknowledgment by an International Agency in respect of GHG Emission Reductions including the right to any acknowledgment that GHG
Emission Reductions constitute tradable emission reduction units for the purposes of International Rules; and 

  

	 	9.	the sole right to any offset of anthropogenic GHG that can be claimed by using GHG Emission Reductions. 

“Energy” means electric energy measured as units of watt hours (kWh, MWh, GWh), including such other electrical products arising from
the operation of the Utility Plant, for injection into the System. 
 “Facility” means the complex of structures, machinery,
and associated equipment making up the Biomass co-generation facility more fully described in Schedule 1 and includes the Utility Plant, the Common Systems and those portions of the Operator’s Mill required to operate the Utility Plant.

 “Forecast” means the five year forecast prepared in accordance with Section 12.8. 

“Force Majeure Event” means any event which wholly or partly prevents or delays the performance of any obligation arising under this
Agreement, but only if and to the extent (i) such event is not within the reasonable control, directly or indirectly, of the Party affected, (ii) such event, despite the affected Party’s exercise of reasonable diligence, cannot be or
be caused to be prevented, avoided or removed by the affected Party, (iii) the Party affected has taken all reasonable precautions and measures in order to avoid the effect of such event on such Party’s ability to perform its obligations
under this Agreement and to mitigate the consequences thereof including any contingency plans agreed between the Parties or which a Party has represented it has in place, and (iv) such event is not the direct or indirect result of the affected
Party’s negligence or the failure (to the extent not prevented by a Force Majeure Event) of such Party to perform any of its obligations under this Agreement. Subject to the foregoing, a “Force Majeure Event” may include any of the
following: 
  

	 	(i)	acts of God or the public enemy, war, whether declared or not, blockade, insurrection, riot, civil disturbance, public disorder, rebellion, violent demonstration,
revolution, or sabotage; 

  

	 	(ii)	any effect of unusual natural elements, including fire, volcanic eruption, landslide, earthquake, flood, tsunami, lightning, hurricane, unusually severe storm, perils
of sea, or similar cataclysmic occurrence or other unusual natural calamity; 

  

 6 

	 	(iii)	environmental and other contamination at or affecting the Site, excepting environmental or other contamination which can be determined to be existing as at the
Effective Date or to arise from operations at the Operator’s Mill; 

  

	 	(iv)	explosion, accident or epidemic; 

  

	 	(v)	accidents of navigation or breakdown or injury of vessels, accidents to harbours, docks, bridges, canals or other assistances to or adjuncts of shipping or navigation,
epidemic or quarantine; 

  

	 	(vi)	nuclear emergency, radioactive contamination or ionizing radiation or the release of any Hazardous Material at or affecting the Site, excepting Hazardous Materials
which can be determined to be existing as at the Effective Date or to arise from operations at the Operator’s Mill; 

  

	 	(vii)	air crash, shipwreck, train wreck, or any other failures or delays of transportation if the cause of such other failure or delay otherwise would qualify under this
Agreement as a Force Majeure Event; 

  

	 	(viii)	any curtailment or interruption of power to the Utility Plant by the Owner or the System Operator; 

 

	 	(ix)	strikes, lockouts or other labour disturbances; 

but does not include any event to the extent that: 
  

	 	(x)	it is caused by the unavailability of labour (other than due to strikes, lockouts or other labour disturbances as are Force Majeure Events) or raw materials (including
Fuel), the breakdown of the Utility Plant or other plant breakdown or equipment failure, unless and to the extent that any such event is itself caused by a Force Majeure Event or which if it occurred in relation to either Party would have been a
Force Majeure Event or is caused by a latent defect in the Utility Plant or other plant or equipment; 

  

	 	(xi)	the event is the result of any failure of a Subcontractor unless and to the extent that the Subcontractor was itself affected by an event, which if it occurred in
relation to either Party would have been a Force Majeure Event; 

  

	 	(xii)	risks associated with that event have been accepted by the relevant Party by the terms of this Agreement; 

 

	 	(xiii)	it relates to any change in Applicable Law, including any Change in Law; or 

 

	 	(xiv)	it is an Interruption. 

 “FSC”
means the Forest Stewardship Council. 
 “Fuel” means the fuel specified in Schedule 8. 

“Fuel Index Rate” means the fuel index rate specified in Schedule 7. 

 

 7 

 “GHG” or “Greenhouse Gas Emissions” means any gas substance that is the
subject of the Convention and related protocols, treaties, agreements and instruments and includes carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide, methane, hydrofluorocarbons and perfluorocarbons. 

“GHG Emission Reductions” means reductions in Greenhouse Gas Emissions however measured and includes, for greater certainty, any
reductions in Greenhouse Gas Emissions attributable to the Energy generated from the Utility Plant as an alternative to generating Energy by other means which would result in higher levels of Greenhouse Gas Emissions. 

“GIA” means the Standard Generator Interconnection and Operating Agreement executed between the System Operator and the Owner, as may be
in force from time to time. 
 “Good Utility Practice” means the practices, methods, standards and procedures that (i) are
generally accepted and followed by a prudent, diligent, skilled and experienced operator acting in accordance with standards generally adopted by operators of power and utility projects in North America who reasonably account for local conditions,
including local infrastructure support, with respect to the operation and maintenance of equipment having similar characteristics to the Utility Plant , and (ii) would be expected by such prudent, diligent, skilled and experienced operator, at
the particular time in question and in the exercise of reasonable judgment in light of facts or circumstances then known or that reasonably should have been known, to accomplish the desired results and goals, including such goals as efficiency,
reliability, economy, and profitability, in a manner consistent with Applicable Law, safety and environmental protection. “Good Utility Practice” is not intended to be limited to the optimum practice or method to the exclusion of all
others, but rather to be a spectrum of reasonable and prudent practices, methods, standards and procedures, and includes taking reasonable steps to provide for: 
  

	 	(i)	adequate materials, Sustaining Capital, resources and supplies (including Fuel) being available to meet the needs of the Utility Plant on a Through-Life Basis under
reasonably anticipated conditions; 

  

	 	(ii)	sufficient operating personnel being available, adequately experienced, and trained to operate the Utility Plant properly, efficiently and taking appropriate account of
Manufacturer’s Recommendations and being capable of responding to abnormal conditions; 

  

	 	(iii)	preventative, routine and non-routine maintenance and repairs being performed on a basis that ensures reliable long-term and safe operation, taking appropriate account
of Manufacturer’s Recommendations, and such maintenance and repairs being performed by knowledgeable, trained and experienced personnel utilizing proper equipment, tools and procedures; 

 

	 	(iv)	appropriate monitoring and testing being performed to determine that equipment is functioning as designed and can reasonably be expected to function properly under
reasonably anticipated conditions; 

  

	 	(v)	equipment being operated in a manner safe to workers, the general public, the environment, plant and equipment and with regard to defined limitations including steam
pressure, temperature, moisture and chemical content, quality of makeup water, operating voltage, current, frequency, rotational speed, polarity, synchronization and control system limits; and 

 

 8 

	 	(vi)	operation and maintenance of the equipment comprising the Facility in accordance with the applicable Annual Operating Plan. 

“Governmental Approval” means all Governmental Authority licenses, waivers, consents, registrations, approvals and requirements obtained
or required to be obtained to enable the Utility Plant, the Facility, the Operator, the Owner and the Services to comply with all Applicable Laws in respect of the Project. 

“Governmental Authority” means any legislative, administrative, judicial or other governmental authority, agency, court, municipal body
or entity in or of Canada or Nova Scotia, any Person or entity controlled by any of the foregoing, and any Person or entity in which the government participates, in each case having legal jurisdiction over the Person in question or the Project and,
in the case of the Owner, including the UARB. 
 “Hazardous Material” means any hazardous material, hazardous or toxic
substance, hazardous waste, hazardous constituent, and petroleum product (including crude oil or any fraction thereof), in each case defined or regulated as such in or under any Applicable Law which regulates, relates to or imposes liability or
standards of conduct concerning the protection of human health or the environment. 
 “HST” means the harmonized sales tax
exigible pursuant to the Excise Tax Act (Canada). 
 “Improvement or Addition” means any change in, addition to, or
modification of, the Utility Plant (other than routine and non-routine maintenance, repair or any minor modification or addition which forms part of any Budgeted Expense) which has the effect of increasing the nominal rate of output of the Utility
Plant, lowering the operating cost of the Utility Plant, enhancing the environmental performance of the Utility Plant or increasing the efficiency, reliability, or safety of the Utility Plant, beyond that which, without the relevant change, addition
or modification, would be expected of those assets in their then-existing state of operating efficiency and reliability. 

“Insurance” has the meaning set out in Section 19.1. 

“Intellectual Property Rights” means: 
  

	 	(i)	patents, trademarks, service marks, rights in designs, trade names, copyrights and topography rights, in each case whether registered or not; 

 

	 	(ii)	applications for registration of any of the above; 

  

	 	(iii)	rights under licenses and consents in relation to any of the above; and 

  

	 	(iv)	all forms of protection of a similar nature or having equivalent or similar effect to any of them which may subsist anywhere in the world. 

 

 9 

 “Interest Rate” means the prime rate of interest set from time to time by The Bank of Nova
Scotia as its reference rate of interest per annum for Canadian dollar commercial loans made in Canada, plus 2.0% per annum. 

“International Agency” means the parties to the Convention, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and any other international
commission, bureau, board, administrative agency or regulatory body responsible for measures to achieve objectives of the Convention. 

“International Rules” means any principles, modalities, rules and guidelines including those pertaining to verification, reporting and
accountability for trading Emission Reductions and Renewable Energy Credits authorized, promulgated or otherwise sanctioned and adopted by an International Agency. 

“Interruption” means an interruption of the delivery of electrical energy to the Operator’s Mill by the System Operator.

 “Joint Operating Committee” has the meaning set out in Section 11.1. 

“Lender” means any financial institution or other lender which has provided or in the future provides construction, interim, short term,
revolving or long-term financing to the Operator and which has taken or in the future takes security in the Operator’s Mill or any portion thereof as security for the repayment of such indebtedness. 

“Liability Insurance” has the meaning set out in Section 19.1. 

“Lien” means any mortgage, charge, pledge, lien, hypothecation, adverse claim, assignment with provision for re-assignment or other
security interest or arrangement having the same legal or economic effect as any of the foregoing. 
 “Liquidated Damages” has
the meaning set out in Schedule 7. 
 “Manufacturer’s Recommendations” means the written instructions, procedures and
recommendations which are issued by the original equipment manufacturer of any plant or equipment used at the Utility Plant relating to the operation, maintenance and repair of such plant or equipment and any revisions thereto issued by the
manufacturer, which are valid and applicable at the time such operation, maintenance or repair is undertaken. Notwithstanding the above, Manufacturer’s Recommendations shall not include any instructions, procedures or recommendations of a
manufacturer of any plant or equipment that the Owner and the Operator have agreed in writing to exclude from this definition or have agreed in writing should not be followed. 

“Major Operational Failure” means: 
  

	 	(i)	material damage to the Facility or any material part of the Facility caused by the negligence, recklessness or wilful misconduct of the Operator;

  

	 	(ii)	a material breach of an Applicable Law, including those relating to the environment and safety caused by the negligence, recklessness or wilful misconduct of the
Operator; or 

  

 10 

	 	(iii)	the Operator’s intentional or reckless use of fuel which is non-compliant with the fuel specifications set out in Schedule 8. 

“Material Adverse Effect” means a material adverse effect on any of (a) the operation and maintenance of the Utility Plant;
(b) the performance of the Services; (c) the Net Output; or (d) the business, operations or financial conditions of the Owner. 

“Material Breach” means any material breach by the Operator of the terms of this Agreement or the occurrence of any event having a
material effect on the ability of the Operator to perform its obligations under this Agreement, including: 
  

	 	(i)	a Major Operational Failure provided that a Major Operational Failure caused by mere negligence is only a Material Breach if the Operator has not remedied it within 30
days of the date of a Notice from the Owner in respect of such breach; 

  

	 	(ii)	the inability of the Operator or the Parent to pay debts generally as they become due or an occurrence of a Winding-Up relating to the Operator or the Parent that is
not dismissed or stayed within thirty (30) days after it is commenced; 

  

	 	(iii)	any assignment of this Agreement of the Operator in breach of Section 26.4; 

 

	 	(iv)	any termination of the Construction Contract for the Operator’s default; 

 

	 	(v)	any representation or warranty made by the Operator in terms of this Agreement being found to be untrue or incorrect which has a Material Adverse Effect, provided that
if any representation or warranty set out in sections 24.1.3, 24.1.4, 24.1.8, 24.2.3 or 24.2.4 becomes untrue or incorrect other than through the reckless or intentional acts or omissions of the Operator but is capable of being cured within 30 days
of a Notice of the breach of representation or warranty and the Operator diligently pursues such cure, the untrue or incorrect representation or warranty will only be a Material Breach if the representation or warranty remains to be untrue or
incorrect at the end of that 30 day period. The Operator will advise the Owner as soon as it becomes aware of any event or circumstance that makes, or is likely to make, the representations or warranties set out in sections 24.1.3, 24.1.4, 24.1.8,
24.2.3 or 24.2.4, or any of them, untrue or incorrect; 

  

	 	(vi)	any systematic failure by the Operator to recognize and correct any known failure to comply with the Operator’s safety or environmental program or the operating
permit within the Facility; or 

  

	 	(vii)	any failure on the part of the Operator to comply with, observe or perform any of the terms of this Agreement (together a “contract breach”), in circumstances
where that contract breach or that contract breach together with other contract breaches is considered by the Owner on reasonable grounds to result in: 

  

	 	1.	the Operator being unable or being likely to be unable to perform other material obligations under this Agreement; or 

 

	 	2.	a Material Adverse Effect, 

  

 11 

 provided, however, that no breach in this sub-section vii shall be a Material Breach unless
and until the Owner has given the Operator Notice of such breach, and the Operator has not remedied it within 30 days from the date of the Notice,; and provided, further, that if such breach is not capable of cure within such 30 day period, but is
capable of cure within a reasonable time (having regard to the nature of the breach), and: 
  

	 	1.	the Operator provides a reasonable schedule for the cure of such breach that is acceptable to the Owner; and 

 

	 	2.	the Operator commences and diligently proceeds to cure such breach in accordance with the agreed schedule for cure, 

such breach shall not constitute a Material Breach unless the breach remains uncured when the time to cure such breach as set out in the
agreed schedule for cure has lapsed. 
 “Maximum Output Amount” is 110% of the Base Output Requirement per Operational Year and
in respect of the Stub Period, 110% of the Base Output Requirement multiplied by the number of days in the Stub Period and divided by 365. 

“Measurement Point” means the point or points of interconnection between the Utility Plant and the System where Energy from the Utility
Plant enters the System as identified on Schedule 6. 
 “MWh” means megawatt hour. 

“Net Output” means the Energy output from the Utility Plant, as determined in accordance with Schedule 6. 

“Notice” has the meaning given to that term in Section 26.3. 

“NSPI Assets” means those assets and rights owned or leased by the Owner and used in the Utility Plant, including the Purchased Assets
and the Steam and Condensate Fixtures. 
 “O&M Index Rate” means the O&M index rate specified in Schedule 7.

 “Operating Manuals” means, collectively, the operating manuals for the Utility Plant as initially prepared by the Operator
under the Construction Contract as may be updated or amended from time to time. 
 “Operational Year” means each year of the
Operation Phase, the first of which will commence on January 1 of the year following the Stub Period, and each successive Operational Year will commence on January 1 of each successive year. 

“Operation Phase” means the period from (and including) the Commercial Operation Date to (and including) the last day of the Term or the
date this Agreement otherwise is terminated or expires in accordance with its terms. 
 “Operation Phase Services” means the
general management, operation and maintenance of the Facility during the Operation Phase including Fuel procurement, Energy generation, the services described in Article 5.0 and Schedule 3 and all other services inherent or incidental thereto.

  

 12 

 “Operator” has the meaning given in the first paragraph hereof. 

“Operator Indemnified Parties” has the meaning given to that term in Section 20.3.1. 

“Operator’s Mill” means the Operator’s pulp and paper mill located on the Site and all other elements of the Site other than
the Utility Plant and NSPI Assets. 
 “Owner” has the meaning given to that term in the first paragraph hereof. 

“Owner Indemnified Parties” has the meaning given to that term in Section 20.3.2. 

“Owner Intellectual Property” has the meaning given to that term in Section 23.1. 

“Owner’s Representative” has the meaning given to that term in Section 15.6. 

“Parent” means NewPage Corporation. 

“Party” means the Owner or the Operator, as the case may be. 

“Person” means an individual, partnership, corporation, business trust, joint stock company, trust, unincorporated association, joint
venture, Governmental Authority, limited liability company or any other entity of whatever nature. 
 “Plan” means the
Transition Phase Plan, the Annual Operating Plan, the Disengagement Plan, the Forecast or any other plan approved from time to time by the Joint Operating Committee, in each case, in accordance with this Agreement, individually or collectively, as
the context may require. 
 “PPSA” has the meaning set out in Section 6.4. 

“Project” means the project to build and operate a co-generation Biomass power generation facility at the Site. 

“Purchased Assets” means the assets purchased by the Owner from the Operator pursuant to the Asset Purchase Agreement. 

“Ramp-up Period” has the meaning set out in Section 7. 

“Renewable Attribute Loss” means any of those Emission Reductions and Renewable Energy Credits, the benefit of which is lost as a result
of Shortfall Energy and/or during any period in which the Operator fails to maintain the Certification for the Utility Plant. 

“Renewable Attribute Loss Rate” means $15 per MWh. 

“Representative” means, with respect to any Person, to the extent engaged by such Person for Project specific activities, any
shareholder, officer, director, principal, agent, third party advisor (such as attorneys, accountants and consultants) employee or other representative or advisor of such Person. 

 

 13 

 “Release” means release, spill, leak, pump, pour, emit, empty, discharge, deposit, inject,
leach, dispose, dump or permit to escape. 
 “RES” means the Renewable Energy Standard Regulations (Nova Scotia). 

“Scheduled Outage” means a removal in accordance with an Annual Operating Plan of any of the Utility Plant’s capability to produce
Energy that (a) has been selected and planned for in advance, and (b) is for regularly scheduled inspection, testing, preventive maintenance, corrective maintenance, repairs, replacement or improvements. 

“Services” are the services for the management, operation, maintenance, administrative, labour, consumable materials, materials
procurement and management, Fuel procurement, supply and storage, water, supervision and other goods and services necessary for the safe, efficient, and reliable management, operation and maintenance of the Facility on a daily basis and includes the
Transition Phase Services, Operation Phase Services, Shared Services and all services inherent or incidental to each of the foregoing. Disengagement Services are also “Services” for the purposes of this Agreement. 

“Services Rate” means $ /MWh as escalated in the manner set out in Schedule 7. 

“Shared Services” means the services described in Schedule 4. 

“Shortfall Energy” means any deficiency in the actual Net Output from the required Net Output in the relevant time period as specified
in Schedule 7. 
 “Site” means all those parcels of real property on which the Combined Facility is, or will be, located.

 “Special Capital” means capital which is not Sustaining Capital and is spent to enhance, modify or improve the
performance of an asset, including any Improvement or Addition. 
 “Steam and Condensate Fixtures” has the meaning set out in
Section 7.2. 
 “Steam Benchmark” has the meaning set out in Section 7.4. 

“Steam Points of Delivery” are those points labelled as such in the Construction Contract. 

“Stub Period” means the period (being a period that is less than 12 months) between the Commercial Operation Date and December 31
of that same year. 
 “Subcontractor” means any subcontractor or supplier of equipment or services to the Operator or
any subcontractor of any person engaged or employed by the Operator or any Subcontractor, in either case in connection with the performance of the Services. 

“Sustaining Capital” means a non-routine capital expense in respect of an existing asset in an amount not less than $25,000 required to
maintain the operating performance of that asset or to extend its life by more than twelve months and shall not include the following costs and expenses: 
  

	(i)	staff and Subcontractor costs (other than staff and Subcontractor costs used for Sustaining Capital activities) including all employee benefits, overtime, employee
incentive programs, if any, relocation costs, expatriate costs and allowances for vacation, sick leave, holidays, employer portion of employee insurance, social security and retirement benefits and other contributions and benefits imposed by any
Applicable Law or established Operator policy that has been approved in writing by the Owner included in Operator’s employee loading rate; 

  

 14 

	(ii)	routine operational services; 

  

	(iii)	routine maintenance and repair services; 

  

	(iv)	consumables, material and supplies; 

  

	(v)	non-capital spare parts, tools and test equipment; 

  

	(vi)	home office technical, project management, human resources and accounting support; 

 

	(vii)	premiums for insurance required to be effected and maintained by the Operator; 

 

	(viii)	taxes other than sales taxes on capital purchases; 

  

	(ix)	office and administrative costs for operating an office located at the Site; and 

 

	(x)	training costs for operational personnel. 

“System” means the electrical energy distribution and/or transmission systems operated by the System Operator. 

“System Operator” means that functional part of Nova Scotia Power Inc., or its successor, which controls and operates the electrical
transmission system within the Province of Nova Scotia pursuant to the Open Access Transmission Tariff as approved by the UARB. 

“Term” has the meaning set out in Section 2.1. 

“Through-Life Basis” means the principle that appropriate design, construction and goods are used having regard, from time to time, to
the remaining lifespan of the Utility Plant and Good Utility Practice. On the Commercial Operation Date, it is assumed that the lifespan of the Facility, if operated in accordance with Good Utility Practice, will be not less than 40 years.

 “Transition Phase” means the period from (and including) the Effective Date to (and excluding) the Commercial Operation
Date. 
 “Transition Phase Plan” means the plan for the Transition Phase Services as modified from time to time in accordance
with Section 4.3, and includes the budget for the Transition Phase. 
 “Transition Phase Services” means the services
described in Article 4.0 and Schedule 2 and all other services inherent or incidental thereto. 
 “UARB” means the Nova Scotia
Utility and Review Board or its successor. 
  

 15 

 “UARB Approval” means the approval by the UARB of the capital work order application made
or to be made by the Owner in relation to the Project, which approval must be satisfactory in form and substance to the Owner and the Operator, acting reasonably. 

“Utility Plant” means that portion of the assets, facilities and real property on the Site that are used to produce Energy including the
NSPI Assets but excluding the Common Systems, as more fully described as the Utility Plant in Schedule 1. 
 “Winding-Up” of,
or in relation to, a Person means the administration, dissolution, liquidation or bankruptcy of that Person, or any equivalent or analogous procedure under any Applicable Law. 

 

	1.2	Interpretation 

 Unless otherwise
specified in this Agreement or unless the context otherwise requires: 
  

	 	(a)	words of any gender include each other gender; 

  

	 	(b)	using the singular or plural number also include the plural or singular number, respectively; 

 

	 	(c)	any reference to any Person in any capacity includes a reference to its successors and permitted assigns in such capacity and in the case of any Governmental Authority,
any Person succeeding to its functions and capacities; 

  

	 	(d)	the terms “hereof,” “herein,” “hereto,” “hereunder” and words of similar or like import refer to this entire Agreement and not
to any particular Article, Section, Schedule, Exhibit or other subdivision of this Agreement; 

  

	 	(e)	references to a particular “Article,” “Section,” “Schedule” or “Exhibit” are, unless otherwise noted, references to that Article
or Section of, or Schedule or Exhibit to, this Agreement; 

  

	 	(f)	the words “include,” “includes” and “including” shall be deemed to be followed by “without limitation” or “but not limited
to”; 

  

	 	(g)	references to any Applicable Law shall be construed as a reference to such Applicable Law and to all regulations and rulings promulgated thereunder as each may be in
effect from time to time; 

  

	 	(h)	references to any agreement or document (including this Agreement) shall (i) include all Exhibits, Schedules, appendices, and other attachments thereto, and
(ii) be construed at the particular time as a reference to such agreement or document as amended, modified or supplemented and in effect from time to time and shall include a reference to any document which amends, modifies or supplements it,
or is entered into, made or given pursuant to or in accordance with its terms; 

  

 16 

	 	(i)	references to (i) days shall refer to calendar days unless Business Days are specified, (ii) weeks and months shall refer to calendar weeks and months,
respectively, and (iii) years shall refer to calendar years; 

  

	 	(j)	all accounting terms used but not expressly defined herein shall have the meanings given to them under generally accepted accounting principles of Canada as
consistently applied by the Person to which they relate and as may be appropriate to the books, records and accounts established under this Agreement; 

  

	 	(k)	in computing any period of time prescribed or allowed under this Agreement, the day of the act, event or default from which the designated period of time begins to run
shall be included. If the last day of the period so computed is not a Business Day, then the period shall run until the close of business on the next Business Day; 

 

	 	(l)	this Agreement is the result of negotiations between, and has been reviewed by, the Parties and their respective counsel. Accordingly, this Agreement shall be deemed to
be the product of each Party, and there shall be no presumption that an ambiguity should be construed in favour of or against Owner or Operator solely as a result of such Party’s actual or alleged role in the drafting of this Agreement;

  

	 	(m)	the Table of Contents and the Article and Section headings contained in this Agreement are for convenience of reference only and should not be construed to define,
describe, extend or limit the scope or intent of this Agreement or any provision contained herein. 

  

	1.3	Conflicting Provisions 

  

	 	1.3.1	This Agreement and the Schedules and Exhibits attached hereto are intended to be construed together as a consistent whole and for a common purpose. In the event
of any irreconcilable conflict between the body of this Agreement and any Schedule or Exhibit hereto, the terms and provisions of the body of this Agreement shall control. In the event of any irreconcilable conflict between the Schedules and
Exhibits hereto, the terms and provisions of the Schedules of this Agreement shall control. 

  

	 	1.3.2	In the event Owner or Operator becomes aware of any irreconcilable conflict between the body of this Agreement and the Schedules or Exhibits or between any of
the Schedules or Exhibits, Owner or Operator (as the case may be) shall give Notice to Owner or Operator (as the case may be) of such conflict. Unless otherwise agreed by the Parties in writing, the Parties shall observe the order of precedence set
forth in Section 1.3.1. 

 2.0 TERM AND TERMINATION OF THE AGREEMENT 

 

	2.1	No Fault Termination 

Either Party may terminate this Agreement by Notice to the other Party if: 

 

	 	2.1.1	UARB Approval is not obtained by December 31, 2010; 

  

 17 

	 	2.1.2	the Asset Purchase Agreement is not signed and delivered and the transactions contemplated by the Asset Purchase Agreement do not close by December 31, 2010; or

  

	 	2.1.3	The Operator has made the decision to cease operations at the Operator’s Mill but in such event the Operator will continue to provide Disengagement Services
during the Disengagement Phase. 

  

	2.2	Term 

 The term of this
Agreement (“Term”) shall commence on the Effective Date and shall continue thereafter through the Transition Phase and the Stub Period and twenty-five Operational Years thereafter, unless terminated by a Party in accordance with
this Agreement. This Agreement will automatically renew on the same terms for three successive five-year renewal terms unless the Owner gives the Operator not less than 12 months’ Notice that it does not want the Agreement to renew and a Notice
in accordance with Section 8.6. The Term shall include any renewal period. 
  

	2.3	Termination by Owner 

 The
Owner may terminate this Agreement at any time: 
  

	 	2.3.1	if the Parent fails to execute and deliver the guarantee set out as Exhibit B within ten (10) days following the Effective Date or if the guarantee is no
longer in force and effect; 

  

	 	2.3.2	for its convenience on two Operational Years’ advance Notice to the Operator (which shall not be given before the end of the third Operational Year);

  

	 	2.3.3	upon any Material Breach occurring; or 

  

	 	2.3.4	if the Construction Contract is terminated for reason of default by the Operator. 

 

	2.4	Termination by Operator 

The Operator may terminate this Agreement if: 
  

	 	2.4.1	the Owner fails to make, when due, any payment required pursuant to this Agreement, except if such payment is being contested in good faith in a timely manner in
accordance with this Agreement, if such failure to pay such uncontested amount is not remedied within one hundred twenty (120) days after Notice of such failure; or 

 

	 	2.4.2	within any: 

  

	 	(i)	three Operational Year period ending after the end of the third Operational Year (the first such period being the fourth, fifth and sixth Operational Years), the Actual
Cost of Fuel is more than 20% above the Deemed Cost of Fuel for that three Operational Year period, taken as a whole (sample calculations are set out in Schedule 11); 

 

 18 

	 	(ii)	five Operational Year period ending after the end of the first Operational Year (the first such period being the second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth Operational
years), the Actual Cost of Fuel is more than $15 Million over the Deemed Cost of Fuel for those same Operational Years taken as a whole (sample calculations are set out in Schedule 11), 

and the Operator provides not less than two Operational Years’ Notice to the Owner unless: 

 

	 	(iii)	during the notice period, the Parties agree to an increased Services Rate; 

 

	 	(iv)	prior to the termination date the Owner agrees to pay the actual cost of fuel for the production of Energy going forward (but not before the end of the eighth
Operational Year) provided that the Owner provides its Notice within six months of the Operator’s Notice ; or 

  

	 	(v)	the Parties have agreed to use the Biomass Index Rate and the Biomass Index Rate has been approved for use by the UARB in accordance with Schedule 7;

  

	 	2.4.3	the Construction Contract is terminated for reason of default by the Owner; or 

 

	 	2.4.4.	the Construction Contract is terminated for reason of default by the Operator and the Owner has not constructed the Project in accordance with the
Operator’s design specified in the Construction Contract. 

  

	2.5	Effect of Termination Notice 

Upon receipt of a termination Notice, the Joint Operating Committee will determine the starting date of the Disengagement Phase based on a
good faith estimate of the date that is 24 months prior to the termination date and will send the Parties Notice in accordance with Section 8.6. No termination may take effect before the end of the Disengagement Phase. 

 

	2.6	Termination Rights 

Termination by either Party in accordance with the terms of this Agreement shall not affect or excuse the performance of either Party
under any provision of this Agreement that by its terms survives any such termination, including billings, and indemnification and liability. 
  

 19 

 3.0 APPOINTMENT 
  

	3.1	Appointment 

 The Owner
hereby appoints the Operator as an independent contractor and not as an agent of the Owner to be solely responsible for the provision of Services in accordance with this Agreement. The Operator accepts the appointment. 

 

	3.2	Acknowledgements 

 By
accepting its appointment, the Operator acknowledges that it is has made its own independent assessment of, and has relied on its inquiries and investigations as to (i) the subject matter of this Agreement, (ii) the quantity, quality,
nature and extent of all resources (including human resources), materials and facilities necessary to comply with, and perform its obligations hereunder, and (iii) the nature and extent of the risks assumed by it under this Agreement.

  

	3.3	General Obligations of Operator 

For the Term of this Agreement, the Operator will: 
  

	 	3.3.1	provide all Services in accordance with this Agreement, Agreed Procedures, Good Utility Practice and to meet all of the Owner’s obligations pursuant to the
terms of the GIA; 

  

	 	3.3.2	provide sufficient resources, and maintain a program of maintenance and funding of such resources, all in accordance with the terms of this Agreement, to enable
the Operator to perform its obligations on time and in accordance with this Agreement; 

  

	 	3.3.3	carry out the Services with due care, skill and diligence and in a manner compatible with the Owner’s customary work place, safety and management principles
as notified in writing by the Owner from time to time. The Operator acknowledges that it has received the Owner’s current workplace, safety and management principles; 

 

	 	3.3.4	maintain a safe work site at the Common Facility; and 

  

	 	3.3.5	comply with all Applicable Laws. 

 4.0
TRANSITION PHASE SERVICES 
  

	4.1	Overview 

 The Operator
shall perform the Transition Phase Services during the Transition Phase in accordance with Schedule 2 and the Transition Phase Plan. 
  

 20 

	4.2	Transition Phase Plan 

The Operator will develop a Transition Phase Plan prior to September 1, 2010 to meet the requirements of Schedule 2. The Transition
Phase Plan will be submitted to the Owner for review and approval. The Owner shall, not less than ten (10) days following its receipt of the draft Transition Phase Plan, approve, or set out required changes to, the draft Transition Phase Plan,
acting reasonably and the Operator will make all such changes to the draft Transition Phase Plan and resubmit it to the Owner for approval. This process will continue until the Transition Phase Plan has been approved by the Owner, or, if the Parties
cannot agree as to the reasonableness of the Owner’s required changes, any such dispute shall be resolved pursuant to Article 21.0. 
  

	4.3	Amending the Transition Phase Plan 

For purposes of effecting changes, if any, to the Transition Phase Plan after its initial approval by the Owner: 

 

	 	4.3.1	The Operator shall prepare and submit to the Joint Operating Committee, for its review and written approval, any modifications to the Transition Phase Plan as
are necessary to account for (i) material changes in the Project schedule pursuant to the Construction Contract; (ii) material changes to the maintenance plans and schedules; (iii) material changes to the scope and design of the
Utility Plant; (iv) Changes in Law; (v) the execution of any contract, instrument, or agreement, or any amendment, modification or supplement thereto, in each case, entered into by the Owner after the Effective Date which may have a
material effect on the operation or maintenance of the Utility Plant; and (vi) any additional Services required by the Owner. Each Party shall advise the other Party as soon as reasonably practical after it becomes aware of any of the aforesaid
matters which could reasonably require a modification to the Transition Phase Plan. 

  

	 	4.3.2	The Joint Operating Committee shall, not less than ten (10) days following its receipt of any such proposed modification, meet or otherwise communicate to
discuss and resolve the terms of any such proposed modification. 

  

	4.4	Operating Manuals and Agreed Procedures 

In accordance with the Transition Phase Plan, the Operator shall develop and submit to the Owner, at least ninety (90) days prior to
the expected Commercial Operation Date for the Owner’s review and approval, drafts of the policies, procedures, systems and programs required for the operation and maintenance of the Utility Plant (the “Draft Procedures”). The
Owner shall review such Draft Procedures, and shall provide written comments thereon to the Operator within twenty (20) days of receipt thereof, acting reasonably and the Operator shall, within twenty (20) days of its receipt of the
Owner’s comments on the Draft Procedures, update all proposed policies, procedures, systems and programs to take into account the Owner’s requested changes and resubmit them to the Owner for approval, provided, however, if the Operator
believes that any changes to the Draft Procedures requested by the Owner will have an adverse effect on the Operator’s 
  

 21 

 
Mill, the Operator will advise the Owner in writing of the nature of the adverse effect and the Parties will work together in good faith to determine an appropriate solution. This process will
continue until all Draft Procedures have been approved by the Owner, or, if the Parties cannot agree as to the reasonableness of the Owner’s required changes or the effect on the Operator’s Mill, any such dispute shall be resolved pursuant
to Article 21.0. Upon reaching agreement or following dispute resolution, the Draft Procedures will be the “Agreed Procedures”. 
  

	4.5	Expenses and Consideration 

  

	 	4.5.1	Other than expenses that are specifically identified as Owner expenses in the Transition Phase Plan, or that are incurred as a result of a Change Order as
defined and provided for in the Construction Contract entered into between the Parties, the Operator shall be responsible for all expenses in the performance of the Transition Phase Services including the cost of the initial inventory of non-capital
spare parts, materials and supplies, Fuel, consumables, tools, and workshop and other equipment required for the operation and maintenance of the Facility, all costs and expenses to recruit, hire and train the Utility Plant supervisory staff and
personnel; all costs and expenses to prepare the policies, procedures, systems and programs more fully described in Schedule 2; all costs and expenses to complete the transition from the Transition Phase to the Operation Phase; and all costs and
expenses to perform the other Transition Phase Services. 

  

	 	4.5.2	The Operator is entitled to use the Purchased Assets for the purposes of the normal operation of the Operator’s Mill during the Transition Phase in the same
manner in which it used the Purchased Assets prior to their sale to the Owner and generally in accordance with Schedule 9. The Operator will pay for such use to the extent and in the circumstances contemplated in the Construction Contract.

  

	 	4.5.3	In the Transition Phase, if the Operator wants to use or employ a spare part that has been purchased by or to the account of the Owner it will first seek the
consent of the Owner which will not be unreasonably withheld or delayed. 

  

	4.6	Performance Deposit 

  

	 	4.6.1	During the Transition Phase, the Operator shall pay the Owner $220,000 per month (not to exceed $6,000,000 in total) as a performance deposit.

  

	 	4.6.2	The performance deposit will be held by the Owner for the Term and may be used by the Owner to apply against the Operator’s outstanding obligations in the
event of a default of the Operator under this Agreement or under any other agreement or arrangement between the Parties that is not cured within the time for cure set out in the relevant agreement or arrangement in respect of that default.

  

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	 	4.6.3	The performance deposit will be replenished by the Operator to the extent it is used by the Owner in payment of defaulted obligations. 

 

	 	4.6.4	In the event the Operator’s credit rating improves to an S&P BB rating or better (or generally accepted equivalent index rating), the performance
deposit obligation will decrease to $3,000,000 and the Owner will return the relevant portion of the security deposit to the Operator. In the event the Operator’s credit rating improves to an S&P BBB- rating or better (or generally accepted
equivalent index rating), no performance deposit will be required and the Owner will return the existing performance deposit to the Operator. Thereafter, in the event the Operator’s credit rating worsens, the Operator will be required to
provide a new performance deposit such that the performance deposit is always at least $3,000,000 where the Operator has an S&P of BB+ rating or worse (or generally accepted equivalent index rating), and $6,000,000 where the Operator has an
S&P BB- rating or worse (or generally accepted equivalent index rating). 

  

	 	4.6.5	If not used by the Owner as provided for above, such performance deposit shall be returned at the end of the Term. 

 

	 	4.6.6	The Owner shall pay the Operator, on a monthly basis, interest on the amount of the performance deposit from time to time at the 30 year Government of Canada
bond rate. 

 5.0 OPERATION PHASE SERVICES 
  

	5.1	Overview 

 The Operator
shall provide the Operation Phase Services in accordance with Schedule 3 and the Annual Operating Plan. 
  

	5.2	Annual Operating Plan 

  

	 	5.2.1	No later than ninety (90) days prior to the commencement of each Operational Year of this Agreement the Operator will provide the Owner with an Annual
Operating Plan. The Annual Operating Plan shall be an annual program and monthly timetable for the operation and maintenance of the Utility Plant and performance of the Services, which shall set forth on a monthly basis the underlying assumptions
and implementation plans in connection with the Annual Budget, and shall include the following information: 

  

	 	(i)	Routine operational services; 

  

	 	(ii)	Routine repairs and maintenance for each part of the Utility Plant; 

  

	 	(iii)	Information regarding the inventory and proposed procurement of equipment, spare parts, tools, test equipment and, in the case of major equipment, the residual life
thereof; 

  

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	 	(iv)	Routine operational information, general operating data and other Utility Plant data; 

 

	 	(v)	Scheduled Outages; 

  

	 	(vi)	List of consumable items in the aggregate; 

  

	 	(vii)	Staffing plans and details regarding the number of part-time and temporary staff and consultants; 

 

	 	(viii)	Operator’s recommendations on matters affecting the operation and maintenance of the Utility Plant, including any requirements for Sustaining Capital and relevant
Improvements or Additions for the Operational Year and any other capital expenditures for the Operational Year, in each case together with the reasons for such recommendations and the expected capital costs and net change in operating cost effected
thereby; 

  

	 	(ix)	Annual safety and environmental management plans; 

  

	 	(x)	Action plans arising from audit results and insurance requirements; and 

  

	 	(xi)	A description of actions necessary to ensure that the Utility Plant will comply with all Applicable Laws. 

 

	 	5.2.2	The Operator shall prepare the Annual Operating Plan based on the Scheduled Outage periods agreed upon by the Owner, acting reasonably. The Parties agree that
Scheduled Outages shall be planned to ensure minimum disruption to both the Facility and the Operator’s Mill, and the Operator shall co-ordinate Scheduled Outages with the Operator’s Mill. 

 

	5.3	Review and Approval 

Within thirty (30) days of the Owner’s receipt of a proposed Annual Operating Plan, the Owner shall provide written comments to
the Operator with respect thereto and request any additions, changes or modifications to such Plan, acting reasonably, which changes and modifications shall be prepared in accordance with Good Utility Practice. All required and suggested changes to
the proposed Annual Operating Plan shall be provided by the Owner to the Operator for its review and shall be made by the Operator within fifteen (15) days following Operator’s receipt of the comments on the proposed Annual Operating Plan.
Owner and Operator shall use all reasonable efforts to reach agreement thereon by the date that is thirty (30) days prior to the applicable Operational Year. If the Owner and the Operator cannot agree as to the reasonableness of any of the
Owner’s requested changes, any dispute shall be resolved pursuant to Article 21.0 and during any dispute resolution period the Annual Operating Plan for the previous Operating Year shall be used except to the extent that changes are
required by Applicable Law or a Governmental Authority. 
  

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	5.4	Amending the Annual Operating Plan 

For purposes of effecting changes, if any, to the Annual Operating Plan: 

 

	 	5.4.1	The Operator shall prepare and submit to the Joint Operating Committee, for its review and written approval, any modifications to the Annual Operating Plan as
are necessary to account for (i) material changes to the maintenance plans and schedules; (ii) material changes to the scope and design of the Utility Plant; (iii) Changes in Law; (iv) the execution of any contract, instrument,
or agreement, or any amendment, modification or supplement thereto, in each case, entered into by the Owner after the Effective Date which may have a material effect on the operation or maintenance of the Utility Plant; (v) any additional
Services required by the Owner, and (vi) any changes to the Common Systems. Each Party shall advise the other Party as soon as reasonably practical after it becomes aware of any of the aforesaid matters which could reasonably require a
modification to the Annual Operating Plan. 

  

	 	5.4.2	The Joint Operating Committee shall, not less than ten (10) days following its receipt of any such proposed modification, meet or otherwise communicate to
discuss and resolve the terms of any such proposed modification. 

  

	5.5	Updating Procedures 

Operator shall, from time to time and consistent with Good Utility Practice and all Manufacturer Recommendations, update the Annual
Operating Plan, the Operating Manuals and the Agreed Procedures at such times as may be appropriate to reflect changes in assumptions made in their preparation which are desirable in the light of performance of the Utility Plant or any other change
in circumstances which is material in connection with such Plan, Operating Manuals or Agreed Procedures. All such updates shall be (i) made in such manner as to identify any additions or deletions to the Operating Manuals or Agreed Procedures,
(ii) submitted to the Joint Operating Committee for consideration and approval, (iii) maintained at the Utility Plant, and (iv) available to the Owner for inspection and audit. In the event the Owner disapproves of an update to the
Operating Manuals or Agreed Procedures, the Operator shall, subject to the following sentence, make such modifications as reasonably requested by the Owner. If the Owner and the Operator cannot agree, and if the Operator considers the Owner’s
request to be unreasonable, such update shall be treated as not having been put into effect, the Operating Manual and/or Agreed Procedure at issue shall be treated as not being so updated, and the dispute as to the update shall be resolved pursuant
to Article 21.0 . 
  

	5.6	Payment 

 Subject to the
other provisions of this Agreement, the Owner shall pay the Operator for the Operation Phase Services on the basis of the Net Output from the Utility Plant as more fully set out in Schedule 7. The Operator shall invoice the Owner on a monthly basis
and the Owner shall pay each such invoice within 20 days of its receipt thereof, 
  

 25 

 
provided that for so long as the Operator has accounts payable owing to the Owner under this Agreement or any other contract or arrangement with the Owner (including the supply of electricity to
the Operator), the Owner will set off the amount payable by the Owner under this Agreement against those accounts payable by the date on which the relevant account payable from the Operator is due. 

6.0 SHARED SERVICES 
  

	6.1	Overview 

 The Operator
shall provide the Shared Services in accordance with Schedule 4 and the Annual Operating Plan. 
  

	6.2	Common Systems 

 The
Operator will manage, operate and maintain the Common Systems as if they are part of the Utility Plant for the purposes of the Operation Phase Services and the Annual Operating Plan. Any Sustaining Capital will be to the Operator’s account for
any Common Systems that are not NSPI Assets. Each Party will be responsible for Special Capital in respect of its own assets provided that with respect to Common Systems, if a Party spends Special Capital to accommodate a request of the other Party,
such Special Capital will be to that other Party’s account. 
  

	6.3	Payment 

 The Shared
Services will be provided as part of the Operation Phase Services and consideration for the Shared Services will be paid for as part of the Operation Phase Services. 
  

	6.4	Notice of Rights 

 The
Owner shall be entitled to affix notices, labels or markings to any Common System, or otherwise mark the Common Systems, to alert and notify third parties of the Owner’s rights in and to the Common Systems. 

7.0 STEAM, CONDENSATE AND SHARED SERVICES 
  

	7.1	Overview 

 The Operator
may use steam, condensate, Shared Services and Common Systems from the Utility Plant in accordance with Schedule 10. 
  

	7.2	Construction 

 The Owner
shall bear the costs of all interconnecting pipe, steam, condensate and compressed air lines, instrumentation, controls, power and communication cabling (the “Steam and Condensate Fixtures”) all up to the Steam Points of Delivery,
the Condensate Points of Delivery and the Common Systems delivery points as set out in the Construction Contract. 
  

 26 

	7.3	Operation and Maintenance 

The Operator will operate and maintain the Steam and Condensate Fixtures as part of the Operation Phase Services. 

 

	7.4	Benchmark 

 The Operator
will identify quantifiable measures on an hourly averaged basis for pressure, temperature and mass flow, and on a suitable (less than hourly) basis for tolerance on pressure, based on the average for those measures for the Operator’s Mill prior
to the commissioning of the Utility Plant in accordance with the Construction Contract (the “Steam Benchmark”). On an ongoing basis, the Operator will keep detailed records of steam measurements at the Steam Points of Delivery for
pressure, temperature, mass flow and tolerance on pressure on an hourly averaged basis against the Steam Benchmark and will submit the records to the Joint Operating Committee for its review for accuracy. The Joint Operating Committee shall reset
the Steam Benchmark from time to time to adjust for trends in variances against the Steam Benchmark. 
  

	7.5	Risk of Steam, Condensate and Compressed Air 

The Operator shall have the risk of loss of all steam, condensate and compressed air before and after the Steam Points of Delivery or
Condensate Points of Delivery. Liability for all damage caused by or arising out of the steam, condensate or compressed air shall lie with the Operator, except to the extent that the damage from steam, condensate or compressed air directly arises
from the Owner’s failure to pay for Sustaining Capital on the Steam and Condensate Fixtures in accordance with this Agreement. 
  

	7.6	Effect of Use of Steam 

The Operator acknowledges that its use of steam will impact the Net Output from the Utility Plant and that an under-delivery of Net Output
may result in the payment of Liquidated Damages or other damages. 
 8.0 DISENGAGEMENT SERVICES 

 

	8.1	Overview 

 The purpose of
the Disengagement Services is to ensure a smooth transition of the Services to the Owner or its Designee and to ensure that to the extent that the Operator’s Mill is in operation, the Operator continues to receive such steam as is necessary to
operate the Operator’s Mill at the Steam Benchmark standard, and the Parties each continue to receive the applicable Shared Services. During the Disengagement Phase, the Operator will provide the Disengagement Services in accordance with the
Disengagement Plan and the instructions of the Owner from time to time. 
  

 27 

	8.2	Operation Phase Services 

During the Disengagement Phase, the Operator will continue to provide all Operation Phase Services and/or Transition Phase Services (as
the case may be), in accordance with the terms of this Agreement, but subject to the terms of the Disengagement Plan. 
  

	8.3	First Disengagement Plan 

The Operator will prepare the Disengagement Plan during the Transition Phase and submit it to the Joint Operating Committee for its review
and approval. Within thirty (30) days of the Joint Operating Committee’s receipt of a proposed Disengagement Plan, the Joint Operating Committee shall provide written comments to the Operator with respect thereto and request any additions,
changes or modifications to such Plan, which changes and modifications shall be prepared in accordance with Good Utility Practice and the requirements of this Agreement. All required and suggested changes to the proposed Disengagement Plan shall be
provided by the Joint Operating Committee to the Operator for its review and shall be made by the Operator within fifteen (15) days following Operator’s receipt of the comments on the proposed Disengagement Plan. Once approved by the Joint
Operating Committee, the Disengagement Plan shall be submitted to the Owner for final acceptance. The Owner and the Operator shall use all reasonable efforts to reach agreement thereon within ninety (90) days of the original submission to the
Joint Operating Committee. If the Owner and the Operator cannot agree by the end of the Stub Period, any dispute shall be resolved pursuant to Article 21.0. 
  

	8.4	Contents of Disengagement Plan 

The Disengagement Plan will specify the tasks, the resources and the personnel to be used to (a) effect a smooth transition of the
Services and any necessary Common System assets from the Operator to the Owner or the Designee and (b) ensure both a continued supply of steam at the Steam Benchmark standard to the Operator’s Mill and, at the option of the Owner a
continued supply of Fuel to the Utility Plant, and will: 
  

	 	8.4.1	Specify the processes and procedures to give effect to the seamless migration of responsibility for the provision of the Services in accordance with the terms of
the Agreement. 

  

	 	8.4.2	Include a detailed description of the following: 

  

	 	(i)	the management structure and roles and responsibilities of the personnel to be used for the Disengagement Services; 

 

	 	(ii)	hand-over plans for the delivery and/or return of any relevant Owner materials and other assets; 

 

	 	(iii)	the tasks to be performed to effect a smooth transition; 

  

	 	(iv)	a timetable incorporating staged cut-overs of different parts of the Services; 

 

 28 

	 	(v)	key dependencies and risks as well as risk mitigation planning; 

  

	 	(vi)	all consultancy and training services to be provided; and 

  

	 	(vii)	the right of access to, and use of, any part of the Common Facility used in the provision of the Services. 

 

	 	8.4.3	Include as a schedule to the Disengagement Plan an engineering report setting out the engineering steps required to separate the operation of the Facility from
the Combined Facility. For the avoidance of doubt, the Parties do not contemplate that disengagement would necessarily result in the separation of the Facility from the Combined Facility. 

 

	 	8.4.4	Specify all assets used for the provision of the Common Systems or otherwise used in the provision of the Services but which are not owned by the Owner or
Operator. 

  

	 	8.4.5	Specify all assets used for the provision of the Common Systems or otherwise used in the provision of the Services and which are owned by the Operator.

  

	 	8.4.6	Set out the provisions by which steam and condensate will be provided through the operation of the Utility Plant and Shared Services will be provided by each
Party after disengagement. The price for the steam, Fuel and other services so supplied after disengagement shall be calculated in accordance with the Steam, Fuel and Shared Services Agreement attached at Schedule 5. 

 

	 	8.4.7	Set out the approach for the continued supply of Shared Services to both Parties. 

 

	8.5	Amending the Disengagement Plan 

The Joint Operating Committee will review the Disengagement Plan on an annual basis to determine whether it, or any part of it, requires
updating or amending. For purposes of effecting changes, if any, to the Disengagement Plan, the Operator shall prepare and submit to the Joint Operating Committee, for its review and written approval, any modifications to the Disengagement Plan as
are necessary to account for (i) material changes to the maintenance plans and schedules; (ii) material changes to the scope and design of the Utility Plant; (iii) Changes in Law; (iv) the execution of any contract, instrument,
or agreement, or any amendment, modification or supplement thereto, in each case, entered into by the Owner after the Effective Date which may have a material effect on the separation of the Utility Plant from the Operator’s Mill such that the
Utility Plant is able to operate independently; (v) any additional Services required by the Owner; (vi) any planned sale of, or modification to, the Operator’s Mill or any material part thereof, and (vii) any changes to the
Common Systems, including any changes to the ownership, or encumbrance on, of any of the Common Systems. Each Party shall advise the other Party as soon as reasonably practical after it becomes aware of any of the aforesaid matters which could
reasonably require a modification to the Disengagement Plan. 
  

 29 

	8.6	Notice 

 Within 30 days of
receiving or issuing a termination Notice under this Agreement, or prior to its expiry (including all renewal terms), the Joint Operating Committee, shall provide notice to the Parties setting out the commencement date and the term of the
Disengagement Phase. The Operator will commence the Disengagement Services in accordance with the Disengagement Plan and the commencement date specified in such Notice. 

 

	8.7	Term of Disengagement Phase 

At any time during the Disengagement Phase, the Owner, in its sole discretion, may accelerate the progress of the disengagement and
terminate this Agreement in advance of the end of the Disengagement Phase. The Owner shall provide the Operator fifteen (15) days’ advance Notice of any such planned acceleration, and shall compensate the Operator for any costs the
Operator may incur on account of such acceleration. 
  

	8.8	Payment 

 In the event of
a termination of this Agreement for Material Breach thereof by the Operator, no additional consideration will be payable by the Owner for the Disengagement Services. In the event the Agreement expires or is terminated for any reason other than the
Material Breach thereof by the Operator, the Owner will pay the Operator for the Disengagement Services on a time and materials basis in accordance with Schedule 5. 
  

	8.9	Steam, Fuel and Shared Services Agreement 

The terms of the Steam, Fuel and Shared Services Agreement attached as part of Schedule 5 will apply after the termination or expiry of
this Agreement for any reason and under any circumstances except for termination of this Agreement under Section 2.1 or an assignment of this Agreement by the Operator in a manner contrary to the provisions of this Agreement. 

 

	8.10	Right to Assignment 

During the Disengagement Phase, subject to the rights, interests and encumbrances of any Lender to the Operator, the Owner shall have the
right, but not the obligation, to have assigned or novated to it, or partially assigned to it, as applicable, any contract (other than any employment contract) that is required for the provision of any Services under this Agreement. During the
Disengagement Phase the Owner shall have the first right but not the obligation to have assigned to it any permits, approvals, consents and licenses that are required for the provision of any Services under this Agreement. 

 

	8.11	Right to Make Offers 

During the Disengagement Phase, the Owner shall have the right, but not the obligation, to make offers of employment to any or all of the
employees providing Services at the Utility Plant provided that the term of any employment agreement will only commence 

 

 30 

 
upon the expiry of the Disengagement Phase to the extent that retention of that personnel is necessary to enable the Operator to meet its obligations during the Disengagement Phase. The Operator
will not prohibit or otherwise restrict (whether by way of a non-compete clause, restrictive covenant or otherwise) any employee who provides Services at the Utility Plant from accepting an offer of employment from the Owner in respect of a position
at the Utility Plant during or after the Disengagement Phase. 
 9.0 GENERAL OPERATOR OBLIGATIONS 

 

	9.1	Public Relations 

 The
Operator shall use its reasonable commercial efforts to maintain good relations with labour unions (both the Owner’s and the Operator’s), suppliers, customers, Subcontractors, Governmental Authorities and the local community. 

 

	9.2	Labour Negotiations 

 The
Operator will consult with the Owner in respect of its negotiations with any labour union having an interest in the Utility Plant and will advise the Owner of any new labour agreements or changes to existing labour agreements. Notwithstanding any
such consultation, the Operator will be solely responsible for its own labour matters. 
  

	9.3	No Liens 

 The Operator
expressly waives and releases any and all rights it has under Applicable Law (including without limitation any lien rights under the Builders’ Lien Act (Nova Scotia)) to place a Lien on the Utility Plant or any other property of the
Owner and shall undertake not to create or do any act, deed or thing which would result in the creation of any Lien on such property. 
  

	9.4	Access 

 The Operator
shall provide the Owner and its respective Representatives unimpeded access to the Common Systems, subject only to such reasonable access policies and procedures (which include Transport Canada marine safety, security and customs laws) that the
Operator generally has in place at the Operator’s Mill and advised to the Owner in writing from time to time. Owner shall have no obligation to pay for access to the Site or to contribute to the upkeep, maintenance or improvement of the roads
into the Facility including for snow removal, road maintenance or security access. 
  

	9.5	Contingency Plan 

 The
Operator will prepare a contingency plan to be provided to the Owner which sets out the steps the Operator will take to avoid and mitigate the effect of any reasonably foreseeable interruptions to the provision of the Services. 

 

 31 

	9.6	Procurement 

 The Operator
shall procure all goods and services required for the Services (including non-capital spare parts) on a Through-Life Basis, taking into account quality, reliability and safety considerations, and possible economies of scale. 

 

	9.7	Title to Assets 

 Title to
all fixtures at the Utility Plant and all personal property used for the Services at the Utility Plant provided or procured by the Operator pursuant to this Agreement for the Utility Plant will pass to the Owner immediately upon delivery of the
property to the Operator or the Utility Plant (whichever occurs first). In addition, title to any equipment, tools, materials and supplies paid for by the Owner in accordance with the Annual Budget or otherwise will pass to the Owner immediately
upon delivery of the materials to the Operator or the Utility Plant, or the payment for the relevant equipment, tools, materials or supplies (whichever occurs first). 
  

	9.8	Documentation 

  

	 	9.8.1	Documentation Standards 

All documentation to be prepared, updated or maintained by the Operator hereunder (including any Documentation, Plans, Forecasts,
manuals, procedures and budgets) shall be clear, concise and readily understandable by the intended audience. All documentation shall be prepared and delivered in such format and using such media as the Owner reasonably requests from time to time.
Any review by the Owner and/or Joint Operating Committee and any resulting requests for changes or acceptance of the documents shall not relieve the Operator of its obligations under this Agreement or any liability in respect thereof. 

 

	 	9.8.2	Keeping Documentation Up-to-Date 

Without limiting the requirements of Section 5.5, the Operator shall keep all Documentation up-to-date in all respects, including to
take into account any Improvements or Additions, and shall ensure that all updated Documentation is made available to the Owner on an extranet site acceptable to the Owner. 

 

	9.9	Modifications to the Facilities 

Subject always to the requirement to comply with Applicable Laws, the Operator will not make any material modifications to the Combined
Facility or substitutions to equipment or parts that will have a direct adverse effect on (i) the Utility Plant; or (ii) the Net Output of the Utility Plant; or (iii) the viability of the Project, without first providing the Owner
with reasonable Notice taking into account the nature of the modification or substitution and the urgency with which such modification or substitution is to be made. 

 

 32 

	9.10	Governmental Approvals 

The Operator shall apply for, and obtain and maintain, all Governmental Approvals which are required for the management, operations and
maintenance of the Facility unless otherwise agreed by the Parties acting reasonably. The Owner shall provide the Operator with such reasonable assistance to obtain and maintain such approvals as the Operator may require from time to time.

  

	9.11	Construction of the Utility Plant 

The Operator shall perform, or cause to be performed, its obligations under the Construction Contract. 

 

	9.12	Operation of Facility 

Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, the Operator shall operate the Utility Plant and each individual piece of equipment
within the Facility at all times within the set operating limits for such items. The relevant operating limits will be set by the Joint Operating Committee in order to comply with all manufacturer’s specifications, Good Utility Practice and
insurance requirements. If the Joint Operating Committee has not specified operating limits for the Utility Plant or any individual piece of equipment within the Facility, the Operator shall request such specification from the Joint Operating
Committee and, in the meantime, shall operate the relevant item in accordance with Good Utility Practice and in accordance with the relevant manufacturer’s specifications. 

10.0 ORGANIZATION 
  

	10.1	Organization 

 The
Operator shall provide an appropriate number of suitably certified, qualified, competent and experienced operations, maintenance, technical support, management and administrative personnel as may be required to perform the Services in accordance
with this Agreement. Such personnel shall be appropriately licensed as may be required under Applicable Laws. 
  

	10.2	Plant Manager, Supervisory Staff and Personnel 

  

	 	10.2.1	The Operator shall appoint and continually employ appropriately qualified, competent and experienced individuals for the plant manager, chief power engineer,
supervisory staff and operating staff positions at the Utility Plant. Owner reserves the right to review the qualifications of and approve or disapprove, acting reasonably and providing written grounds for any disapproval, the appointment of the
proposed plant manager, chief power engineer and all supervisory staff positions, and any successors or replacements thereof, provided that the Operator may refer any unreasonable disapproval of the Owner to dispute resolution under Article 21.

  

 33 

	 	10.2.2	The individual appointed as plant manager shall have full authority to act for and on behalf of Operator in connection with the operation and maintenance of the
Utility Plant and the performance of the Services. The Operator shall be bound by the written communications, directions, requests and decisions made by such plant manager within the scope of his/her authority. 

 

	10.3	Removal and Replacement 

  

	 	10.3.1	The Owner may, in its reasonable discretion, require Operator to remove and replace the plant manager and supervisory staff for poor performance or other grounds
by Notice stating the reasons for its dissatisfaction with that individual and its view that justifiable cause exists for the removal and replacement of that individual. If the Operator does not agree that there are grounds for the individual’s
removal, either Party may refer the issue to dispute resolution, in accordance with Article 21.0 . 

  

	 	10.3.2	Subject to the Owner’s approval rights under Section 10.2.1, the Operator shall replace any removed individual as soon as practicable with a suitably
certified, qualified, competent and experienced individual. 

  

	 	10.3.3	If a plant manager or member of the supervisory staff of the Utility Plant dies, retires, is dismissed, terminates employment or is otherwise prevented from
carrying out his/her duties, the Operator shall, subject to the Owner’s approval rights under Section 10.2.1, cause a suitably certified, qualified, competent and experienced replacement to be appointed promptly thereafter.

  

	10.4	Owner Personnel 

 The
Owner, in its sole discretion and at its expense, may provide one or more professional personnel to work in the Utility Plant and also to be on Site during the Transition Phase. The Owner intends to assign the Owner’s Representative to the
Utility Plant and/or Site for the purposes of observing the performance of the Services and compliance with this Agreement. The intention is not to have the Owner’s Representative perform any of the Services. However, to the extent that any of
Owner’s personnel provide Services at the request of the Operator, such personnel will be under the direction of the Operator and the Operator will continue to be solely responsible for the provision of the Services. 

11.0 JOINT OPERATING COMMITTEE 
  

	11.1	Appointment 

 Within
thirty (30) days after the execution of this Agreement, the Parties shall appoint a Joint Operating Committee (“Joint Operating Committee”) consisting of one (1) representative and one (1) alternate for each Party,
who may be changed from time to time upon reasonable Notice. The size of the Joint Operating Committee may be increased or decreased at any time with the consent of each of the Parties, provided

  

 34 

 
however that all times the Joint Operating Committee shall consist of an even number of members, one half of which shall be appointed by the Owner and one half of which shall be appointed by the
Operator. The Owner shall be entitled to appoint the chairperson of the Joint Operating Committee from among the Joint Operating Committee’s members. 
  

	11.2	Regular Meetings 

 The
Joint Operating Committee shall meet at least once each calendar quarter. Regular quarterly meetings of the Joint Operating Committee shall be called by the chairman of the Joint Operating Committee on not less than twenty (20) days’
Notice. Any member may reasonably request the chairman of the Joint Operating Committee to call a meeting of the Joint Operating Committee at any other time and the chairman will call such a meeting provided that not less than five (5) Business
Days’ Notice shall be given of any such meeting and provided that no new items may be added to the agenda that is circulated with the Notice unless all of the members of the Joint Operating Committee are present at the meeting. Unless agreed
otherwise by all of the members, all meetings of the Joint Operating Committee shall be held at the Utility Plant. Any action which under any provision of this Agreement is to be taken by the Joint Operating Committee may be taken (x) at a
meeting of the Joint Operating Committee held at such place and time, on such terms (including telephone meetings at which all members participating can hear each other) and after such Notice (unless waived before or after the meeting) as the Joint
Operating Committee may determine, or (y) without a meeting by written resolution signed by the required number of members necessary to take such action. 
  

	11.3	Voting 

 Except as may be
otherwise provided in this Agreement, all decisions of the Joint Operating Committee shall require a unanimous vote in favour of the decision. If the Joint Operating Committee is unable to agree on any matter to be determined by it under this
Agreement, such matter shall be resolved in accordance with Article 21. Notwithstanding any rule of procedure to the contrary, the chairman at any meeting of the Joint Operating Committee shall not be entitled to a second, extra or casting vote in
the case of a tie vote at any such meeting. 
  

	11.4	Quorum 

 A quorum for
meetings of the Joint Operating Committee shall be all of the members then in the Joint Operating Committee. Each Party shall ensure that its member (or members if the number of members of the Joint Operating Committee is increased) of the Joint
Operating Committee is present at each meeting. If within one hour of the time appointed for a meeting of the Joint Operating Committee, a quorum is not present, the meeting shall stand adjourned to the same hour on the third Business Day next
following the date of the failed meeting at the same place and Notice shall be given to each member of the Joint Operating Committee of such adjourned meeting not more than twenty-four (24) hours after the time of the failed meeting.

  

 35 

	11.5	Responsibility 

 The Joint
Operating Committee shall be responsible for the matters set out in this Agreement requiring Joint Operating Committee approval as well as for monitoring the implementation of the Services, Plans and Agreed Procedures, as each may be amended from
time to time. The Joint Operating Committee will perform such other functions as may be identified in the Plans from time to time. 
 12.0
BUDGETING AND EXPENSES 
  

	12.1	Annual Budget 

 No later
than ninety (90) days prior to the commencement of each Operational Year the Operator will develop in consultation with the Owner’s Representative, an estimate of the Sustaining Capital required to maintain the Utility Plant and to meet
the Steam Benchmark in the next Operational Year and shall submit the Annual Budget to the Owner for review. The Annual Budget shall: 
  

	 	12.1.1	be prepared in accordance with the balance principle in section 12.9; 

 

	 	12.1.2	be prepared on a Through-Life Basis in respect of the Facility; 

  

	 	12.1.3	be itemized on a monthly cash flow basis; and 

  

	 	12.1.4	incorporate all proposed Budgeted Expenses. 

  

	12.2	Annual Budget Review 

Within thirty (30) days of the Owner’s receipt of a proposed Annual Budget, the Owner shall provide written comments to the
Operator with respect thereto and request any additions, changes or modifications to such Annual Budget, acting reasonably, which changes and modifications shall reflect the requirements of sections 12.1.1 to 12.1.3. All required and suggested
changes to the proposed Annual Budget shall be provided by the Owner to the Operator for its review and shall be made by the Operator within fifteen (15) days following Operator’s receipt of the comments on the proposed Annual Budget.
Owner and Operator shall use all reasonable efforts to reach agreement thereon by the date that is thirty (30) days prior to the applicable Operational Year. If the Owner and the Operator cannot agree as to the reasonableness of the
Owner’s requested changes, any dispute shall be resolved pursuant to Article 21.0 . 
  

	12.3	Budget Overruns 

 If, at
any time during the performance of the Services, the Operator reasonably anticipates that the aggregate costs for any Operational Year of Sustaining Capital may exceed the amount of Budgeted Expenses therefor, the Operator shall promptly advise the
Owner of such situation by Notice, and pursuant to Section 12.5, propose for the Owner’s approval any changes to the applicable Annual Budget which the Operator considers necessary. The Owner will act reasonably in considering any request.

  

 36 

	12.4	Limitations 

Notwithstanding the foregoing Section 12.3, the Owner will not bear any costs other than those Budgeted Expenses incurred in
accordance with the Annual Budget as it may be amended from time to time. The Operator shall have no authority, without the prior written approval of the Owner, to undertake any transaction or incur any expenditure in the name of, or on behalf of
the Owner. Any costs or expenses incurred by the Operator in connection with any such unapproved transaction shall be solely for the account of the Operator. 
  

	12.5	Revisions 

 At the request
of the Owner, the Operator shall update the applicable Annual Budget at such times as may be appropriate to reflect changes in assumptions made in its preparation which are desirable in the light of the performance of the Utility Plant or any other
material change in circumstance or in the assumptions used to develop such Annual Budget, such as Changes of Law. These updates shall be submitted to the Owner for its written approval. In addition, to reflect such changes the Operator may, at any
time, provide proposed revisions to any Annual Budget to the Owner for consideration. Unless otherwise specified by the Owner, such revisions shall become effective for purposes of this Agreement from the date of the Owner’s written approval
thereof (if approved). 
  

	12.6	Disputes Regarding Annual Budget 

If there is any dispute between the Operator and the Owner as to the form or content of any Annual Budget, or any amendments, changes or
revisions thereto, which the Parties fail to resolve within the time periods for resolution set forth in Section 12.2: 
  

	 	12.6.1	The Owner shall be entitled to direct the Operator to perform in accordance with the relevant Annual Budget concerning the matter in dispute in the form and
content desired by the Owner provided that the Operator is able to comply with all Applicable Laws and Good Utility Practice and there is no material adverse impact on the Operator’s Mill or its operations; and 

 

	 	12.6.2	To the extent the Operator’s ability to perform the Services in accordance with this Agreement is materially adversely affected as a result of the
Owner’s failure to approve the relevant Annual Budget (or any revision of modification thereto), the Operator shall not be held in breach of this Agreement, and shall not be liable to the Owner for any loss suffered or incurred by the Owner as
a consequence thereof; provided that (i) any such Damage is a direct result (whether solely or in part) of the Owner’s failure to approve such Annual Budget or any revision thereto, and (ii) the Operator uses reasonable commercial
efforts to comply with the requirements of this Agreement notwithstanding such dispute. 

  

	 	12.6.3	Any disputed item under this Section 12.6 shall be resolved pursuant to Article 21. 

 

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	12.7	Additional Capital Expenditures 

The Owner, or its Designee with the Owner’s consent, shall have the right to request the Operator to incur additional capital
expenditures beyond the total Budgeted Expenses for a Operational Year, as long as the Owner pays the associated cost. 
  

	12.8	Five-Year Forecast 

 In
conjunction with, but separate from, the preparation of the Annual Operating Plan and the Annual Budget for each Operational Year, Operator shall prepare a rolling five-year operation and maintenance plan and cost forecast (including Sustaining
Capital and recommended Improvements or Additions). 
  

	12.9	Balance Principle 

 The
Parties acknowledge that a failure by one Party to incur management, operating and maintenance expenses on the one hand and Sustaining Capital on the other can have a direct economic impact on the other Party. The Parties agree that the
following principle will be used to determine the balance between Sustaining Capital and management, operating and maintenance expenses: 
  

	 	12.9.1	the Operator agrees to incur such management, operating and maintenance expenses; 

 

	 	12.9.2	the Owner agrees to invest such Sustaining Capital in the Utility Plant; and 

 

	 	12.9.3	each Party agrees to invest such Sustaining Capital in respect of its own Common Systems, 

each as would reasonably be expected by a prudent operator of a co-generation utility plant owned and operated by a single entity, having
regard to Good Utility Practice. 
 13.0 CHANGE MANAGEMENT 

 

	13.1	Right to Make Changes 

The Owner, or its Designee with the Owner’s consent, shall have the right to request the Operator to make Changes, including changes
or modifications to any agreed Plan, the Annual Operating Budget, the Agreed Procedures, or to undertake additional activities not required by this Agreement or by Good Utility Practice. Either Party may request a Change to the extent required to
take into account a Change in Law. 
  

	13.2	Process 

 Any Change will
be made by way of a written change order issued and signed by the Owner. The Operator shall not undertake any such Change without receipt in advance of a change order or approval of a change order signed by the Owner. For greater certainty, any
termination of this Agreement or any Service by the Owner shall not require a change order, but shall otherwise be governed by the applicable provisions of this Agreement. 
  

 38 

	13.3	Obligation to Make Changes 

The Operator must not directly or indirectly reject or refuse a Change and shall make all Changes requested by the Owner, provided that
the Owner fully compensates the Operator for any incremental costs it incurs and that such change is consistent with Good Utility Practice and conforms with Applicable Laws. Indirect grounds for refusing to provide, or rejecting, a Change include
imposing unreasonable conditions for, or specifying any unreasonable impact or consequences of, undertaking the Change. It is not unreasonable for the Operator to consider material effects on the Operator’s Mill when determining the cost impact
of a Change. Any disputed Change that cannot be resolved within the terms of the foregoing paragraph shall be resolved pursuant to Article 21. 
  

	13.4	Change in Law 

 In the
event of a Change in Law, the Parties shall cooperate to make such changes as will keep the Parties on substantially the same economic terms as contained herein. 

14.0 ENVIRONMENT 
  

	14.1	Certification 

 The Owner
will obtain Certification for the Utility Plant as soon as reasonably practicable after the commencement of the Operation Phase. The Operator shall provide the Owner with all assistance reasonably required in connection with obtaining such
Certification. The Operator must operate the Utility Plant in a manner consistent with the Certification requirements in order to ensure that the Certification remains in full force and effect. 

 

	14.2	Renewable Energy Credits 

To the extent the Operator has, or may have, any right, title or interest in and to any Emissions Reductions and Renewable Energy Credits
attributable to the Utility Plant (including all steam), the Operator hereby assigns, unconditionally and absolutely, all such right, title and interest free and clear of any and all Liens to the Owner, other than: 

 

	 	14.2.1	any credits similar to Emissions Reductions and Renewable Energy Credits which are attributable to the elimination or reduction of fossil fuel usage at the
Operator’s Mill as compared to the Operator’s Mill prior to the Commercial Operation Date, which shall be for the benefit of the Operator and shall not be or be deemed to be assigned hereunder; and 

 

	 	14.2.2	any Emissions Reductions and Renewable Energy Credits arising directly pursuant to the Crown Lease Consent attributable to the Facility, with respect to which
the Parties have entered into a separate agreement assigning such Emissions Reductions and Renewable Energy Credits to the Owner and setting out the restrictions required under section 13(b) of the Crown Lease Consent. 

 

 39 

 Unless requested by the Owner, the Operator shall not participate in any voluntary program
with respect to Emission Reductions or Renewable Energy Credits attributable to the Utility Plant (other than the excepted credits) without the prior written consent of the Owner. 

 

	14.3	Fuel 

 The Operator shall
only use Fuel complying with the specifications set out in Schedule 8, for the creation of Energy at the Utility Plant. 
  

	14.4	Hazardous Materials 

 The
Operator shall be responsible, at its expense, to identify and properly manage, contain, handle, store, apply, install, use, maintain, repair, replace, clean-up, remediate, remove and dispose of any Hazardous Materials generated by the Combined
Facility,. The Operator shall prepare and provide the Owner with all Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDS) associated with the Utility Plant. 

15.0 RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF OWNER 
  

	15.1	General 

 Owner shall
furnish to the Operator, at the Owner’s sole cost and expense, the information, services, materials and other items described below in the other provisions of this Article 15.0 , all such items to be made available at such times and in such
manner as may be reasonably required by the Operator so as not to unreasonably hinder the expeditious and orderly performance of the Services. 
  

	15.2	Modifications to the Utility Plant 

Subject always to the obligation to comply with Applicable Laws and Good Utility Practice, the Owner will not make or require the Operator
to make any modifications to the Utility Plant that will have a direct material adverse effect on (i) the Operator’s ability to perform the Services hereunder; (ii) on the overall operation of the Facility; or (iii) on the
Operator’s Mill or its operation. Subject always to the requirement to comply with Applicable Laws and Good Utility Practice, the Owner will not make any material modifications to the Utility Plant without first providing the Operator with
reasonable Notice taking into account the nature of the modification and the urgency with which such modification is to be made. 
  

	15.3	Access to Utility Plant 

Owner shall provide the Operator and each of its Representatives access to the Utility Plant in accordance with its security, access,
health and safety policies then in effect. Owner shall reasonably promptly after the execution of this Agreement provide the Operator with the Owner’s then current security, access, health and safety policies, and shall provide the Operator any
revisions to such documents reasonably promptly following the implementation of any such revisions. 
  

 40 

	15.4	Inspection 

 The Owner may
at any time during the Term and following its expiry or termination, review, audit and inspect the Facility and/or the Site, the operation and maintenance thereof and the Operator’s performance of the Services and its obligations hereunder.
Owner, and the Owner’s Representative, shall have the right to make unaccounted inspections of the Utility Plant and the Site at any time; provided that such inspections do not materially interfere with the performance by the Operator of the
Services hereunder. All Persons, to whom access to the Site is granted, shall observe the Operator’s safety policies and procedures, including those related to the use of appropriate personal protection equipment. 

 

	15.5	Governmental Approvals 

Owner shall apply for, and obtain and maintain, all Governmental Approvals which are required under Applicable Law to be obtained and
maintained by Owner to perform its obligations under this Agreement but excluding those required to be obtained and maintained by the Operator. Operator shall provide the Owner with such reasonable assistance to obtain and maintain such approvals as
the Owner may require from time to time. 
  

	15.6	Owner’s Representative and Agents 

Owner shall notify the Operator of the appointment of a representative (the “Owner’s Representative”) who shall be
authorized and empowered to act for and on behalf of the Owner on certain matters concerning the day-to-day operation of the Utility Plant. Owner shall deliver Notice to the Operator of the appointment of the Owner’s Representative, which
Notice shall clearly state the scope of such representative’s responsibilities. In all such matters, the Owner shall be bound by the written communications, directions, requests and decisions made by Owner’s Representative within the scope
of such representative’s authority. 
  

	15.7	Owner’s Right to Perform Services 

If the Operator at any time fails to perform any act on its part to be performed under this Agreement, then the Owner may, but shall not
be under any obligation to, and without further notice or demand upon the Operator (other than as set out further below) and without waiving or releasing the Operator from any of its obligations hereunder, perform any act on the Operator’s
part. Unless immediate action is required in order to avoid harm to any Person or to the Owner’s interest in the Site, the Utility Plant, any Energy, or any Common System, the Owner shall give at least five Business Days’ prior Notice to
the Operator and the Operator shall be entitled during such period to cure or produce a plan (acceptable to the Owner, acting reasonably) to cure its failure to perform. If the Owner has so accepted a plan to cure, the Operator shall diligently and
in a timely fashion cure its failure to perform in accordance with such plan. In any event, the Owner shall give Notice to the Operator at the time of the performance of any act on behalf of the Operator. All sums paid by the Owner pursuant to this
Section 15.7 and reasonably necessary incidental costs and expenses paid by the Owner in connection with any such act, including the reasonable costs and expenses of legal counsel, shall be paid to the

  

 41 

 
Owner by the Operator within 35 days of demand for such payment. The Operator acknowledges that the Owner’s actions under this Section 15.7 are designed to mitigate the Owner’s
loss and that taking any such steps will not prevent the Owner from pursuing any other right or remedy under this Agreement or otherwise at law. 

15.8 GIA 
 The Owner
shall enter into the GIA and will provide a final version of the GIA to the Operator prior to the Commercial Operation Date and upon the agreement of any amendments to the GIA from time to time. 

16.0 PAYMENTS 
  

	16.1	Currency of Payments 

  

	 	16.1.1	All payments hereunder shall be made in Canadian Dollars. 

  

	 	16.1.2	All Budgeted Expenses incurred by the Operator on behalf of the Owner pursuant to this Agreement shall be denominated in Canadian Dollars and the Annual Budgets,
Plans, billing report and estimates required to be prepared pursuant to this Agreement shall reflect this currency. 

  

	16.2	Billing and Payments 

 All
payments required under this Agreement shall be made no later than the date required by this Agreement, or if no date is specifically required, within thirty-five (35) days of receipt by the Party being charged of an invoice or bill from the
other Party. Each Party will make payments by wire transfer, or by other mutually agreeable method(s), to the account designated by the other Party. Any amounts, both principal and interest, not paid by the due date will be deemed delinquent and
will accrue interest at the Interest Rate, such interest to be calculated from the due date to the date the unpaid amount is paid in full. 
  

	16.3	Disputes and Adjustments of Invoices 

The Owner, may in good faith, challenge the correctness of any invoice rendered by the Operator under the Agreement, and the Operator may
adjust any invoice rendered for any arithmetic, computational or other error, within twelve (12) months of the date the invoice was rendered. In the event the Owner challenges an invoice or portion thereof, or any other claim or adjustment
arising hereunder, is challenged, or the Operator adjusts any invoice, payment of the invoice in full shall be made when due by the Owner, with payment of the disputed amount only to be made to an escrow account pending resolution of such good faith
dispute, and the Owner shall give Notice of the objection as to the disputed portion to the Operator at the same time. Any billing challenge or billing adjustment shall be in writing and shall state the specific basis for the challenge or
adjustment. If it is determined that an adjustment to the invoice is appropriate, then such payment shall be made within five (5) Business Days of such determination along with interest accrued on such amount in the escrow account from the due
date until the date paid, and any excess amount deposited in the escrow account by the Owner shall be 
  

 42 

 
returned to the Operator together with any accrued interest. An invoice rendered under the Agreement shall be binding on the Owner and the Operator unless challenged by the Owner or adjusted by
the Operator in accordance with this subsection within twelve (12) months after the invoice is rendered. 
  

	16.4	Set-Offs 

  

	 	16.4.1	Owner shall have the right to set-off against amounts payable by the Owner to the Operator as set out in Section 5.6 of this Agreement as well as
(a) any amount previously paid by the Owner to or on behalf of the Operator, which pursuant to any audit is determined to be an overpayment by the Owner to the Operator; (b) any fine or penalty imposed by any Governmental Authority which
is incurred by the Operator except to the extent resulting directly from the acts or omissions of the Owner and which, if unpaid, could reasonably be expected to result in a Lien on Utility Plant or otherwise have a Material Adverse Effect, and
which is paid by Owner on Operator’s behalf; (c) any Liquidated Damages which have not been paid by the Operator within the required time period; and (d) any other amounts due and owing from the Operator to the Owner under this
Agreement. Notwithstanding any other provision hereof to the contrary, the Operator shall be liable for and shall pay all fines or penalties assessed against it, except to the extent such fines or penalties result directly from the acts or omissions
of the Owner, and the Operator shall only be entitled to pay any such fine or penalty on behalf of the Owner after providing the Owner five (5) Business Days’ Notice that it intends to pay such fine or penalty if the Owner either does not:
i) make such payment; or ii) advise the Operator it is in good faith contesting the requirement to pay such fine or penalty. 

  

	 	16.4.2	The Operator shall have the right to set-off amounts payable to the Operator by the Owner under this Agreement against amounts payable to the Owner by the
Operator under this Agreement. 

  

	16.5	Due Date Adjustment 

 If
the due date for payment of any amount hereunder falls on a day which is not a Business Day, then the due date shall be the first Business Day to occur immediately following such date. 

17.0 RECORDS AND REPORTING 
  

	17.1	Record Keeping Obligations 

The Operator shall keep complete and accurate records and all other data required for the purpose of proper administration of the Utility
Plant and, without limitation, the Operator shall keep all records and other documentary evidence of any production incentives and payments hereunder and which may be necessary to establish, substantiate or maintain any claim or title of the Owner
to Emissions Reductions and Renewable Energy Credits. All such records and Documentation shall be maintained as required by Applicable Law and Good Utility Practice but for no less than seven (7) years after the creation of the record or data.

  

 43 

	17.2	Security of Records 

 All
records and Documentation shall be stored and archived by the Operator in accordance with Good Utility Practice and in a manner which reasonably ensures their continued safety from destruction or loss and their confidentiality. Where records or
Documentation are kept in electronic form, they must be backed-up and copied in accordance with Good Utility Practice for the retention and safety of records of such nature. 

 

	17.3	General Reporting 

 The
Operator will provide in a timely manner to the Owner and its Designee any and all reports reasonably necessary to fulfill regulatory, legal, government relations, insurance or other similar requirements. 

 

	17.4	Incident Reports 

 The
Operator will promptly, and in accordance with Applicable Law, inform the Owner and its Designee of any existing or potential permit violations or incidents, operating deficiencies or other conditions which may impede operation of the Utility Plant,
materially add to cost or result in potential legal claims or actions. Such notification may be either written or oral, with length and content as reasonably requested by the Owner, or its Designee. 

 

	17.5	Regular, Periodic Reports 

The Operator shall furnish to the Owner in writing a report as soon as available but in no event more than thirty (30) days after the
end of each month of each Operational Year, in the form of Exhibit A attached hereto or such other form of report that may be agreed from time to time, a summary of such month’s operations and a summary of the Operational Year-to-date
operations compared to the relevant Annual Budget and Forecasts delivered pursuant to this Agreement, including information in reasonable detail concerning (i) the Utility Plant’s production and availability during such period;
(ii) the operating costs during such period; (iii) capital expenditures during such period; and (iv) any material developments during such period in the operations of the Facility, including material technical problems, discovery of
any material defects in the physical plant and equipment of the Facility , environmental issues, material interruptions to operation of the Utility Plant, and material disputes with any Governmental Authority (including tax authorities) or material
labour difficulties related to the Project. 
  

	17.6	Notification 

 Upon
obtaining knowledge thereof, a Party shall deliver to the other Party each of the following within the respective time period specified for any of the following matters concerning or which may affect the Utility Plant, Services or the Project:

  

	 	(a)	litigation, claim, dispute, action or proceeding by any Person which is either pending or threatened, Notice to be delivered within two (2) Business Days;

  

 44 

	 	(b)	refusal, or bona fide threat of refusal, to grant, renew, or extend, or any pending litigation, claim, dispute, action or proceeding that might affect the granting,
renewal or extension of any relevant Governmental Approval, Notice to be delivered within two (2) Business Days; 

  

	 	(c)	Emergency, Notice to be delivered within two (2) hours; 

  

	 	(d)	outage, (other than a Scheduled Outage), Notice to be delivered within four (4) hours; 

 

	 	(e)	any acceleration, postponement or extension of a Scheduled Outage, Notice to be delivered within one (1) Business Day; 

 

	 	(f)	death or serious injury to any individual, Notice to be delivered as soon as practicable upon the occurrence of such an incident, but in any event no later than four
(4) hours after the incident; 

  

	 	(g)	lost time injury to any individual, Notice to be delivered within one (1) Business Day; 

 

	 	(h)	notice from any Governmental Authority of any inspection by such Governmental Authority of the Utility Plant or the Site, Notice to be delivered within one
(1) Business Day, or, if such inspection is made without notice from such Governmental Authority, as soon as possible upon the occurrence of such inspection; 

 

	 	(i)	irreconcilable and material conflict between or among any documents that are material to the Project that comes to the attention of a Party in its normal course of
business, Notice to be delivered as soon as practicable; 

  

	 	(j)	other event or circumstance that reasonably could be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect, which events or circumstances shall include industrial disputes,
material violation of any environmental or other Applicable Law, or material damage to any of the major pieces of equipment comprising the Utility Plant, Notice to be delivered within one (1) Business Day; and 

 

	 	(k)	in respect of the Operator, the Operator’s knowledge of any facts or circumstances that suggest a likely sale, shut-down, closure (temporary or otherwise) or
disruption to the Operator’s Mill or the Combined Facility generally, within two (2) Business Days of the Operator becoming aware of such facts or circumstances. 

 

	17.7	Other Requested Information 

Throughout the Term, the Parties shall negotiate, discuss and work together and exchange and provide each other with such information as
they can reasonably provide and which 
  

 45 

 
would or might assist the other in performing its obligations under this Agreement or the Owner in satisfying any of its obligations to third parties including any Government Authority. In
particular, the Operator shall keep the Owner reasonably informed of matters relating to the Combined Facility which are associated with the Utility Plant, the business of the Operator relating to the Facility, and the Services, and shall provide
the Owner with the relevant documentation to the extent that such information and documentation is reasonably available to the Operator and provision thereof may occur without material additional work, cost or financial impact to the Operator.

  

	17.8	Audit 

 Throughout the
Term and for a period of two (2) years following the Term, the Owner shall have the right to perform an audit, including a review of books and records, metering equipment and interviewing relevant personnel during business hours to confirm the
Operator’s Actual Cost of Fuel as well as the accuracy of all metering obligations under this Agreement; provided that with respect to any Fuel audit, such audit shall be carried out by a qualified third party who shall keep confidential all
information it receives in the course of such audit and shall disclose only the confirmation or lack of confirmation described in this section. 

18.0 SUBCONTRACTORS 
  

	18.1	Consent 

 The Operator may
not subcontract Services, other than Services consisting of the supply of Fuel, which aggregate $100,000 or greater per Operational Year to any single non-Affiliate Subcontractor, or $250,000 in total to all non-Affiliate Subcontractors in an
Operational Year, without prior written consent of the Owner, which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld. 
  

	18.2	Subcontracts 

 Each
subcontract with a Subcontractor, other than Fuel subcontracts, must contain terms that are consistent with this Agreement and not in any way prejudicial to the Owner. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, the Operator will use
commercially reasonable efforts to ensure that each such subcontract contains the following terms, expressly for the benefit of, and enforceable by, the Owner: 
  

	 	18.2.1	Subcontractor expressly waives and releases any and all rights it has under Applicable Law (including without limitation any lien rights under the
Builders’ Lien Act (Nova Scotia)) to place a Lien on the Utility Plant or any other property of the Owner and shall undertake not to create or do any act, deed or thing which would result in the creation of any Lien on such property;

  

	 	18.2.2	Subcontractor expressly waives the right to claim damages of any kind or nature whatsoever against the Owner arising out of, or in connection with, their
subcontract with the Operator or their provision of any of the Services; 

  

 46 

	 	18.2.3	Subcontractor agrees to a transfer or assignment of its subcontract, whether by way of novation or otherwise, from the Operator to the Owner upon notice by the
Operator to such Subcontractor; and 

  

	 	18.2.4	Subcontractor agrees to include in each of its own subcontracts with any sub-subcontractors the terms of this Section 18.2 to the Owner’s benefit.

 In the event the Operator is unable to negotiate a subcontract including the above listed terms for a
commercially reasonable price notwithstanding commercially reasonable efforts to do so, the Operator may seek the consent of the Joint Operating Committee and the Joint Operating Committee shall direct the Operator to either: (a) enter into its
negotiated form of contract as shown to the Joint Operating Committee or (b) approve the additional costs directly arising from the requirement for the above clauses. 

 

	18.3	Responsibility 

 In any
case, the Operator is solely responsible to the Owner for the management and operations of the Utility Plant, and subcontracting the Services or any portion thereof to an affiliate or a non-Affiliate Subcontractor shall not relieve the Operator of
any of its duties, liabilities or obligations under this Agreement. The Operator shall remain directly liable to the Owner for the performance of such subcontracted Services as if such services had been performed directly by the Operator and not by
an Affiliate or a non-Affiliate Subcontractor. 
 19.0 INSURANCE 

 

	19.1	Operator’s Insurance 

Unless the Owner in writing otherwise consents, the Operator will obtain all insurance (the “Insurance”) as follows:

  

	 	(a)	Property Insurance – The Operator will insure the Property as follows: 

 

	 	(i)	for the purposes of this Section 19.1 the “Property” means the entire property associated with the Facility including property of every description and
kind and which is located within the Facility and all buildings, machinery, equipment, and other structures located in the Facility or that is part of the Facility, and anything in the nature of an improvement; 

 

	 	(ii)	the insurance of the Property will be all risk property insurance and broad comprehensive boiler and machinery insurance (herein called the “All Risk
Insurance” and “Machinery Insurance” respectively, and collectively the “Property Insurance”); 

  

	 	(iii)	All Risk Insurance that will include the perils of fire, inherent explosion, explosion due to ignition, smoke, leakage of protective equipment, impact of aircraft,
vessels and vehicles, riot, vandalism, malicious acts, earthquake, flood, tempest, windstorm, cyclone, tornado and hail and against such additional perils covered by policies normally in use from time to time for property like the Property;

  

 47 

	 	(iv)	the All Risk Insurance will be in an amount which is not less than the full replacement cost of the Property, and subject to a deductible of not more than $5,000,000
for any one loss or occurrence; 

  

	 	(v)	the Machinery Insurance will be on a repair and replacement basis with combined limits for each accident in an amount not less than the full replacement cost of the
Property; and 

  

	 	(vi)	the Property Insurance will contain a waiver of any subrogation rights that the insurers may have against the Owner or those for whom the Owner is in law responsible.

  

	 	(b)	Liability Insurance – The Operator will obtain comprehensive general liability insurance (the “Liability Insurance”) as follows:

  

	 	(i)	the Liability Insurance will be in an amount of not less than $50 million primary and excess inclusive limits and subject to a deductible of not more than $2,000,000
for any one loss or occurrence for bodily injury, death or damage to property (including loss of use or occupation); 

  

	 	(ii)	the Liability Insurance will cover legal liability with respect to claims and damages for injury to or death of persons or damage to property which may be claimed to
have occurred on the Site and will include broad form property, occurrence property, owner’s protective, products, completed operations, personal injury, contingent employer’s, non-owned automobile, blanket contractual liability coverage,
and sudden and accidental pollution liability coverage; 

  

	 	(iii)	the Liability Insurance will provide cross liability coverage and waiver of subrogation for each named insured for liability to every other named insured as if each
named insured were insured under a separate policy. 

  

	 	(c)	Automobile Insurance – The Operator will obtain automobile liability insurance covering all licensed vehicles used by or on behalf of the Operator on the
Site with inclusive limits of not less than $2 million and subject to a deductible for bodily injury, death or damage to or loss of property of not more than $500,000 per accident, and with third party liability coverage and accident benefits.

  

	 	(d)	Pollution Insurance – The Operator will during the term obtain environmental damage and impairment insurance with limits not less than $5,000,000 (sudden
and accidental pollution, not gradual pollution cover) and will have the Owner named as an insured party with cross-liability coverage and waiver of subrogation against the Owner. 

 

 48 

	 	(e)	All the Insurance, 

  

	 	(i)	will name the Owner, its directors, officers and employees as loss payee with respect to Property Insurance and as additional insured with respect to Liability
Insurance; 

  

	 	(ii)	will not be subject to invalidation (as regards the interest of the Owner, its directors, officers and employees), by reason of any breach or violation of any
warranties, representations, declarations or conditions; 

  

	 	(iii)	will be at the Operator’s expense and will be primary, non-contributing with, and not excess of, any other insurance available to the Owner;

  

	 	(iv)	will be placed with financially responsible insurers authorized to do business in Nova Scotia; and 

 

	 	(v)	will provide for 60 days’ prior notice to the Owner by mail (prepaid, registered, and return receipt requested) in the event of cancellation or material change
that reduces or restricts the Insurance 

  

	 	(f)	The Operator, 

  

	 	(i)	will maintain the Insurance in full force and effect at all times during the term of this Agreement and at all other times during which the Operator is in occupation of
the Property; 

  

	 	(ii)	will notify the Owner promptly upon becoming aware of any fact or circumstance that could lead to the cancellation or lapsing of the Insurance and, to the extent
commercially reasonable and attainable, will require any financing party having a secured interest in any policy of Insurance to notify NSPI of any possible cancellation or lapsing of any of the Insurance; and 

 

	 	(iii)	will provide the Owner with copies of all policies of the Insurance and renewals therof. 

 

	 	(g)	The Operator acknowledges that, 

  

	 	(i)	its covenant to provide the Insurance does not in any way limit or satisfy any other covenant or agreement of the Operator herein including, but not limited to,
indemnification provisions; and 

  

	 	(ii)	The Owner’s review or approval of the form of, or a certificate of, the Insurance will not in any way limit or satisfy the Operator’s covenant to obtain and
maintain the Insurance. 

  

	 	(h)	 If the Property or a portion of the Property is damaged by fire or otherwise and the Property is lost, damaged, or destroyed, either in whole or in
part, as a result of the occurrence of any peril for which the Property is insured or required to be 

 

 49 

	 	
insured by the Operator, then the Operator shall use the proceeds of the Property Insurance to rebuild, repair and restore the Property subject to the approval of the Owner provided that the
Owner shall not withhold its approval to rebuild, repair and restore those elements of the Utility Plant required to provide the Operator with steam and Shared Services if the Operator requests the rebuilding, repairing and restoring of those
elements. The Operator indemnifies the Owner Indemnified Parties for any and all Damages arising out of a failure to comply with this clause. 

  

	 	(i)	In the event of a loss that is covered by Property Insurance, each Party will pay an equal share of the deductible applicable to the loss unless the loss is the subject
of an indemnity herein, in which case the indemnifying Party will be responsible for the whole of the deductible. 

  

	 	(j)	The Parties acknowledge that notwithstanding the foregoing, they may agree that the Property Insurance shall be carried by the Owner, and in such event the affected
provisions of this Agreement shall be adjusted accordingly. 

 20.0 INDEMNITY AND LIABILITY 

 

	20.1	Limitation on Liability 

Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in this Agreement: 

 

	 	20.1.1	Except as set forth in Section 20.1.3, the total aggregate liability of the Operator to the Owner and its Affiliates under this Agreement with respect to
any Operational Year (including Liquidated Damages) shall be equal to $15 Million. 

  

	 	20.1.2	Except as set forth in Section 20.1.3, the total aggregate liability of the Owner to the Operator and its Affiliates under this Agreement with respect to
any Operational Year shall be equal to $2 Million. 

  

	 	20.1.3	The limitation of liability set forth in Sections 20.1.1 and 20.1.2 and the exclusions of liability set forth in Section 20.1.4 shall not limit either
Parties’ liability for, or be calculated to include payments made for, (i) any gross negligence or wilful misconduct of such Party, (ii) any indemnification obligations of such Party, (iii) in respect of the Owner, the
Owner’s obligation to pay the Services Rate hereunder ; or (iv) in respect of each Party, that Party’s obligation to expend Sustaining Capital hereunder. 

 

	 	20.1.4	Except as set forth in Section 20.1.3, with respect to third-party claims or otherwise set out in this Agreement, no Party shall be liable to the other
Party for any indirect, incidental, consequential, exemplary or punitive damages, irrespective of the causes thereof, including fault or negligence. 

 

 50 

	20.2	Liability Under the Construction Contract 

To the extent that the Owner recovers for any Damages under the Construction Contract from the Operator, including by way of liquidated
damages, the Owner cannot recover the same Damages in respect of the same loss or damage under this Agreement. 
  

	20.3	Indemnities 

  

	 	20.3.1	General Indemnities 

Owner shall fully indemnify, hold harmless and defend the Operator and each of its Affiliates, and the directors, officers, agents,
employees, successors and assigns of each of them (the “Operator Indemnified Parties”), from and against any and all Damages directly or indirectly arising out of, resulting from or related to third-party claims in respect of any damage to
or destruction of property of, or death of or bodily injury to, any Person, (whether such person is an employee of an Operator Indemnified Party, Owner or any Subcontractor, or is a Person unaffiliated with the Project) but only to the extent caused
by or contributed to by the Owner’s fault, tortuous act, negligence or strict liability in the performance of the Owner’s obligations hereunder or by any breach by the Owner of its obligations hereunder, and in any event excluding damages
to the extent attributable to any matters covered by Operator’s indemnity under Section 20.3.2. Owner’s indemnity under this Section 20.3.1 is for the exclusive benefit of Operator Indemnified Parties and in no event shall inure
to the benefit of any other Person. Any indemnification payable with respect to a claim by an Operator Indemnified Party hereunder shall be net of any insurance proceeds paid to such Person under its or the Owner’s insurance policies with
respect to the circumstances giving rise to the Owner’s indemnification of such Person hereunder. 
  

	 	20.3.2	     

Operator shall fully indemnify, hold harmless and defend the Owner and each of its Affiliates, and the directors, officers, agents,
employees, successors and assigns of each of them (the “Owner Indemnified Parties”), from and against any and all Damages directly or indirectly arising out of, resulting from or related to third party claims in respect of any damage to or
destruction of property of, or death of or bodily injury to, any Person (whether such person is an employee of an Owner Indemnified Party, Operator or any Subcontractor, or is a Person unaffiliated with the Project), and claims for wages or other
costs due by the Operator or any Subcontractor, but in each case only to the extent caused or contributed to by the Operator’s fault, tortuous act, negligence or strict liability in the performance of the Operator’s obligations hereunder
or by any breach by the Operator of its obligations hereunder, and in any event excluding damages to the extent attributable to any matters covered by Owner’s indemnity under Section 20.3.1. Operator’s indemnity under this
Section 20.3.2 is for the exclusive benefit of the Owner Indemnified Parties and in no event shall inure to the benefit of any other Person. Any indemnification payable with respect to a claim by an Owner Indemnified Party hereunder shall be
net of any insurance proceeds paid to 
  

 51 

 
such Person under its or the Operator’s insurance policies with respect to the circumstances giving rise to the Operator’s indemnification of such Person hereunder. 

 

	 	20.3.3	Operator Indemnities 

Operator shall fully indemnify each of the Owner Indemnified Parties, from and against any and all Damages directly or indirectly arising
out of, resulting from or related to: 
  

	 	(i)	damage to the Purchased Assets between the Effective Date and the Commercial Operation Date, except excluding damage to the Purchased Assets to the extent attributable
to the Owner Indemnified Parties or their contractors (but not the Operator); 

  

	 	(ii)	all liabilities for the payment of the amount of any Lien claimed against the property of the Owner or other property in the Owner’s possession directly related to
the Project by the Operator, any Subcontractors, employees and/or agents of the Operator and the Operator shall promptly vacate any such Lien at its sole expense; 

 

	 	(iii)	infringement or alleged infringement of any intellectual property or other proprietary right based upon, or arising from, the Services including design and engineering,
or the materials and equipment designed or incorporated into the Utility Plant by the Operator its Subcontractors or vendors, except to the extent that the Damages arise as a result of the Owner directing the Operator to use a specific design or
specific materials; 

  

	 	(iv)	the failure of the Operator to comply with any Applicable Laws in the provision of the Services or otherwise in connection with this Agreement;

  

	 	(v)	any claim that any personnel of the Operator (including its Subcontractors) is an employee of the Owner; and 

 

	 	(vi)	the Release of any Hazardous Material from the Combined Facility, except to the extent that the Damages arise from the acts or omission of the Owner Indemnified Parties
or their contractors (but not the Operator). 

  

 52 

	20.4	Liquidated Damages 

 The
Parties acknowledge and agree that, in the circumstances where Liquidated Damages are payable by the Operator, the Owner will suffer financial damage in such circumstances and that such financial damage will be proximate and substantial, but the
actual amount thereof will be very difficult, if not impossible to ascertain, and, accordingly, the amount, or method of determining the amount, of the Liquidated Damages is a genuine pre-estimate, or a methodology for arriving at a genuine
pre-estimate, of the amount of such financial damage and shall not be considered penal. 
 21.0 DISPUTE RESOLUTION 

 

	21.1	Step Negotiation 

 In the
event of a dispute regarding this Agreement, the Parties shall attempt to resolve the dispute amicably and promptly by appointing a senior executive of each Party to attempt to mutually agree upon a resolution. Either Party may give the other Party
Notice of any dispute or claim. Within ten (10) days after delivery of said Notice, the executives will meet at a mutually acceptable time and place and thereafter as often as they reasonably deem necessary to exchange information and attempt
to resolve the dispute or claim within thirty (30) days. If the two senior executives cannot reach a resolution, the dispute may be set for arbitration as described herein. 

 

	21.2	Third Party Technical Expert 

In the event of a dispute arising between the Parties as to the subject matter of this Agreement that cannot be resolved between them, the
Parties agree to submit the dispute to binding arbitration, unless the dispute is of a technical or engineering nature and the Parties have agreed to a technical dispute mechanism, including appointing a technical expert, in which case the dispute
will be referred to the technical expert in accordance with the procedure determined by the Parties pursuant to section 21.5. 
  

	21.3	Arbitration 

 Arbitration
will be carried out, pursuant to the terms of the Commercial Arbitration Act (Nova Scotia). In particular, the Parties agree to utilize the arbitration procedure attached as Schedule “A” to the Commercial Arbitration Act (Nova Scotia) in
the conduct of the arbitration. The Party wishing to have any dispute submitted to arbitration (the “Claimant”) shall give Notice to the other party (the “Respondent”) specifying the particulars of any issue in dispute and
proposing the name of the individual it wishes to be the single arbitrator. Within fifteen (15) days thereafter, the Respondent shall give Notice to the Claimant advising whether the Respondent accepts the arbitrator proposed by the Claimant.
If Notice is not given within the fifteen (15) day period, the Respondent shall be deemed to have accepted the arbitrator proposed by the Claimant. In the event that the Parties can not agree on a single arbitrator within the fifteen
(15) day period, the arbitrator shall be selected in accordance with the Commercial Arbitration Act (Nova Scotia). No such arbitrator shall have previously been employed by either Party and shall not have a direct or indirect interest in either
Party or the subject matter of the arbitration. The cost of the arbitration (excluding a Party’s legal fees and disbursements) shall, unless 

 

 53 

 
otherwise ordered by the arbitrator or the panel, be borne equally by the Parties. The decision of the arbitrator shall be final and binding and the beneficiary of any award of the arbitrator may
bring proceedings in any jurisdiction to enforce the award or any judgment enforcing the award. The bringing of such proceedings in one or more jurisdictions shall not preclude the bringing of enforcement proceedings in any other jurisdiction. In
connection with any such proceeding, each Party waives any right to de novo review of the award against that Party. All matters relating to any arbitration held pursuant to this Section, including the existence of the dispute and its referral to
arbitration, shall be held in confidence by both Parties and disclosed only with the consent of both Parties or if required by Applicable Law. 
  

	21.4	Continued Performance 

All Services and the performance of all other obligations under this Agreement shall continue during the dispute resolution proceeding.

  

	21.5	Technical Disputes 

 As
part of the Transition Phase Plan, the Parties will work together to determine a technical dispute mechanism, including appointing a technical expert, to resolve any disputes of a technical or engineering nature, including disputes regarding the
effect of Draft Procedures on the Operator’s Mill, on an expedited basis. Once the process and technical expert are agreed, the Parties will refer all disputes of a technical or engineering nature to the technical expert rather than to
arbitration. If the technical expert ceases to be engaged by the Parties, the Parties shall appoint a new technical expert as soon as reasonably practical. If the technical expert indicates that any dispute referred to the technical expert is beyond
his or her technical expertise, he or she may recommend an alternate technical expert to the Parties, and if the Parties cannot agree on an alternate technical expert, the matter in question shall be referred to arbitration pursuant to
Section 21.3. 
 22.0 FORCE MAJEURE 
  

	22.1	Effect of Force Majeure Event 

Each Party shall be excused from performance and shall not be construed to be in default in respect of any obligation hereunder, for so
long as and to the extent that failure to perform such obligation is due to a Force Majeure Event; provided, however, that notwithstanding anything in this Article to the contrary, a Force Majeure Event shall not excuse either Party from the
obligation to make payments for any obligation. 
  

	22.2	Notice of Force Majeure Event 

If either Party desires to invoke a Force Majeure Event as a cause for delay in its performance of, or failure to perform, any obligation
hereunder, it shall, as soon as is practicable but in any event within five (5) Business Days after the occurrence of the inability to perform due to a Force Majeure Event, give Notice to the other Party of such date and the nature and expected
duration and effect of such Force Majeure Event. Promptly, but in any event within ten (10) days, after a Notice is given pursuant to the 

 

 54 

 
preceding sentence, the Parties shall meet (or otherwise communicate) to discuss the basis and terms upon which the arrangements set out in this Agreement shall be continued, to the extent
feasible taking into account the effects of such Force Majeure Event. 
  

	22.3	Mitigation of Force Majeure Event 

Each Party suffering a Force Majeure Event shall take, or cause to be taken, such action as may be necessary to void, or nullify, or
otherwise to mitigate, in all material respects, the effects of such Force Majeure Event. The Parties shall take all reasonable steps to ensure normal performance under this Agreement, including the resumption of any disrupted obligations.

 23.0 INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY 
  

	23.1	Owner Intellectual Property 

Designs, drawings, specifications, instructions, manuals and other documents created, produced or commissioned by the Owner and relating
to the Utility Plant and to the carrying out of the Services at the Facility and copyright therein and all Intellectual Property Rights relating thereto (“Owner Intellectual Property”) are, shall be, and shall remain the property of
the Owner. The Owner hereby grants to the Operator a non-exclusive, royalty-free, non-transferable license to use the Owner’s Intellectual Property in connection with the providing of the Services to the Owner only. Such license shall be
irrevocable for any period during which the Operator is required to provide the Services. 
  

	23.2	Operator Intellectual Property 

The Operator hereby grants the Owner a non-exclusive, royalty-free, non-transferable (other than as permitted below) license to use solely
with regard to the providing of Services to the Owner any Intellectual Property Rights owned by the Operator required in connection with the provision of the Services. Such license shall be irrevocable during the life of the Utility Plant and
thereafter for such period as may be required to satisfy the Owner’s regulatory, record keeping and reporting obligations. Such license may be transferred by the Owner only to a Person who purchases the Utility Plant or who is retained by the
Owner to provide such Services, and subject to the terms of this Agreement applicable to the Operator’s Intellectual Property Rights. With respect to a service provider retained by the Owner to provide the Services (other than the Operator),
the Owner shall be liable to the Operator for any breach by such transferee of the terms of this Agreement applicable to the Operator’s Intellectual Property Rights as if the Owner itself had made such breach. 

 

	23.3	Third Party Intellectual Property 

The Operator will use reasonable efforts to use open source or open commons licence intellectual property for all aspects of the Utility
Plant. Prior to concluding any contract with any third parties relating to the supply of materials or services specifically created by third parties for the purposes of providing the Services, the Operator shall use reasonable commercial efforts to
provide that such third party grant irrevocable non-
  

 55 

 
exclusive, royalty-free licenses to each of the Operator and the Owner to use all Intellectual Property Rights pertaining to such contract, with the right for the Owner to assign such license to,
or grant a sub-license to, any person appointed operator of the Utility Plant from time to time. 
 24.0 REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES 

  

	24.1	Representations and Warranties by Each Party 

Each Party represents and warrants to the other Party that, as of the Effective Date: 

 

	 	24.1.1	It is duly organized and validly existing as a company or corporation under the laws of its jurisdiction of formation and has all requisite power and authority
to own its property and assets and to conduct its business as presently conducted or as proposed to be conducted under this Agreement. 

  

	 	24.1.2	It has the power and authority to execute and deliver this Agreement, to consummate the transactions contemplated hereby and to perform its obligations
hereunder. 

  

	 	24.1.3	It has taken all necessary action to authorize its execution, delivery and performance of this Agreement, and this Agreement constitutes the valid, legal and
binding obligation of such Party enforceable against it in accordance with its terms, except as such enforcement may be limited by bankruptcy, insolvency, moratorium or similar laws affecting the rights of creditors or by general equitable
principles (whether considered in a proceeding in equity or at law). 

  

	 	24.1.4	No Governmental Approval is required for (i) the due and valid execution and delivery of this Agreement, or (ii) the performance of such Party of its
obligations under this Agreement, except: (A) such Governmental Approvals as have been duly obtained or made, or (B) such as are or will be required for the implementation of the Project. 

 

	 	24.1.5	None of the execution or delivery of this Agreement, the performance by such Party of its obligations in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby, or
the fulfillment of the terms and conditions hereof shall: (i) conflict with or violate any provision of its constating documents, (ii) conflict with, violate or result in a breach of any Applicable Law currently in effect, or
(iii) conflict with, violate or result in a breach of or constitute a default under or result in the imposition or creation of any Lien under any agreement or instrument to which it is a party or by which it or any of its properties or assets
are bound. 

  

	 	24.1.6	No meeting has been convened for its Winding-Up and, so far it is officers are aware, no petition, application or the like is outstanding or threatened for its
Winding-Up. 

  

 56 

	 	24.1.7	It is not a party to any legal, administrative, arbitral or other proceeding, or to the best knowledge of such Party, threatened or any investigation or
controversy pending, that would adversely affect such Party’s ability to perform its obligations under this Agreement. 

  

	 	24.1.8	The recitals at the beginning of this Agreement are accurate. 

  

	24.2	Additional Representation and Warranty by the Operator 

Operator further represents and warrants to the Owner, as of the Effective Date and continuously throughout the Term, that: 

 

	 	24.2.1	It or its Affiliates has substantial expertise and experience in the operation and maintenance of facilities for the production of electrical energy and it or
its Affiliates is fully qualified to operate and maintain the Utility Plant in accordance with the terms of this Agreement; 

  

	 	24.2.2	If the Operator ceases its manufacturing operations at the Operator’s Mill, or if the License and Management Agreement between the Province of Nova Scotia
and the Operator dated March 25, 1969 is terminated in the manner set out in clause 22 of the Crown Lease Consent, then the Province of Nova Scotia has agreed that it will provide to any assignee of the Project means to ensure a continued fuel
supply in the manner set out in such clause 22; 

  

	 	24.2.3	The Operator has access to an adequate supply of Fuel to meet its obligations under this Agreement; 

 

	 	24.2.4	The Operator is certified by the FSC or a similar equivalent certification authority in respect of forestry practices. 

25.0 GUARANTEE 
 The
Operator will ensure that the Parent enters into the parent guarantee substantially in the form set out in Exhibit B. 
 26.0 MISCELLANEOUS

  

	26.1	Amendments 

 The Agreement
may be amended only in writing executed by the Parties hereto. 
  

	26.2	Governing Law 

  

	 	26.2.1	Choice of Law and Jurisdiction 

This Agreement and the rights and duties of the Parties hereunder shall be governed by and construed, enforced and performed in
accordance with the law as of the province of Nova Scotia and the federal laws of Canada applicable therein without regard to principles of conflicts of law. Each Party waives its respective right to any jury trial with respect to any litigation
arising under or in connection with this Agreement. 
  

 57 

	 	26.2.2	Applicable Laws, Regulation, Orders, National Approvals and Permits 

This Agreement is made subject to all existing or future applicable national and local laws and to all existing or future duly
promulgated orders or other duly authorized actions of governmental authorities having jurisdiction over the matters contained in this Agreement. 
  

	26.3	Notices 

 All approvals,
consents, notices, requests, statements, or payments required to be made under this Agreement shall be made in writing and shall be delivered in person, by letter, facsimile or other documentary form (“Notice”) including by email
provided that any approvals and notices of claims or determinations must be made by letter or facsimile. Notice by facsimile or hand delivery shall be deemed to have been received by the close of the Business Day on which it was transmitted or hand
delivered (unless transmitted or hand delivered after close, in which case it shall be deemed received by the close of the next Business Day). Notice by overnight mail or courier shall be deemed to have been received the next Business Day after it
was sent. A Party may change its addresses or the persons to whom Notices or copies thereof shall be directed by providing Notice of same in accordance herewith: 

To Owner: 

Corporate Secretary 

Via Courier: 

Barrington Tower 

1894 Barrington Street,
18th Floor 

Halifax, NS B3J 2A8 

Mail: 
 PO Box
910 
 Halifax, NS B3J 2W5 
  

					
		 	Telephone:	  	902-428-6096
		 	Facsimile:	  	902-428-6171
			
		 	Email:	  	Stephen.aftanas@nspower.ca

 With a copy to:

 Assistant General Counsel, Nova Scotia Power Incorporated 

 

 58 

 Via Courier: 

Barrington Tower 

1894 Barrington Street,
10th Floor 

Halifax, NS B3J 2A8 

Mail: 
 PO Box
910 
 Halifax, NS B3J 2W5 
  

					
		 	Telephone:	  	902-428-6934
		 	Facsimile:	  	902-428-4006
			
		 	Email:	  	peter.doig@nspower.ca

 To Operator:

 Vice-President, General Counsel and Secretary 

8540 Gander Creek Drive 

Miamisburg OH, 45438 USA 
  

					
		 	Telephone:	  	937-242-9339
			
		 	Facsimile:	  	937-242-9459
			
		 	Email:	  	doug.cooper@newpagecorp.com

 And a copy to

 NewPage Port Hawkesbury Corp. 

General Manager 

P.O. Box 9500 

Port Hawkesbury, NS B9A 1A1 
  

					
		 	Telephone:	  	902-625-2460
		 	Facsimile:	  	902-625-2595
			
		 	Email:	  	tor.suther@newpagecorp.com

  

	26.4	Assignment 

  

	 	26.4.1	 This Agreement shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the successors and assigns of each Party hereto. Subject to the provisions of
Section 26.4.5, neither Party may assign all or any part of its rights or obligations hereunder to any other Person without the prior written consent of the other Party, which consent may not be unreasonably conditioned, withheld or delayed,
provided that the Owner may assign this Agreement 

  

 59 

	 	
without the consent of the Operator to a Person who, pursuant to a change in Applicable Law, may be responsible for the generation of electrical energy in Nova Scotia. 

 

	 	26.4.2	In the case of a proposed assignment by the Operator, or a proposed assignment by a Lender in connection with the realization of its security interest, notice of
a request for consent to assign shall be given by such Person to the Owner not less than thirty (30) days before the date of assignment and shall be accompanied by a proposed form of assignment and assumption agreement and evidence
demonstrating to the reasonable satisfaction of the Owner: 

  

	 	  (i)	that the assignee will take over the operation of the Operator’s Mill; 

 

	 	 (ii)	the financial capacity of the assignee, which capacity shall be equal to or better than the credit rating of the Parent as at the Effective Date; and

  

	 	(iii)	the technical capability of the assignee to perform and discharge the obligations and liabilities of the Operator under this Agreement. 

 

	 	26.4.3	Subject to the terms of section 26.4.5, any sale or other disposition of the Operator’s ownership interest in the Common Systems or any portion of the
Operator’s Mill which is material to the Operator’s compliance with its obligations under this Agreement as well as any change of Control, merger, amalgamation or reorganization of the Operator, is deemed to be an assignment by the
Operator. 

  

	 	26.4.4	Other than as set out in section 26.4.1, any sale or other disposition of the Owner’s ownership interest in the Utility Plant, is deemed to be an assignment
by the Owner. 

  

	 	26.4.5	 For all the purposes of this Agreement (i) a change of Control shall exclude (x) a change in the ownership of shares or units of
ownership that are listed on a recognized stock exchange, (y) a sale of a majority of equity ownership interest in the Parent, or (z) any change in the equity ownership of any intermediary entity between the Parent and the Operator for
corporate restructuring purposes provided that the Parent remains in Control of the Operator, (ii) any mortgage, pledge, charge, grant of a security interest or other assignment for collateral security purposes of any of the Operator’s
rights, title and interests in this Agreement, the Facility or the Operator’s Mill in favour of any Lender providing secured financing to or for the benefit of the Operator or any of its affiliates as obligors shall not require the consent of
the Owner provided that such Lender has acknowledged in writing in favour of the Owner that its security interest is subject to the Owner’s consent rights in Sections 26.4.1, 26.4.2 and 26.4.6 (except 26.4.6(i)), which shall apply in connection
with any assignment by the Lender to another Person of the rights, title and interest of the Operator or Lender in this Agreement, the Facility or the Operator’s Mill upon the realization of its security interest, (iii) an assignment of
the Operator’s 

  

 60 

	 	
obligations and liabilities under this Agreement to an operating affiliate shall not require the consent of the Owner, if evidence has been provided to Owner to demonstrate, to the reasonable
satisfaction of the Owner, the capability of such operating affiliate to perform and discharge the obligations and liabilities of the Operator under this Agreement and the Operator remains jointly and severally liable with such operating affiliate.

  

	 	26.4.6	Without limiting a Party’s right to consent or reject a requested assignment, any assignment (other than as set out in Section 26.4.5 (ii), above) is
subject to the following conditions: 

  

	 	(i)	the assignor not being in default of its obligations under the Agreement; 

  

	 	(ii)	the assignee entering into and becoming bound by the Agreement and assuming all the obligations and liabilities of the assignor under the Agreement (arising after the
assignment is effective); 

  

	 	(iii)	the assignee demonstrating to the reasonable satisfaction of the Party whose consent is required its financial and technical capability to fulfil and assume all such
obligations and liabilities of the assignor or, in the case of a change of Control, merger, amalgamation or reorganization, the parties to that transaction demonstrating to the reasonable satisfaction of the Party whose consent is required, the
continued ability of the party arising out of the change of Control, merger, amalgamation or reorganization, to perform and discharge its obligations and liabilities under the Agreement; 

 

	 	(iv)	the assignee’s past dealings with the Party whose consent is required or its Affiliates were acceptable to that Party acting reasonably; and

  

	 	(v)	the assignment would not have a Material Adverse Effect, or adversely affect the operations of the Operator’s Mill in a material way, 

and upon satisfaction of such conditions, the assignor shall be released from its obligations and liabilities under this Agreement except
for those obligations and liabilities arising before the assignment is effective. 
  

	 	26.4.7	The Operator may assign its receivables under this Agreement to its Lender provided that it gives Notice of any such assignment to the Owner at least 30 days
prior to the effective date of the assignment. 

  

	 	26.4.8	Subject to section 26.4.5, the Operator shall not effect any assignment or other disposition of its interest in the Agreement, including any event or action that
is deemed an assignment, prior to the Commercial Operation Date. 

  

 61 

	26.5	Waivers 

 The failure of
either Party hereto to enforce at any time any provision of this Agreement shall not be construed to be a waiver of such provision, nor in any way to affect the validity of this Agreement or any part hereof or the right of a Party thereafter to
enforce each and every such provision. No waiver of any breach of this Agreement shall be held to constitute a waiver of any other or subsequent breach. 
  

	26.6	Independent Contractor 

The relationship between the Parties is that of independent contractors for the performance of their respective obligations under this
Agreement, and not as an agent, representative, partner or joint venturer of each other in respect of the Project. 
  

	26.7	No Third Party Beneficiaries 

Nothing in this Agreement, whether express or implied, is intended to confer any rights or remedies under or by reason of this Agreement
on any persons other than the Parties and their respective permitted successors and assigns, nor is anything in this Agreement intended to relieve or discharge the obligation or liability of any third persons to either Party, nor to give any third
persons any right of subrogation or action against either Party. 
  

	26.8	Entire Agreement 

 This
Agreement (including the Schedules and Exhibits hereto) constitutes the entire agreement between the Parties relating to the subject matter contemplated by this Agreement. This Agreement shall be considered for all purposes as prepared through the
joint efforts of the Parties and shall not be construed against one Party or the other as a result of the preparation, substitution, submission or other event of negotiation, drafting or execution hereof. 

 

	26.9	Partial Invalidity 

Wherever possible, all provisions hereof shall be interpreted in such manner as to be effective and valid under applicable law, and any
provision declared or rendered unlawful by any applicable court of law or regulatory agency or deemed unlawful because of a statutory change will not otherwise affect the remaining lawful obligations that arise under this Agreement, unless such a
construction of the remainder of the Agreement would be unreasonable or deprive a Party of a material benefit under this Agreement. In such event, the Parties shall negotiate in good faith to amend this Agreement to remove the invalid provision and
replace it with a legal, valid and enforceable provision that comes as close as possible to expressing the intention of the invalid provision unless prohibited by law. 
  

	26.10	Surviving Rights 

 All
indemnity and audit rights shall survive the termination of this Agreement for five (5) years. 
  

 62 

	26.11	HST 

  

	 	26.11.1	Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, amounts payable pursuant to the Agreement are exclusive of HST or similar tax and each Party shall pay to the other as
applicable, in addition to such amounts, HST or similar tax properly exigible on such amounts. 

  

	 	26.11.2	Each Party acknowledges that it is a registrant in accordance with the provisions of the Excise Tax Act (Canada) and will continue to be a registrant throughout
the Term. 

  

	 	26.11.3	Each Party shall provide Notice to the other of its HST registration number following execution of this Agreement. 

 

	26.12	Counterparts 

 This Agreement may be
executed and delivered by the Parties in one or more counterparts, each of which when so executed and delivered will be an original, and those counterparts will together constitute one and the same instrument. 

 

	26.13	Facsimile Signatures 

 Delivery of this
Agreement by facsimile, e-mail or functionally equivalent electronic transmission constitutes valid and effective delivery. 

[THE REMAINDER OF THIS PAGE IS INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK] 

 

 63 

 IN WITNESS WHEREOF the Parties hereto have properly executed this Management, Operating and Maintenance
Agreement as of the date first written above. 
  

			
	NOVA SCOTIA POWER INC.
		
	Per:	 	 /s/ Rob Bennett

		 	Name: Rob Bennett
		 	Title: President and CEO
		
	Per:	 	 /s/ Rick Jareya

		 	Name: Rick Jareya
		 	Title: EVP Operations and COO
	
	NEWPAGE PORT HAWKESBURY CORP.
		
	Per:	 	 /s/ Douglas K. Cooper

		 	Douglas K. Cooper
		 	Vice President, General Counsel and SecretaryTerm sheet for an Engineering, Procurement and Construction Contract

 Exhibit 10.3 

BINDING BIOMASS COGENERATION UTILITY PLANT 

CONSTRUCTION TERM SHEET 

This Term Sheet sets out general terms and conditions to be included in an engineering, procurement and construction contract (the “EPC
Contract”) in respect of the nominal 60 MW biomass cogeneration utility plant (the “Utility Plant”) to be constructed at the site of NPPH’s pulp and paper mill in Port Hawkesbury (the “Site”).

 The parties are also party or will be party to an agreement with respect to the operation, management and maintenance of the Project,
including the supply of biomass, certain shared services and the use by NPPH of steam from the Project for an overall net price in $ per MWh (the “MO&M Agreement”) and an asset purchase agreement in respect of the purchase of
certain mill assets by NSPI from NPPH for use in the Project (the “APA”). 
  

			
	Owner:	  	Nova Scotia Power Inc. (“NSPI”)
		
	Contractor:	  	NewPage Port Hawkesbury Corp. (“NPPH”)

  

	1.	Project Description/Technology Description 

NSPI wishes to engage NPPH to complete the design and engineering of the Utility Plant and to procure, construct, start-up, commission, test and
guarantee the Utility Plant at the Site (the “Project”). 
  

	2.	NPPH’s Scope of Work – General 

NPPH will provide turn-key design, engineering, licensing, equipment and materials procurement and quality assurance, construction (including all
qualified and skilled labour, tools, hoisting equipment and cranes, staging, consumables and commodities), project management, project cost control, supervision, documentation (including configuration management), commissioning, start-up and
performance testing, (including tools, special equipment and consumables), training, progress reporting in a format conforming generally to the format attached as Schedule “A” and frequency as may be reasonably requested by NSPI from time
to time, commercially reasonable support of NSPI’s work order application to the Nova Scotia Utility and Review Board (“UARB”) and other services necessary or appropriate to bring about commercial operation of the Project in
accordance with the project schedule (collectively referred to as the “Work”). Schedule “B” sets out the agreed overview of the Project (the “Project Summary”). The Parties will work together to develop
the specifications for the Project within the Project Summary and will produce definition requirements for the Project which will be attached to the EPC Contract (the “Owner’s Requirements”). 

 

	3.	Major Scope Items 

  

	 	(a)	 Project Management – NPPH will be responsible for overall project management and will appoint a duly qualified Project Manager with the
authority to manage the Work. The Project Manager will plan and manage the activities 

	 	
that make up the Work and be the primary point of contact for NSPI. The Project Manager’s responsibilities include, among other things, managing, monitoring and reporting Project progress
for engineering, design, procurement, construction, commissioning, start-up and initial operations against the project schedule, project cost and project financial progress. NPPH will also implement a rigorous safety management plan, environmental
management plan, quality assurance and quality control plan, and project management and overall project administration functions. NPPH will establish a complete and comprehensive management organization including, where appropriate, personnel from
NewPage Corp. NPPH’s organization chart for the Project is attached as Schedule “C”, including third party personnel and their roles. The filling of critical management positions identified as such in Schedule “C” shall be
subject to NSPI’s review and approval, such approval not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed. NPPH will maintain key personnel (including project management and lead disciplines), at all times in the positions and dedicated to the
performance of their duties. Any replacement of key personnel will be subject to the prior written consent of NSPI, which will not be unreasonably withheld or delayed. 

 

	 	(b)	Engineering – NPPH will be fully responsible for all detailed design, engineering and systems interface coordination services necessary for the completion
of the Work including specification of equipment, materials and systems to be incorporated into the Utility Plant. Engineering and design will meet all regulatory requirements, be in accordance with industry codes and standards identified in
Schedule “D” and otherwise be consistent with good utility practices. “Good utility practices” means: 

  

	 	(i)	in respect of practices, methods and procedures, those practices, methods and procedures that (1) are generally accepted and followed by prudent, diligent,
skilled and experienced designers and engineers of power and utility projects acting in accordance with standards generally adopted by designers and engineers of power and utility projects in North America who reasonably account for local
conditions, including local infrastructure support, with respect to equipment having similar characteristics to the Utility Plant, and (2) would be expected by such prudent, diligent, skilled and experienced designers and engineers,
at the particular time in question and in the exercise of reasonable judgment in light of facts or circumstances then known or that reasonably should have been known, to accomplish the desired results and goals, including such goals as efficiency,
reliability, economy, and profitability, in a manner consistent with applicable law, safety and environmental protection; and 

  

	 	(ii)	in respect of the design and engineering of the Work other than practices, methods and procedures, the design and engineering of NSPI’s plant known as Tuft’s
Cove 6 will be the standard for Good Utility Practice. 

 NSPI will give the NPPH Project team access to the
Tuft’s Cove 6 site and relevant Tuft’s Cove 6 design and engineering documentation, subject to the terms 
  

 2 

 
of the confidentiality agreement between the parties. NSPI will on or before the date of execution of this Term Sheet authorize AMEC to provide all design and engineering documentation and
information relevant to Tuft’s Cove 6 to NPPH’s Project team. 
  

	 	(c)	Documentation - “Documentation” means: 

- Electrical Single Line Diagrams 

- Project Schedule & all revisions 

- Site Layouts 

- General Arrangements 

- Process & Instrumentation Diagrams 

- Instrument Loop Diagrams 

- Powerhouse Floor Plans & Elevations 

- Cooling Water Pump House Floor Plans & Elevations 

- Plant Heat Balances & Mass Balances 

- Protection & Control Diagrams 

- Fire Protection Drawings 

- Environmental Approval Drawings 

- Commissioning Plan & Procedures 

- Plant Operation & Maintenance Manuals 

- Quality Assurance Manual, Records & Reports 

- Safety Plan 

- Environmental Management Plan 

- Equipment Lists 

- Instrumentation Lists 

- Piping Bills of Materials 

- Valve Lists 

- Electrical Load Lists 

- Piping Line Lists 

- As Built Drawings 

- Prepared Equipment & Contractor Specifications 

Except as otherwise agreed, all Documentation shall be provided in its native electronic format. NPPH will provide NSPI with six
(6) paper copies of drawings (D size with the exception that General Arrangements, plans and elevations will be provided in E size) plus an electronic file for each drawing compatible with AutoCAD (.dwg or .dgn) file formats. NPPH will make
commercially reasonable efforts to obtain electronic files compatible with Auto CAD for drawings obtained from equipment vendors. 

Six (6) paper copies plus electronic copy of the final approved O&M Manuals. 

All Documentation will adhere to necessary quality assurance and quality control requirements. 

 

 3 

 NSPI will have the right to review and approve certain Documentation as set out in the EPC
Contract, such approval not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed. 
  

	 	(d)	Licensing – NPPH will be responsible for all interfaces with Canadian regulatory authorities (other than the UARB) and implement all design changes for the
Work required by such regulatory authorities. Any impacts due to the implementation of regulatory mandated design changes shall be governed by paragraph 14(g). 

 

	 	(e)	Procurement – NPPH will be responsible for all procurement and the performance of all vendors. NPPH and NSPI will agree on a list of approved vendors for
major equipment and materials. All equipment and materials will be new, of high quality and of proven design. NSPI will receive reasonable prior notice so that its representatives may attend any and all vendor coordination meetings, inspections and
factory tests in support of the Work. Certification of equipment that is required to be certified by law will be the responsibility of NPPH. NPPH will procure all necessary transport of equipment and materials to the Project site including all
special framing, permitting, customs clearance, import and export duties, and special Site infrastructure as required. 

  

	 	(f)	Quality Assurance – NPPH shall develop and implement a quality assurance programme (“QA Programme”) before ordering any equipment in
connection with the Work and will maintain the QA Programme for the duration of the EPC Contract. The QA Programme shall be submitted for NSPI’s review and approval, which approval will not be unreasonably withheld or delayed. Prior to placing
equipment orders, NPPH shall advise NSPI of any proposed deviations from the QA Programme. A quality assurance manual for any critical or major equipment shall be submitted by NPPH to NSPI for NSPI’s review and approval, which approval shall
not be unreasonably withheld or delayed. 

  

	 	(g)	Construction – NPPH will be responsible for the performance of all construction services and activities required for the timely scheduled completion of the
Project including, furnishing management, qualified and skilled labour, equipment, tools, consumables, spare parts, temporary facilities and utilities necessary for such construction. NPPH will handle, warehouse and control all materials, supplies,
and equipment required for such construction. NPPH will keep its work areas at the Site in a neat, clean, and safe condition. NPPH will ensure that all equipment for the Project is stored, protected, and maintained in accordance with accepted
utility practices and vendor requirements. NPPH will implement effective quality control and health, safety and environment programs at the Project site and submit them to NSPI for approval, which approval will not be unreasonably withheld or
delayed. 

  

	 	(h)	 Compliance with Laws – NPPH will execute the Work, and conduct its operations and activities, in compliance with all applicable laws and
regulations, government approvals, licenses and permits and in compliance with quality assurance and quality control and health, safety and environment programs. NPPH will be responsible for preparation for NSPI’s review and approval of all

  

 4 

	 	
reports required for submission pursuant to applicable laws and regulations, government approvals, grants, licenses and permits, such review and approval not to be unreasonably delayed or
withheld. 

  

	 	(i)	Start-up, Commissioning and Testing – NPPH will perform, or cause to be performed, the start up of components, calibration of instruments, functional
verification tests, and start up of the Utility Plant. NPPH will fully commission the Utility Plant and perform all testing of the Utility Plant required by the EPC Contract, including tests necessary to demonstrate each component’s compliance
with the Performance Guarantees. NPPH’s testing obligations will include providing all required qualified labour, equipment, supplies and instrumentation. NPPH will prepare a comprehensive commissioning and testing plan and submit it to NSPI
for approval, which approval will not be unreasonably withheld or delayed. 

  

	 	(j)	Training and Supervision of Operating and Maintenance Personnel – NPPH will provide adequate training to management, operating and maintenance personnel
assigned to the ongoing operation of the Utility Plant. NPPH shall advise NSPI of scheduled training and provide 2 seats in each training session for NSPI personnel. 

 

	 	(k)	 Reports – NPPH will submit to NSPI monthly reports (by the
7th business day of each succeeding month) describing the
status and progress of the Work including engineering, procurement, construction, start-up and commissioning as measured against the global project schedule at the conclusion of the previous month. 

 

	 	(l)	Capital Spares – The Contract Price includes a $1.9 Million allowance for capital spares. Capital spares purchases shall be subject to NSPI’s approval,
not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed. 

  

	 	(m)	Steam Benchmark – The EPC Contract will define a steam benchmark setting out NPPH’s existing steam requirements for pressure, temperature and mass flow
with a suitable tolerance on pressure variation. NPPH will design and build the Utility Plant to meet the steam benchmark. 

  

	 	(n)	Metering Equipment – The Contract Price includes all metering equipment required by NSPI. All additional metering will be to NPPH’s account.

  

	 	(o)	Existing Work – The Contract Price includes all work necessary to satisfy the recommendations resulting from the short circuit and protection coordination
study obtained by NPPH. 

  

	4.	Contract Price/Taxes/Milestone Payment Schedule/Cash Flow Cap 

  

	 	(a)	NSPI will pay NPPH the all-inclusive, fixed price of CAD $92.9 million for the successful completion of all Work (the “Contract Price”) and in no event
will NSPI pay more than the Contract Price, other than where a change order has been agreed by the Parties. The process for force account work will be agreed by the parties in the EPC Contract. 

 

 5 

	 	(b)	NSPI will retain and withhold 10 percent of all payments to NPPH in accordance with the requirements of the Builders’ Lien Act of Nova Scotia (the
“Builder’s Lien Holdback”). 

  

	 	(c)	The Contract Price will be paid to NPPH as follows: 

  

	 	(i)	NSPI will reimburse NPPH for all documented Project costs and a pro-rated portion of NPPH’s fee (to be defined in the EPC Contract), less a 5% holdback (the
“Security Holdback”) and less the Builder’s Lien Holdback, 35 days after receipt of the relevant invoice from NPPH, provided that: 

  

	 	1.	the total of such invoices will not exceed 97.5% of the Contract Price over the life of the Project; 

 

	 	2.	the total of such invoices will not exceed 96% of the Contract Price prior to December 31, 2012 unless Commercial Operation has occurred before December 31,
2012; and 

  

	 	3.	the amount and timing of such invoices will be substantially in accordance with the cost expenditure curve set out in the EPC Contract (allowing for a percentage
variance from the curve in any one month as agreed in the EPC Contract); 

  

	 	(ii)	The Builder’s Lien Holdback will be paid to NPPH in accordance with the Builder’s Lien Act provided that: 

 

	 	1.	no payment of the Builder’s Lien Holdback will be paid until NSPI receives delivery of statutory declarations from NPPH in form and substance satisfactory to NSPI
confirming that all subcontractors have been paid, provided that a partial release may be made in accordance with the EPC Contract; and 

  

	 	2.	after substantial completion in accordance with the Builder’s Lien Act, NSPI will not reimburse the remaining 2.5% of the Contract Price in accordance with the
Builder’s Lien Act but will convert that 2.5% of the Contract Price into a holdback for NSPI’s own security (“NSPI Holdback”). 

  

	 	(iii)	NSPI will pay NPPH the Security Holdback within 10 days following NSPI’s acceptance of the test results regarding Commercial Operation following the Commercial
Operation Date. 

  

	 	(iv)	NSPI will pay NPPH the NSPI Holdback and the remainder of the Contract Price within 10 days following the Total Completion Date (as that term is defined below), less
any liquidated damages that may have accrued to the Total Completion Date. 

  

 6 

	 	(d)	Provided NSPI issues a full notice to proceed by September 30, 2010, the Contract Price includes all costs of performing the Work including, but not limited to,
all NPPH’s internal and third party costs, NPPH’s EPC fee, spare parts, fees, profits and overhead, all taxes including all sales and use taxes (but excluding HST on the Contract Price), NPPH’s employee related taxes and benefits,
NPPH’s corporate income taxes, all duties, levies and imposts on all equipment and services, and all inflation, escalation contingencies and other costs of whatever nature required to perform the Work. If NSPI issues a full notice to proceed
after September 30, 2010 the Contract Price will escalate by 0.2% per month. 

  

	 	(e)	The Contract Price includes an allowance of $ Million for boiler stiffening. If boiler stiffening is not required or the cost of boiler stiffening is less than $
Million, the Contract Price will be reduced by the relevant amount. 

  

	5.	Performance Guarantees/Project Completion/Performance Guarantee Liquidated Damages/Schedule Requirements/Commercial Operation/Delay Liquidated Damages/ Cap on Delay
Liquidated Damages 

  

	 	(a)	NSPI shall provide a full notice to proceed within five (5) business days of all conditions precedent in the EPC Contract, including those set out in paragraph 26
below, being met or waived. 

  

	 	(b)	The EPC Contract will contain discrete major Project milestones, including the following major milestones: 

 

	 	(i)	“Initial Operation Date” means the date on which the Operator demonstrates that the Utility Plant has sustained 70% of the MCR and full emissions
compliance for a period of 120 consecutive hours; 

  

	 	(ii)	“Commercial Operation Date” means the date on which Commercial Operation actually occurs. “Commercial Operation” means that the
Utility Plant sustains 85% of the MCR with full emissions compliance for a period of 120 consecutive hours. “Required Commercial Operation Date” means 27 calendar months from the date of NPPH’s receipt of NSPI’s notice to
proceed; 

  

	 	(iii)	 “Total Completion Date” means the date on which Total Completion actually occurs. “Total Completion” means that the
Utility Plant adheres to all performance criteria and all performance tests as specified in the EPC Contract are complete including, without limitation, complete installation of all materials and equipment in accordance with the EPC Contract
requirements, completion of all required tests as specified in the EPC Contract and attainment of the Performance Guarantees, all licenses and permits required to operate the Utility Plant and other customary

  

 7 

	 	
conditions to completion as specified in the EPC Contract including that there is no outstanding NPPH event of default. The “Required Total Completion Date” will be thirteen
months after the Required Commercial Operation Date. The “Performance Guarantees” will be: 

  

	 	1.	MCR test (“MCR” means maximum continuous power rating as provided by the selected manufacturer of the turbine generator); 

 

	 	2.	Net unit heat rate test based on the selected turbine generator and modified steam boiler; and 

 

	 	3.	Emissions compliance, 

each as defined in the EPC Contract. 
  

	 	(c)	The EPC Contract will provide that if the Initial Operation Date is not December 31, 2012 or earlier for whatever reason or cause, then the Contract Price will be
reduced by $1,400,000 (the “Late Completion Charge”). 

  

	 	(d)	The EPC Contract will contain delay liquidated damages for NPPH’s failure to achieve Commercial Operation within 30 days following the Required Commercial
Operation Date (the “Delay LD Start Date”), in the following amounts: 

  

	 	(i)	$10,000 for each day of delay in Commercial Operation after the Delay LD Start Date until 30 days after the Delay LD Start Date; 

 

	 	(ii)	$20,000 for each day of delay in Commercial Operation starting 31 days after the Delay LD Start Date until 60 days after the Delay LD Start Date; and

  

	 	(iii)	$30,000 for each day of delay in Commercial Operation starting 61 days after the Delay LD Start Date until the day that Commercial Operation is achieved.

 There will be an aggregate cap of 10 % of the Contract Price for the aggregate of delay liquidated damages
and the Late Completion Charge, provided NPPH will have the obligation to complete the Project even if the liquidated damages for delay are exhausted. NSPI’s damages for NPPH’s failure to comply with this obligation are limited by
paragraph 19. 
  

	 	(e)	The EPC Contract will contain performance liquidated damages for failure to attain Total Completion by the Required Total Completion Date. There will be an aggregate
cap of 10 % of the Contract Price for performance liquidated damages, provided that NPPH will have the obligation to complete the Project even if the liquidated damages for performance are exhausted. NSPI’s damages for NPPH’s failure
to comply with this obligation are limited by paragraph 19 below 

  

 8 

	 	(f)	If there is a delay in completion of, or an inability to complete, the interconnection of the project to the NSPI grid caused solely by NSPI, NPPH shall be entitled to
a day for day extension with respect to its obligations hereunder which cannot be completed without grid connection. 

  

	6.	Environmental Requirements 

NPPH shall carry out the Work in conformance with all applicable laws, including all laws in respect of the environment. In addition, NPPH
will ensure that the Work is carried out in full compliance with any environmental permits and any environmental protection plan applicable to the Project. 
  

	7.	Warranties 

  

	 	(a)	General – The warranty period for design, workmanship, standard materials, services and equipment will extend until 12 months following the Commercial
Operation Date. 

  

	 	(b)	Special Warranty Period – There will be longer warranty periods for specified long life equipment identified in the EPC Contract, provided such longer
warranty periods can be obtained from the equipment vendors. 

  

	 	(c)	Warranty for Repaired or Replaced Components – Defective work repaired, replaced or otherwise corrected by NPPH will be warranted for a period equal to a
single additional 12 months or the remaining warranty period for special warranty period items, whichever is longer. 

  

	 	(d)	Warranty Services – NPPH, at its cost, will perform all work and supply all labour, equipment and materials necessary to repair and replace any defective
work, equipment or materials including the disassembly and reassembly of any equipment necessary to access defectives. Warranty work will be conducted in a manner so as to minimize, on a commercially reasonable basis, any adverse impact on the
operation of the Utility Plant. Should NPPH fail to remedy a defect, or commence a remedy on a defect during the applicable warranty period in accordance with the EPC Contract, within 14 days of NSPI providing a notice to NPPH to remedy the same,
NSPI may proceed with any activities necessary to remedy the defect and NPPH shall be liable to and shall indemnify the NSPI Indemnified Parties (as that term is defined below) for any and all reasonable costs and expenses incurred by NSPI in doing
so and NSPI may retain and deduct such amount from payments or other monies due, or which may become due, to NPPH, howsoever arising. 

  

	 	(e)	Root Cause Analysis – If any of the equipment and materials supplied by NPPH or its subcontractors experience failures during the applicable warranty
period, NPPH will at its own cost, investigate the root cause of such failures and will provide a report to NSPI containing the root cause analysis. NPPH will make such repairs, replacements or adjustments satisfactory to NSPI necessary to correct
the root cause of the failures. 

  

 9 

	 	(f)	Warranty Inspection – NPPH shall grant NSPI access to the Work and plan a coinciding scheduled outage of the Utility Plant, in the period that is nine to
twelve months following the Commercial Operation Date, for the purposes of carrying out warranty inspections in accordance with the terms of the EPC Contract. 

 

	8.	Access to Site/Site Security 

  

	 	(a)	NPPH will provide all necessary security at the Site until Commercial Operation. 

 

	 	(b)	NPPH will not limit NSPI access to the Site at any time. 

  

	 	(c)	NPPH will provide suitable office and work space on the construction site throughout the term of the EPC Contract. 

 

	9.	Default 

  

	 	(a)	NPPH will be in default of its obligations pursuant to the EPC Contract upon the occurrence of the following events of default (“NPPH Event of
Default”): 

  

	 	(i)	NPPH or its parent makes a general assignment for the benefit of its creditors, becomes insolvent, admits in writing its inability to pay its debts, is generally unable
to pay its debts as they become due, or becomes the subject of any voluntary or involuntary bankruptcy, insolvency, receivership, arrangement, stay, moratorium, reorganization or other debtor relief proceeding now, in existence or hereafter becoming
effective, and, in the case of any such involuntary proceeding, that is not dismissed or stayed within thirty (30) days after it is commenced; 

  

	 	(ii)	NPPH fails to comply with an arbitral decision; 

  

	 	(iii)	NPPH has made a material misrepresentation in the EPC Contract, unless the fact, circumstance or condition that is the subject of such representation is made true
within 30 days after notice thereof and the negative effects of the material misrepresentation are mitigated within such 30 day period; 

  

	 	(iv)	NPPH or its parent ceases to carry on all or substantially all of its business (but not a temporary shutdown); 

 

	 	(v)	NPPH assigns or transfers the EPC Contract or any right or interest therein without the written consent of NSPI; 

 

	 	(vi)	NPPH fails to maintain any insurance coverage required of it; 

  

	 	(vii)	 NPPH fails to perform or observe any material provision of the EPC Contract and such failure continues for 30 days after NPPH receives a Notice from
NSPI with respect thereto. Provided, however that if such 

  

 10 

	 	
breach is not capable of cure within such 30 day period, but is capable of cure within a reasonable time (having regard to the nature of the breach), and: 

 

	 	1.	NPPH provides a reasonable schedule for the cure of such breach that is acceptable to NSPI (which acceptance shall not be unreasonably withheld or delayed); and

  

	 	2.	NPPH commences and diligently proceeds to cure such breach in accordance with the agreed schedule for cure, 

such breach shall not constitute an NPPH Event of Default unless the breach remains uncured when the time to cure such breach as set out
in the agreed schedule for cure has lapsed; 
  

	 	(viii)	NPPH suspends or abandons the Work; 

  

	 	(ix)	the cap on liquidated damages for delay is reached; or 

  

	 	(x)	the parent guarantee ceases to be in full force and effect. 

  

	 	(b)	In the event of a NPPH Event of Default, NSPI will have the following rights and remedies, in addition to any other rights and remedies that may be available to NSPI
under the EPC Contract and applicable laws, and NPPH will have the following obligations: 

  

	 	(i)	NSPI, without prejudice to any of its other rights or remedies, may terminate the EPC Contract. If NSPI terminates the EPC Contract as a result of an NPPH Event of
Default, it shall nevertheless, if requested by NPPH, provide steam, condensate, compressed air and related goods and services (the “Mill Services”) to NPPH for a price to be determined as follows: 

 

	 	1.	If NSPI does not complete the construction of the Utility Plant or if it completes the construction of the Utility Plant at a cost greater than an amount equal to the
Contract Price, net of any damages paid by NPPH to NSPI under the EPC Contract, the price shall be agreed by the Parties, shall be based on the cost of fuel consumed and the proportionate costs of capital and operation and maintenance referable to
the production of the Mill Services, and shall be invoiced monthly by NSPI to NPPH. Failing agreement on the price either Party may refer the matter to arbitration pursuant to paragraph 12(b); 

 

	 	2.	If NSPI completes the construction of the Utility Plant at a cost, net of any damages paid by NPPH to NSPI under the EPC Contract, which does not exceed an amount equal
to the Contract Price, the price shall be that provided for in the MO & M Agreement or the Steam, Fuel and Shared Services Agreement pursuant to the MO & M Agreement whichever applies; 

 

 11 

	 	3.	If the situation contemplated in 2. occurs then there will be a true up with respect to any amount previously invoiced and paid under 1. above.

  

	 	(ii)	If requested by NSPI, NPPH will: (i) withdraw from the Project Site; (ii) assign to NSPI (without recourse to NPPH) such of NPPH’s subcontracts, purchase
orders and permits as NSPI may request; (iii) deliver and make available to NSPI all information, documents, patents, and licences of NPPH related to the Work reasonably necessary to permit NSPI to complete or cause the completion of the Work;
(iv) authorize NSPI and its agents to use such information in completing the Work; and (v) remove such materials, equipment, tools, and instruments used by and any debris or waste materials generated by NPPH in the performance of the Work
as NSPI may direct; 

  

	 	(iii)	NSPI may take possession of any or all drawings and specifications, manuals, and Site facilities, tools, spares and equipment of NPPH related to the Work necessary for
completion of the Work (whether or not such drawings and specifications, manuals, and Site facilities are complete); 

  

	 	(iv)	NSPI, without incurring any liability to NPPH, will have the right (either with or without the use of NPPH’s equipment) to finish the Work, or have the Work
finished, and NSPI will have the right to take possession of and use all construction equipment of NPPH necessary for completion of the Work, and NPPH will have no right to remove such items from the Site until such completion;

  

	 	(v)	NSPI may seek equitable relief to cause NPPH to take action or to refrain from taking action pursuant to the EPC Contract, or to make restitution of amounts improperly
received under the EPC Contract; 

  

	 	(vi)	NSPI may, but is not obligated to, make such payments or perform such obligations as are required to cure an NPPH Event of Default and offset the cost of such payment
or performance against payments otherwise due to NPPH under the EPC Contract; and may seek damages, including proceeding against any bond, guarantee, letter of credit, or other security given by or for the benefit of NPPH for its performance under
the EPC Contract. 

  

	 	(c)	 NPPH will be liable to NSPI for any and all actual damages to NSPI as a result of a NPPH Event of Default. To the extent that the actual costs of
completing the Work, including compensation for obtaining a replacement contractor or for obtaining additional professional services required as a consequence of an NPPH Event of Default, exceed those costs that would have been payable to NPPH but

  

 12 

	 	
for any NPPH Event of Default, NPPH will be obligated to pay the difference to NSPI. NSPI’s damages under this subparagraph (c) are limited by paragraph 19 below.

  

	 	(d)	NSPI will be entitled to withhold further payments to NPPH for the Work performed prior to termination of the EPC Contract until NSPI determines the liability of NPPH,
if any. Upon determination of the total cost of the Work, NSPI will notify NPPH in writing of the amount, if any, that NPPH will pay NSPI or NSPI will pay NPPH. 

 

	 	(e)	The occurrence of any one or more of the following events shall constitute an event of default by NSPI hereunder (each, a “NSPI Event of Default”):

  

	 	(i)	NSPI makes a general assignment for the benefit of its creditors, becomes insolvent, admits in writing its inability to pay its debts, is generally unable to pay its
debts as they become due, or becomes the subject of any voluntary or involuntary bankruptcy, insolvency, receivership, arrangement, stay, moratorium, reorganization or other debtor relief proceeding now, in existence or hereafter becoming effective,
and, in the case of any such involuntary proceeding, that is not dismissed or stayed within thirty (30) days after it is commenced; 

  

	 	(ii)	NSPI has made a material misrepresentation in the EPC Contract, unless the fact, circumstance or condition that is the subject of such representation is made true
within 30 days after notice thereof and the negative effects of the material misrepresentation are mitigated within such 30 day period; 

  

	 	(iii)	NSPI’s failure to pay to NPPH any required payment which is not in dispute which failure or breach continues for thirty (30) days after receipt of written
notice from NPPH that the account is overdue; or 

  

	 	(iv)	NSPI fails to comply with an arbitral decision. 

  

	 	(f)	In the event of a NSPI Event of Default, in addition to any other rights and remedies that may be available to NPPH under the EPC Contract and applicable laws, NPPH,
without prejudice to any of its other rights or remedies, may terminate the EPC Contract and the MO&M Agreement and commence the Steam, Fuel and Shared Services Agreement pursuant to the MO&M Agreement. 

 

 13 

	10.	Intellectual Property 

  

	 	(a)	Indemnity – NPPH will indemnify, defend, and hold NSPI harmless from losses, claims or payments for infringement or alleged infringement of any intellectual
property or other proprietary right based upon the Work including design and engineering, or the materials and equipment designed or incorporated into the Work by NPPH or any of its subcontractors or vendors. 

 

	 	(b)	Substitution of Infringing Items – NPPH, at its sole cost, will substitute non-infringing equipment or processes for infringing equipment or processes,
modify such infringing equipment or processes so they become non-infringing, or obtain the necessary licenses for NSPI to use the infringing equipment or processes. Any substituted and modified equipment or processes must meet all the requirements
and are subject to all of the provisions of the EPC Contract. The option proposed by NPPH will be subject to the approval of NSPI, taking into account cost and lost time impacts on NSPI of the proposed remedy versus the alternative remedy.

  

	 	(c)	License – NPPH will grant, and will make commercially reasonable efforts to cause its subcontractors and vendors to grant, to NSPI at no additional cost
other than what is included in the Contract Price, a perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive, transferable and assignable, royalty free, paid up license to use Intellectual Property (as defined below) included in the Work delivered under the EPC
Contract for use in the construction, operation and maintenance of NSPI’s Utility Plant. “Intellectual Property” will mean all intellectual property and proprietary rights including without limitation all rights of inventorship
and authorship, inventions, patents, patent applications, and know-how for any product, process, method, machine, manufacture, design, composition of matter, or any new or useful improvement thereof, as well as copyrights, trademark, trade dress and
service mark rights and all rights in trade secrets. The license granted to NSPI above will not apply to third party software sourced from an arm’s length third party (“Third Party Software”) and NSPI agrees that the standard
license terms for Third Party Software will apply to the relevant Third Party Software. NPPH will make commercially reasonable efforts in respect of any Third Party Software that: (a) a license is granted in the name of NSPI; (b) support
for the Third Party Software is commercially available in the Canadian market but NPPH has no liability if such support becomes unavailable after the date of the purchase of the Third Party Software; and (c) open source Third Party Software is
considered to the extent reasonably and commercially practicable (having regard to the relevant equipment to which the Third Party Software relates). 

  

	 	(d)	Other Use of Intellectual Property or Confidential Information – Except as provided above, or otherwise expressly permitted by the EPC Contract, neither
party will disclose or have the right or license to use the Intellectual Property or confidential information of the other party or its subcontractors, vendors or affiliates, without the prior written consent of the disclosing party or such
subcontractor, vendor or affiliate, as applicable. 

  

 14 

	11.	Applicable Permits 

 NPPH will obtain and
maintain in good standing all permits necessary for the performance of the Work other than those applicable permits specifically designated and described in the EPC Contract as applicable permits for which NSPI will be responsible. Each party will
provide the other party with reasonable assistance in obtaining and maintaining all applicable permits. 
  

	12.	Dispute Resolution 

  

	 	(a)	Step Negotiation - In the event of a dispute regarding the Project or the EPC Contract, the parties will attempt to resolve the dispute amicably and promptly by
appointing a senior executive of each party to attempt to mutually agree upon a resolution. Either party may give the other party written notice of any dispute or claim. Within ten (10) days after delivery of said notice, the executives will
meet at a mutually acceptable time and place and thereafter as often as they reasonably deem necessary to exchange information and attempt to resolve the dispute or claim within thirty (30) days. If the two senior executives cannot reach a
resolution, the dispute may be set for arbitration as described herein. 

  

	 	(b)	Arbitration - In the event of a dispute arising between the parties as to the subject matter of the EPC Contract that cannot be resolved between them, the
parties agree to submit the dispute to binding arbitration, pursuant to the terms of the Commercial Arbitration Act (Nova Scotia). In particular, the parties agree to utilize the arbitration procedure set out in Schedule “A” to the
Commercial Arbitration Act (Nova Scotia) in the conduct of the arbitration. The party wishing to have any dispute submitted to arbitration (the “Claimant”) will give notice to the other party (the
“Respondent”) specifying the particulars of any issue in dispute and proposing the name of the individual it wishes to be the single arbitrator. Within fifteen (15) days thereafter, the Respondent will give notice to the
Claimant advising whether the Respondent accepts the arbitrator proposed by the Claimant. If notice is not given within the fifteen (15) day period, the Respondent will be deemed to have accepted the arbitrator proposed by the Claimant. In the
event that the parties can not agree on a single arbitrator within the fifteen (15) day period, the arbitrator will be selected in accordance with the Commercial Arbitration Act (Nova Scotia). No such arbitrator will have previously been
employed by either party and will not have a direct or indirect interest in either party or the subject matter of the arbitration. The cost of the arbitration (excluding a party’s legal fees and disbursements) will, unless otherwise ordered by
the arbitrator or the panel, be borne equally by the parties. The decision of the arbitrator will be final and binding and the beneficiary of any award of the arbitrator may bring proceedings in any jurisdiction to enforce the award or any judgment
enforcing the award. The bringing of such proceedings in one or more jurisdictions will not preclude the bringing of enforcement proceedings in any other jurisdiction. In connection with any such proceeding, each party waives any right to de novo
review of the award against that party. All matters relating to any arbitration held pursuant to this paragraph, including the existence of the dispute and its referral to arbitration, shall be held in confidence by both parties and disclosed only
with the consent of both parties or if required by law. 

  

 15 

	 	(c)	Continued Performance - All Work and the performance of all other obligations, including undisputed payments, under the EPC Contract will continue during the
dispute resolution proceeding. 

  

	13.	Force Majeure 

  

	 	(a)	Effect of Force Majeure Event - Each Party shall be excused from performance and shall not be construed to be in default in respect of any obligation hereunder,
for so long as and to the extent that failure to perform such obligation is due to a Force Majeure Event; provided, however, a Force Majeure Event shall not excuse either Party from the obligation to make payments for any obligation.

  

	 	(b)	Notice of Force Majeure Event - If either Party desires to invoke a Force Majeure Event as a cause for delay in its performance of, or failure to perform, any
obligation hereunder, it shall, as soon as is practicable but in any event within ten (10) business days after the occurrence of the inability to perform due to a Force Majeure Event, advise the other Party in writing of such date and the
nature and expected duration and effect of such Force Majeure Event. Promptly, but in any event within ten (10) days, after a notice is given pursuant to the preceding sentence, the Parties shall meet (or otherwise communicate) to discuss the
basis and terms upon which the arrangements set out in the EPC Contract shall be continued, to the extent feasible taking into account the effects of such Force Majeure Event. 

 

	 	(c)	Mitigation of Force Majeure Event - Each Party suffering a Force Majeure Event shall take, or cause to be taken, such commercially reasonable action as may be
necessary to void, or nullify, or otherwise to mitigate, in all material respects, the effects of such Force Majeure Event. The Parties shall take all reasonable steps to ensure normal performance under this Agreement, including the resumption of
any disrupted obligations. 

  

	 	(d)	Definition of “Force Majeure Event” - for the purposes of this paragraph 13, “Force Majeure Event” means any event which wholly or
partly prevents or delays the performance of any obligation arising under this Agreement, but only if and to the extent (i) such event is not within the reasonable control of the Party affected, (ii) such event, despite the affected
Party’s exercise of reasonable diligence, cannot be or be caused to be prevented, avoided or removed by the affected Party, and (iii) the party affected has taken all commercially reasonable precautions and measures in order to avoid the
effect of such event on such Party’s ability to perform its obligations under this Agreement and to mitigate the consequences thereof including any contingency plans agreed between the Parties or which a Party has represented it has in place,
and (iv) such event is not the direct result of the affected Party’s negligence or the failure of such Party to perform any of its obligations under this Agreement. Subject to the foregoing, a “Force Majeure Event” may include
any of the following: 

  

	 	(i)	acts of God or the public enemy, war, whether declared or not, blockade, insurrection, riot, civil disturbance, public disorder, rebellion, violent demonstration,
revolution, or sabotage; 

  

 16 

	 	(ii)	any effect of unusual natural elements, including fire, volcanic eruption, landslide, earthquake, flood, tsunami, lightning, hurricane, unusually severe storm, perils
of sea, or similar cataclysmic occurrence or other unusual natural calamity; 

  

	 	(iii)	explosion, accident or epidemic; 

  

	 	(iv)	accidents of navigation or breakdown or injury of vessels, accidents to harbours, docks, bridges, canals or other assistances to or adjuncts of shipping or navigation,
epidemic or quarantine; 

  

	 	(v)	strikes, lockouts or other labour disturbances; 

  

	 	(vi)	nuclear emergency, radioactive contamination or ionizing radiation or the release of any hazardous material; 

 

	 	(vii)	air crash, shipwreck, train wreck, or any other failures or delays of transportation if the cause of such other failure or delay otherwise would qualify under the EPC
Contract as a Force Majeure Event; 

 but does not include any event to the extent that: 

 

	 	(i)	it is caused by the unavailability of labour (other than unavailability of labour due to such strikes, lockouts or other labour disturbances as are Force Majeure
Events) or raw materials, the breakdown of the Utility Plant or other plant breakdown or equipment failure unless and to the extent that such event is itself caused by a Force Majeure Event or which if it occurred in relation to either Party would
have been a Force Majeure Event or is caused by a latent defect in the Utility Plant or other plant or equipment; 

  

	 	(ii)	the event is constituted by any failure of a subcontractor unless and to the extent that the subcontractor was itself affected by an event, which if it occurred in
relation to either Party would have been a Force Majeure Event; 

  

	 	(iii)	it relates to the condition of the Project site including subsurface conditions and contamination at or affecting the Project site; 

 

	 	(iv)	risks associated with that event have been accepted by the relevant Party by the terms of the EPC Contract; or 

 

 17 

	 	(v)	it relates to any change in applicable law. 

  

	14.	Change Orders 

  

	 	(a)	A change order may result only from any of the following: 

  

	 	(i)	Changes in the Work required by NSPI in writing, including an acceleration of Work, in accordance with the EPC Contract; 

 

	 	(ii)	Changes in the Work required by an event of Force Majeure; or 

  

	 	(iii)	The occurrence of an NSPI caused delay as defined by the EPC Contract; 

  

	 	(b)	NSPI will have the right to make changes in the Work and all such changes will be deemed to be part of the Work. If NPPH will be actually, demonstrably delayed in the
performance of a critical path item identified in the schedule due solely to an NSPI caused delay or a Force Majeure Event, then NPPH may request a change order under which the Project schedule (and each milestone date referenced therein) will be
extended by the period of time that NPPH is actually and demonstrably delayed in the performance of such critical path item. 

  

	 	(c)	In the event the change in Work is caused by a Force Majeure Event, the Contract Price will also be changed to reflect NPPH’s non-labour Project cost resulting
from such change less any insurance proceeds in respect of that change. 

  

	 	(d)	In the event the change in Work is caused by an NSPI caused delay, the Contract Price will also be changed to reflect NPPH’s Project cost resulting from such
change order work less any savings or costs not incurred as a result. 

  

	 	(e)	If NSPI agrees to a change order for changes in the Work required by NSPI in writing, including an acceleration of Work, in accordance with the EPC Contract, the
Contract Price will be increased by the agreed amount. In the event the parties cannot agree, the Contract Price will be equitably adjusted in accordance with the principles set out in the EPC Contract. 

 

	 	(f)	If a change in Work involves a reduction in the cost to perform the Work, there will be a lump sum deduction from the Contract Price, which deduction will be based on
the amount that NPPH has in its budget for the Work involved, inclusive of direct and indirect costs, overhead, margins, contingencies, fees and profit that have not already been incurred. If necessary and specified on the change order accepted by
NSPI, NSPI will adjust the Contract Price and the Project schedule, the progress payment schedule and otherwise as required as a result of the agreed change order. 

 

 18 

	 	(g)	If any change in applicable law demonstrably increases NPPH’s Project cost by $1,000,000 or less, such cost will be borne by NPPH without an increase in the
Contract Price. If the change in applicable law demonstrably increases NPPH’s Project costs by more than $1,000,000, the Contract Price shall be increased by an amount equal to the difference between NPPH’s demonstrable increased Project
costs resulting from a change in the applicable law and $1,000,000. 

  

	15.	Notices 

 Any Notice pursuant to the EPC
Contract will be in writing and (i) delivered personally, (ii) sent by certified mail, return receipt requested, (iii) sent by a recognized overnight mail or courier service, with delivery receipt requested, or (iv) sent by
confirmed facsimile transmission with telephonic confirmation, to the addresses designated in the contract. Notices will be effective when received by the other party. Any technical or other communications pertaining to the Work will be with the
parties’ designated representative. Each party will notify the other in writing of the name of such representatives. 
  

	16.	Choice of Law 

 The EPC Contract will be
governed exclusively by and construed and enforced in accordance with the laws of the Province of Nova Scotia and the federal laws of Canada applicable therein. 
  

	17.	NPPH Indemnity 

  

	 	(a)	For the purposes of this paragraph 17, “NSPI Indemnified Parties” means NSPI and its respective employees, agents, partners, directors, officers, and
assigns. 

  

	 	(b)	NPPH shall indemnify and hold the NSPI Indemnified Parties harmless from any liability resulting from the failure of NPPH or its subcontractors to make timely payments
of the items referred to in this paragraph or such similar items for which NPPH is responsible. Any interest, penalties or other liabilities arising from such failure shall be the sole responsibility of and be paid for by NPPH.

  

	 	(c)	NPPH shall indemnify and save harmless the NSPI Indemnified Parties from all workers’ compensation assessments due by NPPH in relation to the Work.

  

	 	(d)	 NPPH shall at all times reimburse, protect, indemnify and save free and harmless the NSPI Indemnified Parties, the Project site and the other lands and
property of the NSPI Indemnified Parties from and against all liens and claims made or liability incurred by the NSPI Indemnified Parties on account of the Work performed or materials supplied by employees of NPPH and subcontractors, or on account
of an exaggerated lien filed by NPPH, including, without limitation, legal fees on a solicitor-and-own-client (indemnity) basis, except to the extent that NSPI has failed to pay NPPH in accordance with the EPC Contract. NPPH shall cause any such
lien or claim which may be filed or made, to be released and discharged forthwith at the expense of NPPH. If NPPH fails to release or obtain the release and discharge of any such lien or claim, then NSPI may, but shall not be obliged to, discharge,
release or otherwise deal with the lien or claim, and 

  

 19 

	 	
NPPH shall pay any and all costs and expenses incurred by the NSPI Indemnified Parties in so releasing, discharging or otherwise dealing with the claim or lien, including but not limited to,
legal fees on a solicitor-and-own-client (indemnity) basis. Any amounts so paid by the NSPI Indemnified Parties may be deducted from any amounts due NPPH whether under the EPC Contract or otherwise. 

 

	 	(e)	NPPH shall be liable to and shall indemnify, and hold harmless the NSPI Indemnified Parties for all losses, damages and expenses, including legal fees on a
solicitor-and-own-client (indemnity) basis, which they or any of them may incur as a result of any third party claims, demands, actions or proceedings for: 

 

	 	(i)	any acts or omissions in connection with the performance, purported performance or non-performance of the EPC Contract or of the Work by NPPH or its subcontractors or
their respective employees or agents; 

  

	 	(ii)	any acts or omissions of NSPI, other contractors or their respective employees or agents, or in connection with such acts or omissions, while acting under the direction
and control of NPPH, its subcontractors or their respective employees or agents; or 

  

	 	(iii)	any liability, claims, damages, costs and expenses arising from the failure of NPPH or its subcontractors, or their respective employees or agents to comply with the
law. 

  

	 	(f)	NPPH shall, at its sole expense, if requested by NSPI, defend those persons entitled to be indemnified by NPPH under the EPC Contract. NSPI shall have the right, if it
so elects, to participate in any such defence and NPPH shall have the right to settle claims to a maximum of $250,000 without first consulting with NSPI and thereafter only with the consent of NSPI, which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld,
delayed or conditioned and paragraph 24 shall not apply to such consent. 

  

	 	(g)	NPPH shall be liable to and shall indemnify the NSPI Indemnified Parties for all losses, damages and expenses on account of: 

 

	 	(i)	all physical damage caused by NPPH or its subcontractors to the Work, the Project site, the property of the NSPI Indemnified Parties or other contractors or property
under the care, custody or control of NSPI or other contractors; and 

  

	 	(ii)	the cost to repair or make good any and all damage to roads, bridges, railroads, highways, land adjacent to the Project site, irrigation canals or facilities, ditches
or equipment relating thereto caused by or resulting from the actions howsoever of NPPH or its subcontractors in relation to this Project. 

  

 20 

	18.	NSPI Indemnity 

  

	 	(a)	NSPI shall indemnify and save NPPH harmless from all claims and demands, including legal fees on a solicitor-and-own-client (indemnity) basis arising out of any patent,
trademark, copyright or industrial design infringement pertaining to any equipment, machinery, materials, compositions, processes, methods or designs supplied or specified for use by NSPI to NPPH for use in connection with the Work.

  

	 	(b)	NSPI shall indemnify and hold harmless NPPH, its subcontractors, and their respective officers and directors from and against all third party claims, demands, losses,
damages, expenses, actions and proceedings and which arise on account of and are attributable to NSPI’s obligations hereunder and the action of NSPI employees, agents and contractors (excluding NPPH) while on the Project site to the extent such
employees, agents and contractors (excluding NPPH) are not working under the direction or control of NPPH, its subcontractors or their respective employees or agents. 

 

	19.	Limitation of Liability 

  

	 	(a)	Except for liquidated damages, claims arising under the indemnities for intellectual property, liens, third party claims and workers’ compensation and except to
the extent to which coverage is provided by a policy or policies of insurance, as applicable: 

  

	 	(i)	NPPH’s total aggregate liability on any basis whatsoever (including all financial and non-financial obligations) to NSPI shall be limited to $10 Million,
provided that in the event that NPPH has abandoned the Work then NPPH’s total aggregate liability, including all liquidated damages, shall be limited to 20% of the Contract Price plus $10 million; and 

 

	 	(ii)	NPPH, its subcontractors, and their respective officers and directors shall not be liable to NSPI, or anyone claiming through or under it, whether by way of indemnity
or by reason of breach of contract or in tort, including liability for negligence and breach of statutory duty, or on any other legal or equitable basis, for: 

 

	 	1.	special, punitive, indirect, economic or consequential loss or damage; 

  

	 	2.	loss of use, whether complete or partial, of the Work or existing facilities of NSPI or third parties; 

 

	 	3.	loss of product; 

  

	 	4.	loss of revenue, overhead and profit; or 

  

 21 

	 	5.	loss of any contract that may be suffered by NSPI. 

  

	 	(b)	NSPI’s total aggregate liability on any basis whatsoever (including all financial and non-financial obligations) to NPPH shall be limited to $10 Million except for
the obligation to pay the Contract Price in accordance with the terms of the EPC Contract. 

  

	20.	Title and Risk of Loss 

 Title to all Work
(including work in process) shall pass to NSPI at the earliest possible moment in time and NPPH will use reasonable commercial efforts to include in its subcontracts a provision expressly for the benefit of NSPI providing that title to any personal
property forming, or to form, part of the Work, shall pass directly to NSPI, and not to NPPH. Notwithstanding the previous sentence, NPPH shall ensure that NSPI has the right to pay for the steam turbine generator, main transformer and steam
condenser and take title directly from the supplier of such items and, if NSPI exercises that right, NSPI shall provide any necessary deposit, down payment, or prepayment required by the equipment vendor. Any such step would be taken for the sole
purpose of securing NSPI’s title to key equipment and would in no way derogate from or reduce NPPH’s responsibilities or obligations under the EPC Contract, including with respect to delivery, installation and performance guarantees. The
portion of the Contract Price paid to suppliers directly by NSPI will be deemed to have been paid to NPPH for the purposes of the EPC Contract. Until Commercial Operation has been attained NPPH will bear the risk of loss and full responsibility for
the costs of replacement, repair or reconstruction resulting from any damage to or destruction of the Utility Plant (or any portion thereof) or any materials, equipment, tools and supplies, which are purchased for permanent installation in or for
use during construction of the Utility Plant regardless of whether NSPI has title thereto under the EPC Contract, provided that in the event such loss or damage is a result of the negligence or intentional misconduct of NSPI, its employees, agents
and contractors (excluding NPPH), in which event NSPI will be responsible with respect to any losses covered by the Builder’s Risk insurance for up to the permitted deductible applicable thereto. 

 

	21.	Site Conditions 

 NPPH will be deemed to
have conducted a full and complete investigation of the existing Site, including subsurface site conditions, and acknowledges and accepts the existing Site conditions as is. NPPH will agree that neither the Required Commercial Operation Date nor any
other Project dates will be extended, the Contract Price will not be modified, and NPPH will not be entitled to request or be granted any change order as a result of any Site conditions, including any presence of hazardous materials, variance of the
subsurface Site conditions from the those assumed by NPPH or geotechnical conditions in agreeing to the Contract Price and executing the contract. 
  

 22 

	22.	Project Security 

  

	 	(a)	To secure NPPH’s performance of its obligations under the EPC Contract, NPPH agrees to obtain: 

 

	 	(i)	as a closing condition of the APA, an irrevocable draw-down letter of credit (or other form of security acceptable to NSPI, in its sole discretion) substantially in the
form attached as Schedule E in the amount of $10 Million; and 

  

	 	(ii)	on the earlier of: 

  

	 	1.	the date on which the aggregate Contract Price invoiced under the EPC Contract meets or exceeds $10 million; and 

 

	 	2.	January 7, 2011, 

 a letter
of credit in replacement of the letter of credit in (i) on the same terms as the letter of credit in (i) in the amount of $15 million. 
  

	 	(b)	On the Commercial Operation Date, NPPH may reduce the letter of credit to $10 Million on the same terms as the original letter of credit. Unless the letter of
credit is called, it will expire on the date that is the later of: (a) two weeks following the Total Completion Date; and (b) two weeks following the end of the warranty period set out in section 7(a). 

 

	 	(c)	The EPC Contract will set out the process for renewing and replacing letters of credit before their expiry. 

 

	 	(d)	Dollar amounts set out above are in Canadian dollars but the letters of credit and replacements thereof may be denominated in Canadian or US dollars. The EPC Contract
will include judgement currency language. 

  

	23.	Documentation 

  

	 	(a)	NSPI shall have the right of inspection and review of all Documentation at all reasonable times. No inspection, or failure to inspect, by NSPI shall relieve NPPH of
NPPH’s obligations under the EPC Contract. 

  

	 	(b)	Prior to commencement of the performance tests, NPPH shall prepare, and submit to NSPI, operation and maintenance manuals and process and instrumentation drawings in
accordance with the Owner’s Requirements. The Work shall not be considered to be completed for the purposes of the EPC Contract until such operation and maintenance manuals and process and instrumentation drawings have been submitted to NSPI.

  

	 	(c)	NPPH shall: 

  

	 	(i)	prepare the Documentation; 

  

 23 

	 	(ii)	keep the Documentation up to date, including by way of recording the exact locations of each of any differences, sizes and details of the Work from the as-built
drawings, with cross-references to relevant specifications and other requirements on the as-built drawings; 

  

	 	(iii)	keep the Documentation on the Site; 

  

	 	(iv)	upon completion of the Work, or at such other later time as may be determined by the Owner, submit the Documentation to NSPI in accordance with the Owner’s
Requirements. 

  

	 	(d)	All final Documentation consisting of plans, specifications, reports or documents of a professional nature shall be signed by and stamped or sealed with the stamp or
seal of: 

  

	 	(i)	the professional member or licensee who prepared them or under whose supervision and control they were prepared; or 

 

	 	(ii)	the professional member or licensee who thoroughly reviewed and accepted professional responsibility for them. 

 

	24.	Deemed Approval 

 Unless
otherwise agreed in the EPC Contract, with respect to any approval or consent right of NSPI hereunder that is qualified by the words “not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed”, such approval or consent will be deemed to have been given
if NSPI does not respond to the request for approval or consent within 10 business days of its receipt of the request. 
  

	25.	Insurance 

 NPPH agrees to
provide and/or cause its subcontractors to provide and maintain in full force and effect with financially responsible insurance carriers, the following insurance, which shall take effect within five business days following full notice to proceed and
shall remain in effect during the term of the EPC Contract and any extension thereof or as otherwise specified herein. 
  

	 	(a)	Automobile Liability Insurance, covering all licensed motor vehicles owned, rented or leased and used in connection with the Work covering Bodily Injury and Property
Damage Liability to a combined inclusive minimum limit of $2,000,000 and mandatory Accident Benefits. 

  

	 	(b)	 Commercial General Liability Insurance on a Wrap-Up basis in an amount not less than $25,000,000 inclusive for bodily injury, including death, personal
injury and damage to property, including loss of use thereof, for each occurrence. Property damage deductible shall not exceed $250,000 per occurrence and bodily 

 

 24 

	 	
injury shall not be subject to a deductible. The Commercial General Liability Insurance on a Wrap-Up basis shall contain a waiver of any subrogation rights that the insurers may have against NSPI
or those for whom NSPI is in law responsible. 

 Coverage shall specifically include as a minimum, but not be
limited to the following: 
  

	 	(i)	Include NSPI as Insured as well as all sub-contractors, architects and engineers working at the site of the Project; 

 

	 	(ii)	Blanket Contractual Liability; 

  

	 	(iii)	Damage to property of NSPI including loss of use thereof; 

  

	 	(iv)	Pollution Liability coverage on at least a Sudden and Accidental basis; 

  

	 	(v)	Products & Completed Operations including a provision that such coverage to be maintained for a period not less than 12 months following the Total Completion
Date; 

  

	 	(vi)	Blasting, pile driving, caisson work, underground work; 

  

	 	(vii)	Employer’s Liability; 

  

	 	(viii)	Non-Owned Automobile Liability; and 

  

	 	(ix)	Broad Form Property Damage. 

  

	 	(c)	Equipment Insurance covering equipment and tools, owned, rented or leased for the full replacement cost of such equipment on an “All Risks” basis including
marine based risk subject to normal exclusions. 

  

	 	(d)	“All Risks” Builder’s Risk insurance and/or Installation Floater as applicable, including mechanical and electrical breakdown, testing and commissioning
to a limit of the value of the full replacement cost of the Work, any one occurrence, covering physical loss or damage to the Work and expediting expenses, including physical loss or damage resulting from latent defects, faulty workmanship, errors
in design and planning if not otherwise excluded by the terms of the policy. Insured property to include materials, operating equipment, and supplies for incorporation therein, including temporary or off-site storage and project lay-down areas, and
all temporary structures used in the erection of the Work while in transit to and from the site or in storage, while at the site, before and during erection and until completed and while awaiting tests and during testing and commissioning. The
deductible shall not exceed $2,500,000. The “All Risks” Builder’s Risk insurance and/or Installation Floater as applicable will contain a waiver of any subrogation rights that the insurers may have against NSPI or those for whom NSPI
is in law responsible. 

  

 25 

 The insurance noted above shall be maintained continuously from commencement of the Work
until the Commercial Operation Date, or until operational cover is put into effect, whichever is the later. 
  

	 	(e)	Errors & Omissions Insurance or similar insurance coverage rolled into section 25(b) in an amount not less than $2,000,000 aggregate limit covering the period
from start of conceptual design through to completion of the Project and NPPH will provide NSPI an annual certificate of insurance evidencing proof of renewal of such coverage during such period and for every year for five years following the Total
Completion Date. 

  

	 	(f)	Such other insurance as is mutually agreed upon between NPPH and NSPI. 

  

	 	(g)	All the insurance, 

  

	 	(i)	will not be subject to invalidation (as regards the interest of NSPI), by reason of any breach or violation of any warranties, representations, declarations or
conditions; 

  

	 	(ii)	will be at NPPH’s expense and will be primary, non-contributing with, and not excess of, any other insurance available to NSPI; 

 

	 	(iii)	will be placed with insurers authorized to do business in Nova Scotia; and 

 

	 	(iv)	will provide for 60 days’ prior notice to NSPI by mail (prepaid, registered, and return receipt requested) in the event of cancellation or material change that
reduces or restricts the insurance. 

  

	 	(h)	NPPH: 

  

	 	(i)	will maintain the insurance in full force and effect at all times during the term of the EPC Contract; 

 

	 	(ii)	will notify NSPI promptly upon becoming aware of any fact or circumstance that could lead to the cancellation or lapsing of the Insurance and, to the extent
commercially reasonable and obtainable, will require any financing party having a secured interest in any policy of Insurance to notify NSPI of any possible cancellation or lapsing of any of the Insurance; and 

 

	 	(iii)	acknowledges and agrees that: 

  

	 	•	it will provide NSPI with the Insurance policies including renewals thereof, provided that in respect of equipment and errors and omissions insurance certificates of
insurance may be provided in lieu of the Insurance policies; 

  

 26 

	 	•	its covenant to provide the Insurance does not in any way limit or satisfy any other covenant or agreement of NPPH herein including, but not limited to, indemnification
provisions; 

  

	 	•	NSPI’s approval of the form of, or a certificate of, the insurance will not in any way limit or satisfy NPPH’s covenant to obtain and maintain the insurance;

  

	 	•	if NPPH fails to maintain the insurance as set forth herein, NSPI will have the right, but not the obligation, to purchase said insurance at NPPH’s expense; and

  

	 	•	all deductibles shall be to the account of NPPH, except as otherwise provided herein. 

 

	 	(i)	Except as specifically required in section 25, prior to finalizing the EPC Contract, NPPH will determine the extent to which it is able to obtain in respect of all
Insurance (other than automobile insurance) a waiver of any subrogation rights that the insurers may have against NSPI or those for whom NSPI is in law responsible. If NPPH is unable to obtain such a waiver in respect of any Insurance (except as
specifically required in section 25), the EPC Contract will provide contractual terms (such as an indemnity) to meet the same objectives. 

  

	26.	Conditions Precedent 

  

	 	(a)	The EPC Contract shall not become effective until a capital work order application made by NSPI in respect of the Project is approved by the Nova Scotia Utility and
Review Board and such approval must be satisfactory to NSPI in form and substance acting reasonably. 

  

	 	(b)	NPPH shall have the right to terminate the EPC Contract if the notice to proceed is not issued by NSPI before December 31, 2010, without liability to either party.

  

	 	(c)	Neither party will be obliged to enter into an EPC Contract unless the parties have signed and delivered the MO&M Agreement. 

 

	 	(d)	The EPC Contract shall not become effective until the APA is executed and delivered by both parties and the transaction contemplated by the APA closes in accordance
with its terms. 

  

 27 

	27.	Binding Intent 

 This Term Sheet is
intended to be binding on the parties. The parties agree to negotiate in good faith the full EPC Contract. The rights and obligations of the parties under this Term Sheet shall terminate upon the execution of the full EPC Contract 

 

	28.	Assignment 

 This Term Sheet is not
assignable. 
  

	29.	Counterparts 

 This Term Sheet may be
executed and delivered by the parties in one or more counterparts, each of which when so executed and delivered will be an original, and those counterparts will together constitute one and the same instrument. 

 

	30.	Facsimile Signatures 

 Delivery of this
Term Sheet by facsimile, e-mail or functionally equivalent electronic transmission constitutes valid and effective delivery. 

[THE REMAINDER OF THIS PAGE IS INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK] 

 

 28 

 The within Term Sheet is agreed to this 1st day of April, 2010 

 

			
	NOVA SCOTIA POWER INC.
		
	Per:	 	 /s/ Rob Bennett

	Name:	 	Rob Bennett
	Title:	 	President and CEO
		
	Per:	 	 /s/ Mark Savory

	Name:	 	Mark Savory
	Title:	 	VP Technical and Construction Services
	
	NEWPAGE PORT HAWKESBURY CORP.
		
	Per:	 	 /s/ Douglas K. Cooper

		 	Douglas K. Cooper
		 	Vice President, General Counsel and
		 	Secretary

 A copy of the Schedules will be
furnished supplementally to the Commission upon request.

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