However, when reporters first asked Claudine Bouchard on Wednesday if she was confident the deal would proceed, she chuckled and said it was a "good question."
"My personal view on that is I'm really confident because it's a very good deal for them, and it's a very good deal for us," she said at an event organized by the Chamber of Commerce of Metropolitan Montreal.
"This is a commercial agreement that we made, not a political agreement," she added. "We have … key elements in that deal to make sure our partners in Newfoundland see that deal as we do: as a very win-win situation."
The utilities had hoped to hammer out final agreements by April 2026.
But Wakeham has promised to have the draft deal reviewed by an independent third party and subject any final agreements to a public referendum, pointing to lessons from the province's past hydroelectric failures. He has not said when the review will begin.
Bouchard said she would leave the politics to the politicians.
"But for the moment, we still have an agreement in principle," she said. "We're trying to implement in a final agreement because we are convinced — we are absolutely convinced — that this was a win-win agreement for both provinces."
Newfoundland and Labrador's Liberals have said the proposal, if finalized, would bring the province more than $225 billion over the next 50 years. Wakeham has said he believes a better deal is possible.