Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

As Alberta Shifts From Coal, Electricity Utility Warns Of Ontario-style Rate Hikes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Nov, 2015 11:04 AM
    CALGARY — Change is coming to Alberta's electricity sector, but industry watchers are divided on how it will affect rates for consumers already hit hard by the enduring global oil price slump.
     
    Pointing to Ontario, TransAlta chief executive Dawn Farrell recently raised the spectre of rate hikes while pushing for the Calgary-based utility's proposed plan to transition away from coal-fired power plants.
     
    There is a "real risk to consumers, including Alberta businesses, of price spikes and volatility" as the province moves away from coal-fired generation and adds more renewable energy, she wrote in an opinion piece that ran in two Alberta newspapers.
     
    In Ontario, she pointed out, electricity prices have climbed roughly 50 per cent over the past five years compared to 10 per cent in Alberta in the same period.
     
    That's "largely due to an aggressive program to retire coal generation and subsidize rapid renewable energy growth," she wrote.
     
    But Ben Thibault, director of the Pembina Institute's electricity program, says Alberta shouldn't see Ontario-style spikes because renewable power costs have come down significantly since Ontario started transitioning, and there are also more options when it comes to supplies.
     
    "There's some qualitative reasons that I think we're in different circumstances," Thibault said.
     
    Alberta's privatized power market will also help allocate investments to the best generating options, he said.
     
    "We have a market in place in Alberta that will find the cheapest alternative generating sources, so I think this transition can be done in a way that is a more measured approach," said Thibault.
     
    Whether Ontario's price spikes have been caused entirely by its transition away from coal-fired power plants is also subject to debate.
     
    Tom Adams, an independent energy consultant, has been highly critical of Ontario's transition and blames the rate hikes on the coal phase-out.
     
    "Almost everything points back to the 'off coal' decision of 2003," said Adams.
     
    He added that early cost estimates on the transition away from coal were wildly inaccurate, including one put forth by the Ontario Clean Air Alliance that pegged the cost to transition at $1.86 a month, or about the cost of "a cup of coffee and a doughnut."
     
    "This proved to be so ridiculously understated that it would be comical if it hadn't become such a grave issue (in Ontario)," said Adams. "Electricity prices are soaring in Ontario; they are going to continue increasing for the next several years, according to official forecasts."
     
    The Ontario Energy Board has hiked prices twice this year, adding about 4.6 per cent to the average household bill in April and another 3.4 per cent in October.
     
    But it blamed the costs from nuclear and hydro-electric power plants for 40 to 50 per cent of the rate increase. Renewable energy made up about a third of the rate increase.
     
    Thibault said Ontario has suffered for setting fixed rates for renewable energy that were far too high, but he said lessons have been learned and Ontario has since tweaked its methods.
     
    Alberta's NDP government is set to unveil its power transition plan before the Paris climate change conference starting Nov. 30.
     
    In September, Premier Rachel Notley committed to phasing out coal use in the province as quickly as is reasonable "without imposing unnecessary price shocks on consumers."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Leaders Hail Sikhs Living In British Columbia

    Canadian Leaders Hail Sikhs Living In British Columbia
    Guru Nanak challenged inequality and was ahead of his time in declaring all of humanity as being equal, a lesson we should still heed today

    Canadian Leaders Hail Sikhs Living In British Columbia

    Balsillie Fears TPP Could Cost Canada Billions And Become Worst-Ever Policy Move

    Balsillie Fears TPP Could Cost Canada Billions And Become Worst-Ever Policy Move
    Jim Balsillie warns that provisions tucked into the Trans-Pacific Partnership could cost Canada hundreds of billions of dollars — and eventually make  signing it the worst public policy decision in the country's history.

    Balsillie Fears TPP Could Cost Canada Billions And Become Worst-Ever Policy Move

    Air Baltic Will Be The First Commercial Airline To Operate Bombardier CSeries

    Air Baltic Will Be The First Commercial Airline To Operate Bombardier CSeries
    The Latvian national airline has 13 firm orders for the CS300 and retains options for seven others, Bombardier said in a news release.

    Air Baltic Will Be The First Commercial Airline To Operate Bombardier CSeries

    B.C. NDP Leader John Horgan Receives Strong Vote Of Confidence

    Ninety-five per cent of the ballots cast supported Horgan's continued leadership.

    B.C. NDP Leader John Horgan Receives Strong Vote Of Confidence

    B.C. Documents On Highway Of Tears Open Wounds As Missing-Women Inquiry Looms

    B.C. Documents On Highway Of Tears Open Wounds As Missing-Women Inquiry Looms
    VICTORIA — The small British Columbia Cheslatta Carrier Nation has a decades-long anguished relationship with Highway 16, or the so-called Highway of Tears.

    B.C. Documents On Highway Of Tears Open Wounds As Missing-Women Inquiry Looms

    Inquest Set To Begin Into Death Of 7-Year-Old Toronto Girl Killed By Her Guardians

    Inquest Set To Begin Into Death Of 7-Year-Old Toronto Girl Killed By Her Guardians
    Seven years after Katelynn Sampson's small, battered body was discovered in a Toronto apartment, a coroner's inquest will investigate just what allowed the little girl to be beaten to death by her legal guardians.

    Inquest Set To Begin Into Death Of 7-Year-Old Toronto Girl Killed By Her Guardians