Zap! Your hydro bill's going up

Antonella Artusa
Toronto Sun
September 23, 2010

The Ontario Energy Board thinks you’re not paying enough for hydro so it’s yanking another $60 out of your wallet.

Ontario hydro ratepayers — already hammered by the HST, time-of-use pricing and rate hikes — will pay an added $240 million a year, the Ontario NDP says.

Officials at the provincial crown agency — whose salaries are paid for through hydro bills — decided earlier this year that utilities should be able to boost their rate of return to 9.85% from 8.39%.

The OEB says that the increase shouldn’t be more than $1 per month for most residential customers, tucked into the delivery charge on the bill.

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath called Premier Dalton McGuinty on the carpet in the legislature Thursday, demanding to know why ratepayers should have to cough up even more of their stretched dollars to boost profits for the utilities.

“Ontario families are scrambling to deal with sky-high hydro rates. Does the premier think it’s fair to actually ask consumers to pay even more just to ensure healthy profits for hydro utilities?” she said.

Because utilities are a monopoly, the OEB determines how much profit is required to attract investors, appease shareholders and permit investment in infrastructure and then balances that against the interests of the ratepayers who pick up the tab.

Prof Gordon Roberts, of the York University Schulich School of Business, who made a submission to the OEB on behalf of Pollution Probe, recommended a lower rate.

“It’s generous,” Roberts said. “Clearly, if the answer comes out on the generous side (for utilities), it’s less fair for the ratepayers.”

Energy Minister Brad Duguid said the rate of return allows these companies to reinvest, ensuring the province can keep the lights on.

“Local distribution companies are private companies — they have shareholders,” Duguid said. “The Ontario Energy Board determines what the appropriate rate of return is for them. That’s always the way it’s been and that’s the way it is now. We don’t influence that.”

Lawrence Solomon, executive director of Energy Probe, agrees that the OEB has an obligation to ensure utilities have enough funds to invest.

“I think the NDP is pointing their guns at the wrong target … not blame the regulator that’s really doing its best to adjudicate really an impossible situation,” Solomon said.

He expects the Dalton McGuinty government to do everything in its power to depress rate increases at least until the next election.

But Ontario’s already higher hydro bills will double or triple within the next couple of years unless the McGuinty government stops overpaying for wind and solar and rethinks its pledge to abandon cheap, efficient coal plants, he said.

“In the U.K there’s a term that’s become a household term — it’s called fuel poverty,” Solomon said. “They now need subsidies to make their energy payments and we are headed in the same direction.”

Posted in Energy Probe News, Reforming Ontario's Electrical Generation Sector | Leave a comment

A Liberal power surge: Blizzard

Christina Blizzard
Toronto Sun
September 25, 2010

Many Ontarians can’t keep paying these ever-escalating fuel bills

The two biggest issues in next year’s election will be the HST and the price of electricity.

As consumers open their hydro bills this month, they’re getting sticker shock from the extra 8% the HST has added.

Last week, both Opposition parties were hammering at the Liberals for other sneaky costs that have been quietly added to their already ballooning bills.

Andrea Horwath and the New Democrats were especially effective.

First, they raised the issue of the $60 million that was paid to Bruce Power in 2009 for energy they didn’t produce.

This added an extra $15 per household per year.

On Thursday, they revealed utility companies had been allowed to boost their expected profit margins to 9.85% from 8.01% — although utilities actually came in at around 3.32% last year — by the Ontario Energy Board. The hike is estimated to cost consumers $240 million annually.

While the government claims rate hikes will pay for new transmission, that just isn’t the case.

Horwath pointed out this hike will simply go from our wallets to corporate profits.

Then there’ve been the Smart Meters. They were supposed to be a tool to help families manage their bills.

Instead, they’ve become a weapon — a blunt instrument to batter the wallets of consumers at a time when we can least afford it.

The root of the problem is the government’s “obsession to prematurely retire Ontario’s coal plants,” says Energy Probe’s executive director Lawrence Solomon.

Where decades ago, coal plants were dirty and EP opposed them, they’ve become much cleaner and most harmful emissions have been removed.

“Coal has become a very clean and inexpensive form of power, but this is what the government has decided to target out of a misplaced fear of carbon dioxide,” Solomon said.

Germany, the U.S., the U.K., India and China are building coal plants, he said.

Solomon said the government is wasting vast amounts of money on transmission to bring remote wind and solar energy to urban markets and should end subsidies to unsustainable forms of generation.

“If the government simply put the power system on a market basis, we would see rates drop,” he said.

Cash-strapped consumers will reach a point where they just can’t pay their bill, Solomon said.

This has happened in the U.K., where energy costs are a leading contributor to poverty.

“If the province keeps going along this way, there will be many people who think of themselves as middle class who all of a sudden realize they can’t keep paying these ever-escalating fuel bills, and there will be subsidy programs put in place to deal with fuel poverty,” he said.

Premier Dalton McGuinty likes to brag about how we got through the long, hot summer without worrying about energy shortages.

The flip side of that coin is the economic downturn and the decimation of the manufacturing sector means demand for electricity has tanked.

If the manufacturing sector ever comes back the demand for electricity will soar.

The only thing growing in the energy sector is the number of bloated bureaucracies. Where once we had just Ontario Hydro, we now have Ontario Power Generation, Hydro One, the Independent Electricity System Operator, the Ontario Power Authority and the Ontario Energy Board.

PC Leader Tim Hudak reported the OPA has gone from 15 to 300 bureaucrats.

“They’ve not produced the long-term energy plan yet, despite five years on the job, but they seem more than happy to be the propaganda arm for your expensive energy experiments,” Hudak told McGuinty in the House Thursday.

We pay through the nose for private companies to get an almost 10% rate hike. We pay six-figure salaries to fatcat bureaucrats. We pay for a flawed plan to close coal plants.

Fatcats get fatter. We get poorer.

Thank your government next October.

Posted in Energy Probe News, Reforming Ontario's Electrical Generation Sector | Leave a comment

Horizon seeks hefty hike

Steve Arnold
The Spec.com
September 28, 2010

Electricity in Hamilton and St. Catharines is about to get more expensive.

Horizon Utilities, which distributes power in the two cities, is asking the provincial regulator to increase the distribution charge for power by almost 12 per cent effective January. And the utility says there will need to more increases in the future.

At the same time, provincial NDP leader Andrea Horwath has started a campaign to cut bills by getting the provincial government to remove its portion of the new Harmonized Sales Tax.

Tony Iavarone, Horizon’s director of corporate communication, said the rate increase is needed so the company can start the expensive process of training new apprentices and replacing aging poles and wires.

“We thought it would be better to initiate this work now and have incremental increases than to wait and really have to hit our customers,” he said. “We have aging infrastructure and an aging population in our trades, and it takes four years to train up a new apprentice.

“A lot of this infrastructure was put in during the 1950s and 1960s,” he added. “We want to do the work faster so we don’t have it dying on us.”

The rate hike Horizon is seeking would add about $3.77 to the monthly bill of the average homeowner and about $10.47 to the bill of a larger user such as The Spectator.

Iavarone noted the Horizon hike is really only 3.5 per cent of a total hydro bill because Horizon’s fees and charges only account for about 22 per cent of the bill. The rest consists of charges imposed by Ontario Power Generation and other agencies.

This isn’t the first rate increase hydro users have faced this year. In May the Ontario Energy Board slapped average users with an increase of $5.78 to raise money for renewable generation projects and conservation programs, and to meet increased costs for existing generation. That was in addition to new time of use charges. In July, Ontario’s new Harmonized Sales Tax was added. Ontario Power Generation, the agency that actually produces electricity, has also applied for an increase of $2.75 per customer to take effect in January.

The OEB previously rejected an application by Horizon to increase the rates of average customers by 32 cents a month to make up $2.8 million in revenue it didn’t earn from U.S. Steel when the company shut down its Hamilton plants in 2009. Instead, that lost income will be build into rate increases Horizon intends to seek next year.

The Ontario NDP has said the HST adds about $11.25 a month to the average bill.

In total, the increases add up to more than $23.55 a month.

For NDP leader Andrea Horwath, that’s a cruel burden to lay on people already struggling because of fixed incomes or other problems. She has launched a campaign to push the Ontario government into taking its portion of the HST off hydro bills.

“This government has been putting more and more expenses on people who are already near the breaking point,” Horwath said in an interview. “This is going to drive people to the absolute brink of distress.”

Horwath said her own latest hydro bill was over $400. She can afford it, but many can’t.

“People are having to make a choice between buying groceries and paying these bills because they don’t have a choice about using hydro,” she said. “This is a chance for the government to do something positive.

In the Legislature, Premier Dalton McGuinty said his party is working to help people manage electricity costs, but wouldn’t promise to provide an HST exemption.

Lawrence Solomon, executive director of Energy Probe, added in an interview these hikes are only the first of many to come if the government doesn’t drop its plan to close down coal-fired generating stations in favour of expensive wind and solar projects.

“This is just the beginning,” he said. “If we stay on our present course we could see a doubling or tripling of rates.”

Solomon rejects the idea of pouring subsidies into wind and solar projects. Instead, he’d like to see the cost of hydro controlled by allowing real market competition – something the Harris Conservative government considered but never fully carried out.

“The NDP is aiming at the wrong problem,” he said. “All their plan will do is move the cost to another sector. They should be criticizing the general policy, not just the HST part of it.”

Posted in Energy Probe News, Reforming Ontario's Electrical Generation Sector | Leave a comment

Waterloo seeks hydro bill hike

Jeff Outhit
The Record.com
September 29, 2010

WATERLOO — Electric bills in Waterloo, already the highest in the region, are poised to rise higher.

City council’s electric utility is seeking to hike its delivery charge 18.5 per cent next May, in part to continue pouring millions in profits into city coffers.

If approved by the Ontario Energy Board, the increase would add $69 to the annual electric bill of an average residence in Waterloo, Woolwich and Wellesley. This equals an increase of five per cent on a current bill of $1,345, including all charges and taxes.

The proposed increase follows increases in city property taxes, up 12.5 per cent since 2006, and increased water bills, up 54 per cent since 2006.

“It is necessary to maintain our electrical system,” Mayor Brenda Halloran said. “I think people understand that it’s an essential service.”

She’s frustrated the city utility had to wait seven years to seek an increase in delivery charges. The charge has seen only minor adjustments since 2004.

“We’re playing catch-up,” said Albert Singh, vice-president of finance for Waterloo North Hydro.

Schools are likely to oppose the “significant” increase, said Wayne McNally, who coordinates a coalition of 72 school boards that monitor regulated utility rates.

Schools worry they may have to take money from classrooms to pay rising electric bills, McNally said. They are reviewing Waterloo’s application to assess whether the increase is warranted and have asked to participate in approval hearings.

The environmental group Energy Probe has also asked to participate, representing consumers. “I would hope that we’d be able to lower the rate hike, to some extent,” said Lawrence Solomon, executive director of Energy Probe.

He warns that electricity bills are poised to soar as Ontario pursues expensive green power. “We are headed for power rates that are going to double or triple, if the government stays on its current course,” he said. “So what we’ve seen so far in rate applications is only the beginning.”

Waterloo North Hydro has told the provincial energy regulator that its proposed increase will generate $5 million a year that it needs to:

Maintain a reliable system to distribute electricity, serve customers, pay for staff, and promote conservation.

Help pay for a $26-million headquarters under construction in Woolwich Township. It’s to open in Dec. 2011.

Continue providing millions to councils that operate the utility for profits.

Local politicians have taken more than $149 million out of three municipal electric utilities since turning them into profit-making ventures in 2000. This includes $15 million to help pay off RIM Park debt in Waterloo.

“It’s played a major role in keeping property taxes at a reduced rate,” Halloran said. “We’re getting good dividends back.”

If the Waterloo electricity increase is denied “we will do what we can to keep the system running,” Singh said. But he said the utility would struggle in the long term to maintain itself.

Kitchener-Wilmot Hydro increased its delivery charges 8.7 per cent in May, adding $27 to an average electricity bill that has reached $1,295 a year.

Cambridge and North Dumfries Hydro decreased its delivery charges 2.9 per cent in May, shaving $10 from an average bill that’s now $1,279 a year.

Posted in Energy Probe News, Power Generation in Ontario | Leave a comment

A Liberal power surge: Blizzard

Christina Blizzard
Toronto Sun
September 25, 2010

The two biggest issues in next year’s election will be the HST and the price of electricity.

As consumers open their hydro bills this month, they’re getting sticker shock from the extra 8% the HST has added.

Last week, both Opposition parties were hammering at the Liberals for other sneaky costs that have been quietly added to their already ballooning bills.

Andrea Horwath and the New Democrats were especially effective.

First, they raised the issue of the $60 million that was paid to Bruce Power in 2009 for energy they didn’t produce.

This added an extra $15 per household per year.

On Thursday, they revealed utility companies had been allowed to boost their expected profit margins to 9.85% from 8.01% — although utilities actually came in at around 3.32% last year — by the Ontario Energy Board. The hike is estimated to cost consumers $240 million annually.

While the government claims rate hikes will pay for new transmission, that just isn’t the case.

Horwath pointed out this hike will simply go from our wallets to corporate profits.

Then there’ve been the Smart Meters. They were supposed to be a tool to help families manage their bills.

Instead, they’ve become a weapon — a blunt instrument to batter the wallets of consumers at a time when we can least afford it.

The root of the problem is the government’s “obsession to prematurely retire Ontario’s coal plants,” says Energy Probe’s executive director Lawrence Solomon.

Where decades ago, coal plants were dirty and EP opposed them, they’ve become much cleaner and most harmful emissions have been removed.

“Coal has become a very clean and inexpensive form of power, but this is what the government has decided to target out of a misplaced fear of carbon dioxide,” Solomon said.

Germany, the U.S., the U.K., India and China are building coal plants, he said.

Solomon said the government is wasting vast amounts of money on transmission to bring remote wind and solar energy to urban markets and should end subsidies to unsustainable forms of generation.

“If the government simply put the power system on a market basis, we would see rates drop,” he said.

Cash-strapped consumers will reach a point where they just can’t pay their bill, Solomon said.

This has happened in the U.K., where energy costs are a leading contributor to poverty.

“If the province keeps going along this way, there will be many people who think of themselves as middle class who all of a sudden realize they can’t keep paying these ever-escalating fuel bills, and there will be subsidy programs put in place to deal with fuel poverty,” he said.

Premier Dalton McGuinty likes to brag about how we got through the long, hot summer without worrying about energy shortages.

The flip side of that coin is the economic downturn and the decimation of the manufacturing sector means demand for electricity has tanked.

If the manufacturing sector ever comes back the demand for electricity will soar.

The only thing growing in the energy sector is the number of bloated bureaucracies. Where once we had just Ontario Hydro, we now have Ontario Power Generation, Hydro One, the Independent Electricity System Operator, the Ontario Power Authority and the Ontario Energy Board.

PC Leader Tim Hudak reported the OPA has gone from 15 to 300 bureaucrats.

“They’ve not produced the long-term energy plan yet, despite five years on the job, but they seem more than happy to be the propaganda arm for your expensive energy experiments,” Hudak told McGuinty in the House Thursday.

We pay through the nose for private companies to get an almost 10% rate hike. We pay six-figure salaries to fatcat bureaucrats. We pay for a flawed plan to close coal plants.

Fatcats get fatter. We get poorer.

Thank your government next October.

Posted in Energy Probe News, Reforming Ontario's Electrical Generation Sector | Leave a comment

Horizon seeks hefty hike

Steve Arnold
The Spec
September 28, 2010

Horizon Utilities, which distributes power in the two cities, is asking the provincial regulator to increase the distribution charge for power by almost 12 per cent effective January. And the utility says there will need to more increases in the future.

At the same time, provincial NDP leader Andrea Horwath has started a campaign to cut bills by getting the provincial government to remove its portion of the new Harmonized Sales Tax.

Tony Iavarone, Horizon’s director of corporate communication, said the rate increase is needed so the company can start the expensive process of training new apprentices and replacing aging poles and wires.

“We thought it would be better to initiate this work now and have incremental increases than to wait and really have to hit our customers,” he said. “We have aging infrastructure and an aging population in our trades, and it takes four years to train up a new apprentice.

“A lot of this infrastructure was put in during the 1950s and 1960s,” he added. “We want to do the work faster so we don’t have it dying on us.”

The rate hike Horizon is seeking would add about $3.77 to the monthly bill of the average homeowner and about $10.47 to the bill of a larger user such as The Spectator.

Iavarone noted the Horizon hike is really only 3.5 per cent of a total hydro bill because Horizon’s fees and charges only account for about 22 per cent of the bill. The rest consists of charges imposed by Ontario Power Generation and other agencies.

This isn’t the first rate increase hydro users have faced this year. In May the Ontario Energy Board slapped average users with an increase of $5.78 to raise money for renewable generation projects and conservation programs, and to meet increased costs for existing generation. That was in addition to new time of use charges. In July, Ontario’s new Harmonized Sales Tax was added. Ontario Power Generation, the agency that actually produces electricity, has also applied for an increase of $2.75 per customer to take effect in January.

The OEB previously rejected an application by Horizon to increase the rates of average customers by 32 cents a month to make up $2.8 million in revenue it didn’t earn from U.S. Steel when the company shut down its Hamilton plants in 2009. Instead, that lost income will be build into rate increases Horizon intends to seek next year.

The Ontario NDP has said the HST adds about $11.25 a month to the average bill.

In total, the increases add up to more than $23.55 a month.

For NDP leader Andrea Horwath, that’s a cruel burden to lay on people already struggling because of fixed incomes or other problems. She has launched a campaign to push the Ontario government into taking its portion of the HST off hydro bills.

“This government has been putting more and more expenses on people who are already near the breaking point,” Horwath said in an interview. “This is going to drive people to the absolute brink of distress.”

Horwath said her own latest hydro bill was over $400. She can afford it, but many can’t.

“People are having to make a choice between buying groceries and paying these bills because they don’t have a choice about using hydro,” she said. “This is a chance for the government to do something positive.

In the Legislature, Premier Dalton McGuinty said his party is working to help people manage electricity costs, but wouldn’t promise to provide an HST exemption.

Lawrence Solomon, executive director of Energy Probe, added in an interview these hikes are only the first of many to come if the government doesn’t drop its plan to close down coal-fired generating stations in favour of expensive wind and solar projects.

“This is just the beginning,” he said. “If we stay on our present course we could see a doubling or tripling of rates.”

Solomon rejects the idea of pouring subsidies into wind and solar projects. Instead, he’d like to see the cost of hydro controlled by allowing real market competition – something the Harris Conservative government considered but never fully carried out.

“The NDP is aiming at the wrong problem,” he said. “All their plan will do is move the cost to another sector. They should be criticizing the general policy, not just the HST part of it.”

Posted in Energy Probe News, Reforming Ontario's Electrical Generation Sector | Leave a comment

Zap! Your hydro bill's going up

Antonella Artuso, Queen’s Park Bureau Chief
Toronto Sun
September 22, 2010


The Ontario Energy Board thinks you’re not paying enough for hydro so it’s yanking another $60 out of your wallet.

Ontario hydro ratepayers — already hammered by the HST, time-of-use pricing and rate hikes — will pay an added $240 million a year, the Ontario NDP says.

Officials at the provincial crown agency — whose salaries are paid for through hydro bills — decided earlier this year that utilities should be able to boost their rate of return to 9.85% from 8.39%.

The OEB says that the increase shouldn’t be more than $1 per month for most residential customers, tucked into the delivery charge on the bill.

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath called Premier Dalton McGuinty on the carpet in the legislature Thursday, demanding to know why ratepayers should have to cough up even more of their stretched dollars to boost profits for the utilities.

“Ontario families are scrambling to deal with sky-high hydro rates. Does the premier think it’s fair to actually ask consumers to pay even more just to ensure healthy profits for hydro utilities?” she said.

Because utilities are a monopoly, the OEB determines how much profit is required to attract investors, appease shareholders and permit investment in infrastructure and then balances that against the interests of the ratepayers who pick up the tab.

Prof Gordon Roberts, of the York University Schulich School of Business, who made a submission to the OEB on behalf of Pollution Probe, recommended a lower rate.

“It’s generous,” Roberts said. “Clearly, if the answer comes out on the generous side (for utilities), it’s less fair for the ratepayers.”

Energy Minister Brad Duguid said the rate of return allows these companies to reinvest, ensuring the province can keep the lights on.

“Local distribution companies are private companies — they have shareholders,” Duguid said. “The Ontario Energy Board determines what the appropriate rate of return is for them. That’s always the way it’s been and that’s the way it is now. We don’t influence that.”

Lawrence Solomon, executive director of Energy Probe, agrees that the OEB has an obligation to ensure utilities have enough funds to invest.

“I think the NDP is pointing their guns at the wrong target … not blame the regulator that’s really doing its best to adjudicate really an impossible situation,” Solomon said.

He expects the Dalton McGuinty government to do everything in its power to depress rate increases at least until the next election.

But Ontario’s already higher hydro bills will double or triple within the next couple of years unless the McGuinty government stops overpaying for wind and solar and rethinks its pledge to abandon cheap, efficient coal plants, he said.

“In the U.K there’s a term that’s become a household term — it’s called fuel poverty,” Solomon said. “They now need subsidies to make their energy payments and we are headed in the same direction.”

Posted in Energy Probe News, Reforming Ontario's Electrical Generation Sector | Leave a comment

Horizon seeks hefty hike

(Sept. 28, 2010) Lawrence Solomon, executive director of Energy Probe, says these hikes are only the first of many to come if the government doesn’t drop its plan to close down coal-fired generating stations in favour of expensive wind and solar projects. Continue reading

Posted in Reforming Ontario's Local Electrical Distribution Sector | Leave a comment

A Liberal power surge: Blizzard

(Sept. 25) The root of Ontario’s ever-escalating fuel is the government’s “obsession to prematurely retire Ontario’s coal plants,” says Energy Probe’s executive director Lawrence Solomon. Continue reading

Posted in Reforming Ontario's Local Electrical Distribution Sector | Leave a comment

Lawrence Solomon: Radiation’s benefits

(Sept. 25) Will a gamma ray a day keep the doctor away? A new book says low-level radiation may prevent cancer. Continue reading

Posted in Hormesis | Tagged , | Leave a comment