Calgary Herald

Blame game heats up in electricit­y power play

Who should take heat for $2 billion in higher charges?

- CHRIS VARCOE

Is the former Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government responsibl­e for a critical electricit­y decision that could cost Albertans up to $2 billion in higher charges — or is the current NDP government accountabl­e?

Or is anyone to blame in this high-voltage affair?

Ultimately, that question could be decided by an Alberta court after the Notley government started legal action Monday to try to stop utility companies from unloading unprofitab­le power purchase arrangemen­ts (PPAs) on to consumers.

It’s a showdown that’s been brewing for months, but dates back to the Klein government’s deregulati­on of Alberta’s power market almost two decades ago.

The lawsuit involves a provision contained in the power contracts that the government is now calling “the Enron clause” after the notorious U.S. energy company — and the NDP is fighting to have the clause voided.

“Our government believes that Albertans shouldn’t be on the hook for secret back-room deals that were created between companies like Enron and the previous PC government,” Deputy Premier Sarah Hoffman told a news conference at the legislatur­e.

“We think it is not only unfair to Albertans, it is also unlawful.”

Since the spring, the government has been trying to find a way to prevent the utilities from transferri­ng money-losing PPAs into the lap of a government-created agency, the Balancing Pool.

The agency sells electricit­y from older-generation contracts that weren’t sold at auction when Alberta’s market deregulate­d in the late 1990s.

It allocates any profits or losses back to consumers on their monthly electricit­y bills.

To date, the pool has returned more than $4.4 billion to Alberta consumers.

Rapidly, however, the profits are turning into losses. Power prices have recently plunged to 20-year lows.

On Dec. 11, Calgary’s power utility Enmax gave notice it was terminatin­g its PPA for the Battle River coal-fired power facility.

It noted the province was increasing Alberta’s carbon tax on heavy greenhouse gas emitters and that the PPA became “unprofitab­le or more unprofitab­le” for Enmax.

The power arrangemen­ts originally contained an exit clause that allowed for the contract to be terminated if a change in law made the PPAs unprofitab­le.

But the arrangemen­ts were later amended in August 2000 to also include the words “more unprofitab­le.”

The province claims the change was made at the behest of nowdefunct Enron, then a big player in Alberta’s power market.

The province argues no public notice was given or hearings held into the changes made by Alberta’s Energy and Utilities Board at the time, and that the province’s own energy regulator made an amendment “that it was not authorized by law to make,” according to court documents.

The government says it isn’t fair to make consumers pay for losses on contracts already unprofitab­le due to market conditions. It notes the buyers collective­ly made an estimated $11 billion in profit from their PPA operations dating back to last decade.

After Enmax terminated its PPA, the decision was accepted by the Balancing Pool in January — something the province is also contesting.

Other utilities stuck with unprofitab­le coal-fired PPAs have since joined the stampede and terminated their contracts. However, their cancellati­ons haven’t been accepted by the pool.

In March, a statement by Energy Minister Marg-McCuaig Boyd noted “any change of ownership of the power purchase arrangemen­t will have minimal impact to consumers.”

But stuck with the unprofitab­le contract, the Balancing Pool has already begun taking steps to brace for the financial meteor heading its way.

Its board of directors approved a strategy this spring to liquidate its $705-million investment portfolio due to the cash requiremen­ts tied to the contract terminatio­ns.

If the cancellati­ons are upheld, the Balancing Pool will have to cover the shortfall, estimated at up to $2 billion by the time the contracts finally expire in 2020, according to the government.

In essence, the NDP is blaming the former PC government for being asleep at the switch and not examining the repercussi­ons of the “more unprofitab­le” clause on Alberta consumers.

Hoffman leaned heavily on inflammato­ry language at the news conference, using words like “secret clause” and “covert moves” to describe the changes made back in 2000.

“It’s clear there was an intention to have this deal struck secretly between Enron and the then-government, and that certainly is not in the public interest, and we’re arguing it’s also unlawful,” she said.

But there’s a counter-point. If the NDP hadn’t changed the carbon levy on heavy emitters, it wouldn’t have given companies the opportunit­y to terminate the contracts in the first place, critics contend.

“It’s a banana-republic move,” charged Alberta Party Leader Greg Clark. “They’ve tied themselves in legal knots to try to find some way of unringing the bell.”

Enmax added that the government should have known about the implicatio­ns of its carbon levy. “Enmax’s actions on its PPAs were completely foreseeabl­e, legal and reasonable,” it said in a statement.

In its court filing, the province contends the energy, environmen­t and justice ministers only became aware of the “more unprofitab­le” clause in a midMarch 2016 meeting with the Balancing Pool.

And so the case is now headed for the courts in November.

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