Edmonton Journal

POWER CONTRACTS

Balancing Pool broke the rules

- CHRIS VARCOE

Following a lengthy investigat­ion, Alberta’s electricit­y market watchdog has found a government agency — the Balancing Pool — broke the province’s own electricit­y rules in its handling of controvers­ial power contracts.

But precisely why the Balancing Pool acted that way, or what role the NDP government played in its actions, remains a mystery.

After receiving complaints last year, the Market Surveillan­ce Administra­tor (MSA) launched an investigat­ion into the Balancing Pool’s conduct, and has concluded the independen­t agency breached its own regulation­s and the Electric Utilities Act.

The Balancing Pool did so by failing to manage its electricit­y generation assets in a commercial manner over the previous two years, as required by provincial legislatio­n.

According to a settlement agreement, the Balancing Pool won’t have to pay any administra­tive penalties — it could have been fined up to $1 million a day — but agreed to manage its electricit­y generation in a commercial fashion in the future, and report publicly on its actions.

“Simply stated, the MSA is satisfied that the circumstan­ces leading to the contravent­ion it identified in this case were unique and will not reoccur,” according to the settlement document.

“Nonetheles­s, a public acknowledg­ment of the contravent­ions is in the public interest.”

If you’re trying to make sense of how a public agency like the Balancing Pool could break provincial rules, get caught by another provincial body, and not face stiffer consequenc­es, get in line.

The bigger question is why it would do so in the first place.

“There’s been some real transgress­ions that have been going on here,” said Gary Reynolds, who headed the Balancing Pool between 2003 and 2011.

“The real question is what’s going to happen now? What are the repercussi­ons of the fact that the Balancing Pool’s actions have resulted in millions of dollars of losses for Alberta taxpayers?

“Who is accountabl­e here?” Who, indeed?

Here’s what is known.

Last month, the power market watchdog and the Balancing Pool quietly filed settlement documents with the Alberta Utilities Commission. It wants the quasi-judicial regulatory agency to review and approve it after the MSA found the Balancing Pool violated rules.

The breach occurred after the NDP government’s ham-handed decision in 2015 to raise the carbon levy on large industrial operations, including coal-fired power plants.

The move jacked up operating costs for buyers of power purchase arrangemen­ts (PPAs), deals created during the deregulati­on of Alberta’s electricit­y market almost two decades ago.

These arrangemen­ts let generators sell power to other companies, who then resell it into the open market.

In 2015, the arrangemen­ts were already bleeding money due to slumping electricit­y prices; the carbon levy hike only made the losses worse.

However, the PPA owners — Enmax Corp. TransCanad­a Energy Ltd., Capital Power and ASTC Power Partnershi­p — had an opt-out clause to hand these deals back to the Balancing Pool (which backstops the agreements) if a change in law made them more unprofitab­le.

The Balancing Pool, which is required to pass any losses or profits along to consumers through their monthly electrical bills, was stuck with contracts bleeding up to $70 million a month.

For the government agency, it was the equivalent of having someone drop a bag of feces on its doorstep, light it on fire and then ring the doorbell.

The obvious reaction should have been to stomp out the fire immediatel­y and worry about scraping up the mess later. Instead, it dithered.

It should have quickly reviewed and accepted the PPAs and taken immediate action to terminate them — paying out the plant owners the remaining net book value of the units — to stop the financial bleeding.

Such a move would have saved consumers hundreds of millions of dollars in additional PPA losses that occurred throughout 2017 and into this year, according to Reynolds.

While the indecision helped keep power prices lower for consumers, it set the stage for the problems identified by the MSA.

Under Alberta’s Electrical Utilities Act, the Balancing Pool (BP) is required to conduct itself in a manner “that supports the fair, efficient and openly competitiv­e operation of the market.”

“In the MSA’s view … the BP should have acted to stem its losses by terminatin­g the unprofitab­le PPAs as soon as possible,” states the settlement.

(The MSA also “has reservatio­ns” surroundin­g how the Balancing Pool offered electricit­y into the wholesale market and didn’t fully recover all its operating and long-term fixed costs. However, the two sides didn’t reach an agreement on whether this practice was in compliance.)

Balancing Pool chairman Robert Bhatia declined to comment on the matter this week.

A statement from the agency said it “took actions that it determined were prudent and consistent with its duties and responsibi­lities.

“However, the Balancing Pool acknowledg­es the concerns and issues raised by the MSA in its investigat­ions and has agreed to enter into this settlement agreement.”

How very noble of a government agency to admit it broke the rules.

But why did it do so?

In part, it’s because the Notley government launched a lawsuit in mid-2016 against the PPA holders, which it ultimately settled last year.

At the time, the Balancing Pool said it wanted to wait for the province’s legal action to wrap up.

But it also had a window before the lawsuit was launched in the summer of 2016, or after several lawsuits were settled later that year, to have terminated the power agreements.

Yet, it waited until last summer to act. Two PPAs were finally terminated this spring; another will occur at the end of this month.

The Balancing Pool liquidated its $700 million investment fund to pay for its early losses, but also had to borrow $910 million (as of June) from the provincial government — money consumers will have to repay on their monthly power bills until 2030.

“Why would a government organizati­on break its own rules — because their political masters told them to. That’s the only logical conclusion,” Alberta Party MLA Greg Clark said Thursday.

“This is not something that arm’s-length agencies will do without extreme political pressure.”

The Notley government rejects this assertion.

“Any decisions regarding terminatio­n of PPAs have always been solely in the hands of the Balancing Pool, not the government,” Mike McKinnon, a spokespers­on for Energy Minister Marg McCuaig-Boyd, said in a statement.

The Independen­t Power Producers Society of Alberta, representi­ng about 100 of the province’s electricit­y suppliers, isn’t satisfied with the settlement. The group filed a letter with the Alberta Utilities Commission on Sept. 11, citing several concerns with the proposed deal.

The agreement “does not adequately address the particular behaviour and misconduct of the BP that caused the harm and loss to (our) members, and that distorted the functionin­g of Alberta’s electricit­y market,” states a letter from its lawyers.

The organizati­on filed analysis from consultanc­y EDC Associates that says if the Balancing Pool had bid its electricit­y into the market last year to fully recover all its variable and fixed costs to break even, power prices would have risen sharply. Generators would have “earned an additional $1.7 billion gross operating margin,” EDC concluded.

Officials with the MSA didn’t return calls this week, but in a letter said the settlement was the result of extensive negotiatio­ns with the Balancing Pool.

“In the MSA’s view, the settlement is fair, reasonable and its approval is in the public interest,” says a letter it sent to the AUC last month.

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 ?? HUGO SANCHEZ ?? The Notley government rejects accusation­s it exerted pressure to delay cancellati­on of money-losing power deals.
HUGO SANCHEZ The Notley government rejects accusation­s it exerted pressure to delay cancellati­on of money-losing power deals.

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