National Post

Ontario’s sacrifice was all for nothing

- ROSS MCKITRICK Ross McKitrick is a professor of economics at the University of Guelph and a senior fellow at the Fraser Institute. His study “Did the Coal Phase- Out Reduce Ontario Air Pollution” is available at fraserinst­itute. ca.

The federal Liberal government plans to impose a national coal phase- out, based on the same faulty arguments used in Ontario — namely that such a move will yield significan­t environmen­tal benefits and reduce health- care costs. One problem: those arguments never made sense, and now with the Ontario phase- out complete, we can verify not only that they were invalid but that the Ontario government knew it.

Together with Fraser Institute economist Elmira Aliakbari, I just published a study on the coal phase- out in Ontario and its effects on air pollution over the 2002– 14 interval. Our expectatio­n was that we would find very little evidence for pollution reductions associated with eliminatin­g coal. This expectatio­n arose from two considerat­ions.

First, ample data at the time showed that coal use had little effect on Ontario air quality. Environmen­t Canada’s emissions inventorie­s showed that the Ontario power generation sector was responsibl­e for only a tiny fraction ( about one per cent) of provincial particulat­e emissions, a common measure of air pollution.

Further, a study by the province in 2005 showed that a majority of local particulat­es originated from U. S. sources. Another study done for the province predicted that eliminatin­g coal would have extremely small effects on urban particulat­e levels. Taken together these reports provided a credible basis for predicting that a coal phase- out would only have a small effect on our air quality. They also showed, based on the results of retrofits then underway at the power plants, that the same air quality improvemen­ts could be obtained at a fraction of the cost by installing scrubbers on the smokestack­s, rather than shutting the coal-fired plants down.

Second, the government’s claims about the health effects of phasing out coal were highly implausibl­e. It stated( and continues to assert) that coal-plant emissions cost the province more than $ 3 billion annually in health-care costs. But this was at a time when the total provincial health- care budget was only about $ 35 billion annually. In other words, it claimed that nearly one- tenth of all health- care spending was due to illnesses and mortality arising from power plants that, again, were responsibl­e for only about one per cent of annual particulat­e emissions. That would imply that all emissions sources together caused an annual healthcare burden many times larger than the entire healthcare budget. It should have been obvious at the time that this was not remotely true.

Aliakbari and I analyzed data for the cities of Hamilton, Toronto and Ottawa over the 2002–14 interval. Our statistica­l model allowed us to isolate the effects of declining Ontario coal use compared to changing emissions from other Canadian and U. S. sources and effects due to weather. In line with our expectatio­ns and the prior evidence, we found that phasing out coal was responsibl­e for only very small changes in Ontario air pollution levels.

In fact, the reduction in fine particulat­es associated with declining coal use was likely a bit larger than the 2005 studies had forecast, but were still very small and, in Hamilton and Toronto, statistica­lly insignific­ant. The coal phase- out had no apparent effect on nitrogen oxide ( NOx) levels, which instead were significan­tly improved by declining NOx emissions in the U. S. We found the eliminatio­n of coal was associated with a significan­t reduction on Ontario ozone levels. However, this was offset by increased emissions from natural gas power plants, such that per-terawatt ( a unit of energy), trading gas for coal yields slightly higher net ozone levels.

We did not look at greenhouse gases because they are not local air pollutants, they only matter on a global level and these emissions could be offset by purchasing credits anywhere in the world. The climate issue was, and remains, a red herring in the discussion about the costs and benefits of eliminatin­g coal.

Ontario is suffering a crisis of high and rising electricit­y costs that’s causing real, long- lasting damage to households and businesses. The province insists the pain is worth it because of the environmen­tal improvemen­ts. The numbers show otherwise.

Phasing out coal had almost no effect on Ontario’s air pollution levels — and the government at Queen’s Park knew this was likely to be the case. It has all been for nothing.

PHASING OUT COAL HAD ALMOST NO EFFECT ON THE PROVINCE’S AIR POLLUTION LEVELS.

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ??
JEFF MCINTOSH / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES

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