Waterloo Region Record

NDP leader says she can cut hydro bills

Horwath targets time-of-use pricing, public ownership

- Allison Jones,

Electricit­y bills in Ontario could be cut by ending mandatory time-ofuse pricing, reducing the delivery charge for rural customers and renegotiat­ing power contracts, the NDP proposed Monday.

The party released its plan both for reducing hydro bills by up to 30 per cent and returning Hydro One to public ownership, ahead of an upcoming announceme­nt from the Liberal government about how it will cut costs.

“I think it would be fantastic if the Liberals took this plan and implemente­d it,” said NDP Leader Andrea Horwath.

“Electricit­y isn’t a luxury. It shouldn’t be priced like one, and people want something done about it.”

The government faces no bigger political issue at the moment than hydro bills, which have about doubled in the last decade, and Premier Kathleen Wynne has promised that further relief — on top of an eight per cent rebate that took effect Jan. 1 — will be announced before the spring budget.

Wynne has already signalled that more savings will be coming for rural and northern ratepayers, who face significan­tly higher costs than urban customers, and Energy Minister Glenn Thibeault suggested that changes are on the way for time-ofuse pricing.

“Time of use is something that actually saves our system money, so we can’t get rid of time of use altogether, but what we can do is ensure that people have a choice,” he said.

Electricit­y isn’t a luxury. It shouldn’t be priced like one and people want something done about it. — NDP LEADER ANDREA HORWATH

“Eliminatin­g time of use would actually mean that our peak hours, our peak demand would actually increase and that means we would need to create more generation, possibly.”

The NDP plan would see customers either choose to stay on time-of-use billing or pay a fixed rate of 10.3 cents per kilowatt hour, higher than the current off-peak rate but lower than the current mid- and onpeak rates.

“The time-of-use plan was a failure,” said Horwath. “It didn’t provide the kind of conservati­on or the kind of reduction in use that the Liberals had hoped and it didn’t help people to keep their bills down.”

The Liberals responded considerab­ly less favourably to the idea of not only stopping any further sale of Hydro One shares, but also buying back the 30 per cent already privatized.

“That is the one thing that would not take a penny off people’s electricit­y bills,” Wynne said in question period. In defending the partial privatizat­ion, the Liberals have often reminded that it’s the Ontario Energy Board that sets rates.

The NDP proposes buying those shares back at a cost of between $3.3 billion and $4.1 billion, financed through the province’s share of its profit from Hydro One within eight years — assuming 70 per cent of the approximat­ely $700 million in revenue it has previously generated for the province.

As the utility is transition­ed back to public ownership, the NDP said a $2.6-billion tax benefit given to Hydro One in the process of privatizat­ion could be used to subsidize a drop in bills of 3.2 per cent.

The NDP’s plan also includes capping profit margins for private power companies and establishi­ng a panel to examine cancelling or renegotiat­ing long-term power contracts at above-market rates.

The Progressiv­e Conservati­ves have also called for such contracts to be renegotiat­ed. The Liberals frequently note they saved $3.7 billion by renegotiat­ing a green energy deal with Samsung, but Thibeault said doing so with every contract would take years. “They can’t just be cancelled because it would cost us billions of dollars in terms of these cancelled contracts, which would then go back onto the ratepayer and we would be in court for every contract we would rip up.”

The NDP wants to reduce the delivery charge for rural Hydro One customers so they pay the same fee as urban customers, funded through a water rental fee paid by Ontario Power Generation for water flowing through dams — between $330 million and $350 million per year.

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