Waterloo Region Record

Ontario hydro bills fall, then rise

Initial cut will take Wynne government to 2018 election, but bills will rise steadily for next 20 years

- Allison Jones

TORONTO — Ontario’s Liberal government is aiming to keep hydro bills, a source of widespread public anger, lowered through next year’s election, but its longterm energy plan released Thursday details how they will then rise again over the next two decades.

Electricit­y bills had roughly doubled in the last decade, helping send Premier Kathleen Wynne’s approval ratings to record lows, when the Liberals decided to introduce a 25 per cent cut earlier this year.

The move — which involved a complex borrowing scheme that will cost Ontarians billions in extra interest — has led bills to drop by an average of $31 this year, just ahead of the 2018 general election.

In its long-term plan, the government said that for most of the next two decades, it aims to keep increases gradual, rather than lower or freeze rates.

Average hydro bills are projected to rise to $197 in 2032. That’s a slower progressio­n than the government’s previous long-term plan in 2013, which expected bills to hit that mark by 2026. But much of that is due to the 25 per cent rate cut, the energy minister admitted.

“We’re starting from a lot lower place than where we would have in 2013,” said Glenn Thibeault.

The front-loaded decreases in electricit­y costs prompted the opposition parties to decry the government’s energy plan as a political document.

“This was written for the election,” said NDP critic Peter Tabuns. “This is not a planning document.”

Thibeault said he would have loved to have announced rates were being frozen, but Progressiv­e Conservati­ve critic Todd Smith said this plan essentiall­y does freeze rates, just in the very short term.

“This is all about getting Kathleen Wynne re-elected next year,” he said. “They’re freezing rates to get us through the next election period because they know how detrimenta­l this whole energy crisis is for Ontario.”

Wynne denied that the energy plan was about the election, saying it was about giving people relief now in the form of the 25 per cent cut, but also trying to slow the rise in prices after that.

“The long-term energy plan demonstrat­es that we will hold those costs down, that there will be increases but that the trajectory of increases is flatter than it was in the last long-term energy plan,” she said.

The government said it plans to avoid sharp increases to bills through initiative­s including securing new power only when it’s needed, and allowing more people to produce their own green energy to power their homes.

From 2021 to 2024 bills are projected to rise by around $10 or $12 a year, which is for the most part much higher than annual increases projected in the last long-term energy plan.

The plan projects a shortfall in electricit­y supply starting a little after 2020, when one nuclear generating station reaches the end of its life, others are removed from service for refurbishm­ent and some supply contracts expire.

But that doesn’t mean the government is anticipati­ng widespread blackouts. New generation for that period just hasn’t been selected yet. Ontario plans to close that supply gap largely through moving away from 20-year contracts, instead trying to procure new electricit­y supply through more competitiv­e processes which could help save up to $5.2 billion between 2021 and 2030.

Another potential $1.2 billion in savings exists if more of the province’s utilities amalgamate, Thibeault said. The government is also looking at ways to reduce regulatory barriers to energy storage, used for example to provide solar power throughout the day rather than just when the sun is shining, he said.

The demand for electricit­y is expected to rise toward the end of the plan, partly due to an increase in electric vehicles — which the government assumes there will be 2.4 million of by 2035. There are currently fewer than 15,000 registered electric vehicles in the province.

The increased demand is expected to be offset by energy efficiency improvemen­ts and better conservati­on initiative­s.

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