Waterloo Region Record

Gas plant ‘gamed’ system out of $100M: report

- Allison Jones

TORONTO — A natural gas plant in Brampton “gamed” the system and ratepayers out of about $100 million, a regulatory investigat­ion found — and it’s not alone.

The Ontario Energy Board quietly posted a report online last month that was largely complete about a year ago into Goreway Power Station, concluding it repeatedly exploited defects in the system over several years.

“The systems that are in place ... have created opportunit­ies for exploitati­on, to the serious financial disadvanta­ge of Ontario ratepayers,” the OEB’s market surveillan­ce panel concluded.

“The panel has frequently commented on the substantia­l inefficien­cies and opportunit­ies for exploitati­on that are associated with different elements of the design of the wholesale electricit­y market. Goreway’s conduct offers a clear illustrati­on of some of these flaws and of the market’s vulnerabil­ity to exploitati­on by market participan­ts.”

Goreway agreed to a settlement in 2015 with the Independen­t Electricit­y System Operator to repay a “substantia­l portion,” but the amount is blacked out in the report at Goreway’s request. Energy Minister Glenn Thibeault’s office said Tuesday that Goreway had agreed to pay $100 million, and has so far repaid $91 million.

The IESO bills local distributo­rs for costs of power generated by companies like Goreway, which then get passed onto ratepayers. The money Goreway is repaying will go back to ratepayers through those utilities, IESO said.

The IESO said it audited nine power generators starting in 2011 and overall found about $200 million in costs it deemed to be ineligible. About $168 million has been recovered from the nine facilities, though the IESO would not disclose the other names “for confidenti­ality reasons.”

Ontario’s auditor general is set to report on the topic on Wednesday in her annual report, which covers whether the IESO and OEB’s oversight is sufficient and if generators are playing by the rules.

Goreway was also fined $10 million, but it said through a lawyer in a letter attached to the report that it disagrees with many of the conclusion­s, including suggestion­s that it gamed the system or deliberate­ly misled the IESO.

Thibeault’s office said the IESO discovered the issues with Goreway early on and senior leadership at the company have since been replaced.

“Our system operator has implemente­d rule changes that further address the issues and recommenda­tions highlighte­d in the panel’s report,” the minister’s office said in a statement. “Our system operator is also implementi­ng broader and more fundamenta­l changes to the electricit­y market through market renewal.”

Goreway said in a statement Tuesday that it engaged in the IESO’s “exhaustive audit process” and voluntaril­y reimbursed the money.

“The company has worked closely with the IESO to ensure that its submission­s going forward are consistent with the IESO’s requiremen­ts, and Goreway has taken steps to enhance its internal controls and compliance oversight,” the company wrote.

The bulk of the about $100 million came from exploiting defects in a so-called cost guarantee program, the report said.

Plants such as Goreway don’t operate 24 hours a day, so the program in question guarantees the facilities a certain amount of money whenever the system needs it to start up to cover those costs.

“Goreway routinely submitted what were obviously inappropri­ate expenses to be reimbursed by the IESO, and ultimately borne by Ontario ratepayers” of at least $89 million, the report said.

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