Calgary Herald

Legislatio­n unplugs NDP plan to change electricit­y system

- DEAN BENNETT

EDMONTON Alberta has introduced legislatio­n to formally pull the plug on a fundamenta­l overhaul of the province’s electricit­y industry.

Energy Minister Sonya Savage said the province will stay with the current energy-only system, in which producers are paid for the spot price of electricit­y, rather than go with the capacity system that was set to take effect in 2021.

“Alberta’s energy-only market has been operating for more than 20 years,” Savage said Thursday after introducin­g Bill 18. “It has a proven track record for providing a reliable supply of electricit­y at affordable prices.”

OVERWHELMI­NG FEEDBACK

Bill 18 follows up an announceme­nt made by Savage in the summer that the government, after consulting with stakeholde­rs, would scrap the capacity system.

Savage said the feedback was so overwhelmi­ng the government made its decision before the consultati­on period was over.

“There was no need to drag it out,” said Savage.

“We wanted to get a signal to investors quickly that we were staying with the energy-only market.”

The province did not provide details on who Savage met with and what advice she received before scrapping the capacity market plan.

The former NDP government passed legislatio­n late in 2016 to move to the capacity system to ensure no electricit­y shortages as Alberta moved to replace coal-fired electricit­y with more natural gasfired power and renewables such as wind and solar.

Capacity markets pay producers for spot prices, but also to build up capacity even if it isn’t needed. Alberta’s existing energy-only market is composed of publicly traded companies that get paid in the spot market for the power they produce.

As part of the capacity plan, the NDP capped prices at 6.8 cents per kilowatt-hour during the transition to 2021 to shield people from any electricit­y bill price spikes.

That 6.8-cent cap remains in place and Savage wouldn’t say if the government will keep it.

“What we’ve seen before from the energy-only market is rolling blackouts and price spikes,” said NDP energy critic Irfan Sabir.

“Consumers will suffer because of this decision.”

The Canadian Press

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada