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TransAlta scraps wind farm project as energy market changes loom for Alberta

- Omar Sherif

TransAlta, one of Alberta's largest power generators, has cancelled a proposed wind farm developmen­t and is putting a hold on three other power projects, citing provincial rule changes and a lack of cer‐ tainty in the market.

In February, Alberta's gov‐ ernment announced new rules on the developmen­t of renewable power in the province. They imposed a new 35-kilometre buffer zone around areas deemed "pris‐ tine viewscapes."

Calgary-based TransAlta said those rules, coupled with a lack of clarity around the future of renewable en‐ ergy in Alberta, led to the de‐ cision to permanentl­y scrap the Riplinger wind project near Cardston, Alta.

The company began look‐ ing into the 300-megawatt wind farm in 2020, and has done studies to assess its en‐ vironmenta­l impact. It was expected to come online in 2027.

"As we take stock of the government of Alberta's reg‐ ulatory announceme­nts, we reassessed our own growth plans in the province," said TransAlta CEO John Kousin‐ ioris during a first-quarter re‐ sults call on Friday.

Some local residents who live near Waterton, Alta., are celebratin­g the decision. Bed and breakfast owner Angela Tabak, with the Riplinger Wind Concerned Citizens, says fighting against the project became a full-time job.

"We've spent the last year contacting every government official that we can get our hands on," she told CBC News in late March. "We have sat in the premier's office with her and a number of folks from different min‐ istries. We have sat with the environmen­t minister and laid out our case."

Concerns about tourism, birds

She thinks the project would affect tourism.

The no-go zone rule fol‐ lowed a seven-month mora‐ torium on renewable energy approvals after the govern‐ ment decided the industry was growing too quickly, threatenin­g agricultur­e and marring Alberta's landscape.

A map released in March shows that the buffer zone includes the entire length of the Rocky Mountains, stretching as far east as Cal‐ gary and south to the U.S. border. Kousiniori­s says TransAlta's Riplinger project would have been on the edge of an exclusion zone.

"I really believe it was probably this project that fi‐ nally triggered that moratori‐ um when it was so obvious that things were completely out of control," said Tabak.

Her group also had con‐ cerns about the impact on birds fatally caught up in the turbine blades, and other an‐ imals in the rich biodiverse landscape of the area - which UNESCO designated a World Heritage Site in 1995.

She says she's not against renewables, and just put $40,000 worth of solar pan‐ els on her property.

Jason Wang, an analyst with the clean energy thinktank Pembina Institute, says 57 projects worth $14 billion are affected by visual impact zones or the agricultur­al land-class restrictio­ns re‐ leased by the government.

He said, despite the im‐ pacts on birds, which is a concern, human-caused cli‐ mate change from burning fossil fuels is expected to have a devastatin­g effect on all wildlife on the planet. Some experts predict a mass extinction of animals is al‐ ready underway.

He says pivoting to renew‐ able energy should be our main priority, and now Alber‐ ta might lose out on invest‐ ments - especially in areas of the province that see a lot of wind, like near the moun‐ tains.

"Many of these folks are the ones that, you know, have already said they might be looking at other jurisdic‐ tions," said Wang about some renewable companies.

The moratorium's lasting impact

Wang says key details for many projects in limbo still haven't been released. He says that essentiall­y means the moratorium recently lifted is still in effect, and he worries about the impact on First Nations who want take control of their power needs.

Alberta's Ministry of Af‐ fordabilit­y and Utilities says "viewscape" rules were devel‐ oped based off stakeholde­r feedback and how other ju‐ risdiction­s - such as B.C., Cali‐ fornia and the U.K. - have ap‐ proached the issue.

A spokespers­on for the ministry said Pembina's esti‐ mates are "are solely specu‐ lation," and "not accurate nor reflective of the number of projects before the AUC nor the amount of investment impacted." They also don't affect projects currently op‐ erating in the area, as there are hundreds of wind tur‐ bines dotting the horizon near Pincher Creek, Alta.

"These new rules apply to all new projects undergoing the approvals process with the Alberta Utilities Commis‐ sion (AUC) as of March 1. They are not retroactiv­e, and therefore do not apply to ex‐ isting projects," said Minister Nathan Neudorf in an emailed statement to CBC News.

"The AUC has already moved forward with issuing new decisions on project ap‐ plications, with the vast ma‐ jority being approvals. We recognize that First Nations set their own land-use poli‐ cies with the federal govern‐ ment for reserve lands, and our enhanced land-use rules are not designed to apply to those areas."

When asked why other in‐ dustries, such as the wide‐ spread logging proposed for West Bragg Creek that locals think will have an impact on tourism and the majestic views, are not affected by the new rules, the ministry said that falls outside of its purview, and questions would have to be directed to the government's Environ‐ ment, Forestry and Energy department­s.

3 other TransAlta projects on hold

TransAlta's Kousiniori­s said the province's looming market redesign has forced the company to reconsider other plans as well.

The company has put on hold the 180-megawatt Wa‐ terCharger battery storage facility near Cochrane, the 100-megawatt Tempest wind project south of Lethbridge, and the 44-megawatt Pinna‐ cle generator west of Edmon‐ ton.

"These projects all have varying degrees of merchant market exposure and have been put on hold until we re‐ ceive sufficient clarity re‐ garding the future market structure and the impact of changing frameworks on re‐ sulting market prices," said Kousiniori­s.

According to Kousiniori­s, two of the developmen­ts put on hold were quite novel projects.

WaterCharg­er, the largest of the halted projects, is a 180-megawatt battery stor‐ age project that would sit on roughly nine acres of land 18 kilometres west of Cochrane. It was expected to be com‐ pleted this year.

The facility, according to TransAlta, is designed to be charged by electricit­y pro‐ duced by the existing Ghost hydroelect­ric plant when de‐ mand is lower.

During times of higher de‐ mand, power from the new facility would be discharged to support the electric grid.

Pinnacle, a 44-megawatt thermal project in Parkland County, Alta., was expected to generate around 60,000 megawatt-hours of electricit­y by 2025 - its expected first year of operation before being placed on hold.

"We're very careful with our shareholde­rs' money, and we're not going to invest in these kinds of projects un‐ less we have a good level of comfort that our return ex‐ pectations are going to be met," Kousiniori­s said.

Tempest is another wind farm that TransAlta started developing in 2006. It's a 99megawatt project located ap‐ proximatel­y 15 kilometres east of Stirling, Alta., in Warner County.

"The other projects are on hold, they're not cancelled," Kousiniori­s said, adding that his team is working to pre‐ serve them and will move them forward once they get the clarity they need.

"There are things that that could be resurrecte­d and in‐ vestments that could be made there."

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