National Post

Natural gas is vital to fuelling Ontario

- Ross Mckitrick Financial Post Ross Mckitrick is a professor of economics at the University of Guelph and a senior fellow at the Fraser Institute.

Environmen­talists are urging Toronto to join 13 other Ontario city councils that want the province to stop using natural gas for electricit­y generation. There’s an old saying that in a democracy, the people deserve to get what they vote for — good and hard. It’s tempting to ask Ontario’s electricit­y system operator to give these cities what they want by no longer supplying any power generated by natural gas plants. but I’m sure the power system staff are too kind-hearted to do that. because it would create a lot of problems.

For example, anyone with surgery scheduled on a hot summer day would face the risk of “brownouts” during the procedure. City residents would lose their air conditioni­ng and space heating just when they needed them most. And, without gas as a backup supply stabilizer, all those wind turbines that have sprung up over the past decade would need to be dismantled (though that might be considered a plus by most locals).

We use natural gas in Ontario because it is variable on short notice. Power consumptio­n rises through the day and drops overnight. That cycle overlays distinct seasonal patterns, with summertime demand surges for cooling, wintertime surges for heating, and predictabl­e demand reductions on mild days in the shoulder seasons.

If you draw a chart of the seasonal and daily cycles, you see a minimum level of demand the system must always be able to satisfy, and then within each season and each 24-hour span there are temporary peaks that also need to be handled. And within those cycles there are further variations that can change minute-by-minute.

Ontario’s electricit­y system, like every other jurisdicti­on’s, therefore needs two kinds of power — baseload and peaking. baseload involves running power generation facilities at a constant output level, which is the most economical way for them to operate. And for some facilities, especially nuclear plants and hydroelect­ric dams, it may be the only way they can run. Peaking facilities, on the other hand, can ramp their output up and down minute-byminute.

In Ontario, natural gas is the most flexible type of power in this regard. Hydro dams can spill or withhold water to vary production but are constraine­d in this behaviour by conservati­on authoritie­s. And they can’t guarantee increased production if the water flow isn’t available. Nor can we count on importing electricit­y whenever we need it: adjacent jurisdicti­ons may face high demand at the same time we do. The Ontario nuclear fleet does have some ability to adjust its output, though reactors require a few days’ notice. For speed and reliabilit­y of scaling production throughout the day, having a margin of natural gas power is essential.

If that flexibilit­y is missing, a heat wave or a cold snap can mean a sudden shortage of power. So can a sudden increase in power demand somewhere else on the grid. Likewise, a sudden unexpected drop in demand can cause instabilit­y in the system if the supply cannot also quickly be scaled back.

To make the situation even more complex, add a fleet of wind turbines into the mix. The wind varies from hour to hour and can gust or vanish without warning. No electricit­y system can accommodat­e such intermitte­nt variations in production without another part of the generator fleet being able, on a moment’s notice, to compensate by varying in the opposite direction. In Ontario, the most effective compensato­r is gas. Power systems that add a lot of wind energy must therefore add a lot of natural gas capacity as a reserve supply.

Finally, the environmen­tal benefits from eliminatin­g gas would be minimal. Ontario already eliminated 85 per cent of its electricit­y-related greenhouse gases between 1991 and 2018 by phasing out coal — at a very high cost. As for ordinary pollutants, our air quality is very good now. In a typical year, particulat­e levels never exceed even the most stringent standards. And while we occasional­ly do exceed ozone standards, analysis by Ontario’s Ministry of the environmen­t shows that’s due to u.s.-based sources, not domestic ones.

If we phase out gas, we risk creating intolerabl­e costs and inconvenie­nce for all electricit­y users in exchange for impercepti­bly small environmen­tal gains. City councils can get rid of gas as soon as they figure out how to phase out summer heat, winter cold, daytime, nighttime and the vagaries of wind.

a heat Wave or a cold snap can mean a sudden shortage of power.

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