The Peterborough Examiner

NDP asks AG to probe PC cancellati­ons

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

TORONTO — Ontario’s auditor general should look into the cancellati­on of hundreds of renewable energy contracts by the Doug Ford government so the public knows how much that decision will end up costing taxpayers, the leader of the Opposition said Wednesday. NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said she was concerned the final cost of cancelling 750 contracts could surpass the $231 million the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government said it has put aside.

In a letter to auditor general Bonnie Lysyk, the Opposition leader asked the legislativ­e watchdog to launch an investigat­ion into the contracts’ terminatio­n fees.

The NDP first reported the cost of the cancellati­ons Tuesday, saying the $231-million figure was listed as “other transactio­ns” in government documents for the 2018-19 fiscal year.

“This lack of transparen­cy is concerning,” Horwath wrote in the letter. “Without a detailed explanatio­n of the full costing of these cancelled contracts, Ontarians are left to wonder what will be the extent of the costs of decommissi­oning and terminatio­n of the power purchase agreements.”

The PCs acknowledg­ed the cancellati­ons could cost taxpayers more than $230 million, but said the final figure, which includes the cost of decommissi­oning a wind farm under constructi­on in Prince Edward County, has yet to be establishe­d.

Horwath said she fears the costs could escalate, as they did when the previous Liberal government cancelled two gas plants in 2011.

At that time, the Liberals said the cost of scrapping those deals was approximat­ely $230 million, but the province’s auditor general later establishe­d that taxpayers were on the hook for $950 million.

“They have an obligation, as the government in power, to have the auditor general give the public a true representa­tion of what their cancelling of contracts is going to cost,” Horwath said Wednesday.

Energy Minister Greg Rickford said cancelling the contracts last year was the “appropriat­e and responsibl­e” thing to do because the province doesn’t need the power.

“Out of an abundance of caution, a responsibl­e government makes contingenc­y plans for those kinds of steps,” Rickford said of the cancellati­on costs.

“The decommissi­on costs are something we should accommodat­e for. Should they not be used, they’ll go back to the taxpayer base.”

Lysyk’s office confirmed it has received and is reviewing Horwath’s request. The auditor is not legally required to investigat­e.

Interim Liberal Leader John Fraser said the government has repeatedly said it has faith in the auditor’s office, so it should stand behind those statements in this instance as well.

“I think if (Rickford) wants to validate his story, he should just make it open to the auditor general,” he said.

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