The Telegram (St. John's)

Irate ratepayers

Ontario announces plan to decrease hydro bills

- BY ALLISON JONES

Soaring electricit­y bills in Ontario will see an average 17 per cent cut this summer, a year before the provincial Liberals’ bid for re-election, but those savings will ultimately cost ratepayers billions in extra interest payments.

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne acknowledg­ed Thursday that the bill for the acrossthe-board-relief will eventually come due for ratepayers.

“Over time it will cost a bit more. That’s true,” she said when detailing the plan. “And it will take longer to pay off. That’s also true. But it is fairer because it doesn’t ask this generation of hydro customers alone to pay the freight for everyone before and after.”

Electricit­y bills have approximat­ely doubled in the last decade, rising faster than inflation since 2010, and have sparked increasing anger among Ontarians, leading to plummeting approval ratings for Wynne.

She said the increasing costs were due to investment­s in the grid, nuclear refurbishm­ents and getting rid of coal. She also acknowledg­ed that long-term contracts for green energy producers at above-market rates were “too generous.”

Ontario now has a clean and reliable system, Wynne said, but the entire burden of those investment­s was being shouldered by current ratepayers, when the benefits will be seen

over many years.

But Ontario Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Patrick Brown said the new plan just shifts the burden between the same group of people — “robbing Peter to pay Paul, but in this case, both Peter and Paul are taxpayers.”

Most of the electricit­y generation contracts in Ontario are for 20 years, so refinancin­g them is like re-amortizing a mortgage over 30 years instead. But that will come with up to $1.4 billion a year in extra interest payments over 10 years.

In the near term, rates will also be held to the rate of inflation,

and the plan is for the 17 per cent cut to be reflected in the Ontario Energy Board’s May 1 rates so customers see it reflected on their June bills.

But those extra interest costs will be added back onto bills in the future.

Legislatio­n will be introduced to enable the Independen­t Electricit­y System Operator and Ontario Power Generation to refinance a portion of the global adjustment charge.

That’s the charge consumers pay for above-market rates for power producers. The auditor general has estimated the

global adjustment charge cost $50 billion between 2006 and 2015 and increased by 1,200 per cent between 2006 and 2013 meanwhile, the average electricit­y market price dropped by 46 per cent.

The across-the-board relief of 17 per cent comes in addition to an eight per cent rebate that took effect Jan. 1. That cut is estimated to cost taxpayers about $1 billion per year.

Several other measures were announced Thursday to help low-income and rural residents at a cost of $2.5 billion over three years to taxpayers.

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 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne speaks Thursday during a news conference in Toronto.
CP PHOTO Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne speaks Thursday during a news conference in Toronto.

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