Toronto Star

Ontario at risk of power shortage

U.S.-based regulator warns province could have difficulty meeting demand

- ROB FERGUSON STAFF REPORTER

Ontario is singled out in an electricit­y regulator’s report warning twothirds of North America is “at risk of energy shortfalls this summer” should temperatur­es spike.

With the province in the grip of an early June heat wave in the past few days, the Atlanta-based North American Electric Reliabilit­y Corporatio­n says extended refurbishm­ents at nuclear power plants could result in a power pinch if the coming months prove hotter than usual, causing “extreme demand.”

The heavily industrial Windsor Essex area — where auto giant Stellantis has suspended constructi­on of a massive electric vehicle battery plant while questions over government subsidies are sorted out — may not be able to get “sufficient supply,” adds the non-profit regulator’s summer reliabilit­y report.

“Ontario has entered a period during which generation and transmissi­on outages will be increasing­ly difficult to accommodat­e … for the foreseeabl­e future.”

Energy Minister Todd Smith tried to downplay concerns after New Democratic Party energy critic Peter Tabuns raised the possibilit­y of brownouts or blackouts before the end of August.

That month — Aug. 14, to be precise — will mark 20 years since a massive blackout hit northeaste­rn North America, tripped by part of an Ohio power plant failing during heavy demand.

The cascading effects crippled Ontario and eight states for days, leaving 50 million people without electricit­y.

“We’re making sure we’re hardening the infrastruc­ture here to deal with some of the conditions the member is talking about,” Smith said in reference to the question from Tabuns (Toronto-Danforth).

“We have a grid in Ontario that is the envy of all jurisdicti­ons in North America — one that’s clean, one that’s affordable and one that’s reliable and one that’s safe.”

But Tabuns said that optimism ignores some cautions in the report from the internatio­nal regulatory authority, whose role is to assess reliabilit­y of the continent’s electricit­y systems, flag potential problems and spur regional energy systems to have contingenc­y plans in place should troubles develop.

“Ontario is the only province in Canada that is rated an elevated risk that it can’t meet peak demand,” he said, blaming Premier Doug Ford’s government for axing 758 renewable energy projects shortly after taking power in 2018.

Climate change means “we’re going to see more extreme weather that increases the chance we’ll have outages,” Tabuns added.

The report said Ontario could see a “significan­t increase” in the need to import electricit­y from neighbouri­ng provinces and states, but noted the province’s St. Lawrence interconne­ction with New York is down until the end of the year and “continues to impact import and export capacity.” Manitoba and Quebec, however, have power available.

“Under both normal and extreme weather conditions, Ontario may rely on imports and outage management for a significan­t number of weeks,” the report continued, stating shortages could reach 2,000 megawatts on sweltering days. New England and western states are prone to similar problems.

Ontario’s Independen­t Electricit­y System Operator (IESO) posted figures online Friday — as temperatur­es soared for the third day in a row — that peak demand was forecast to be 22,048 MW with 23,955 MW of power generation available from nuclear plants, hydroelect­ric, and natural gas-fired power plants and to a lesser extent from wind, solar and biofuel.

“We are preparing for tighter grid conditions that could develop if the province experience­s extreme heat waves — this is similar to last summer and is the new norm for Ontario and many jurisdicti­ons around North America,” said Andrew Dow of the system operator.

 ?? R.J. JOHNSTON TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? The U.S.-based North American Electric Reliabilit­y Corporatio­n said in a report that with some nuclear power plants taken offline for refurbishm­ents, Ontario could see a power pinch if this summer proves hotter than usual.
R.J. JOHNSTON TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO The U.S.-based North American Electric Reliabilit­y Corporatio­n said in a report that with some nuclear power plants taken offline for refurbishm­ents, Ontario could see a power pinch if this summer proves hotter than usual.

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