Waterloo Region Record

Time to pull the plug on Ontario’s unduly painful electricit­y policies

- Ross McKitrick and Elmira Aliakbari Ross McKitrick is a senior fellow, Elmira Aliakbari is a policy analyst, at the Fraser Institute. They authored the recent study Rising Electricit­y Costs and Declining Employment in Ontario’s Manufactur­ing Sector availa

Ontario manufactur­ers are feeling the pinch from high electricit­y prices. But how high are the province’s industrial electricit­y rates relative to other jurisdicti­ons?

Ontario has the highest residentia­l electricit­y costs of all Canadian provinces. Ontario electricit­y prices increased twice as fast as the national average over the past decade, and the average Toronto resident in 2016 paid $60 more a month than the average Canadian.

That takes us back to industrial electricit­y rates, which are paid by industries including manufactur­ing (automakers, for example) and mining around the province. A recent Fraser Institute study showed that, in 2016, out of 16 major cities, Toronto and Ottawa ranked third and fourth behind only New York and Boston.

Small industrial consumers (with a power demand of one megawatt and monthly consumptio­n of up to 400 megawatt hours) in the Toronto area paid, on average, 16.27 cents per kilowatt hour (kWh, a common unit for measuring power), nearly double what comparable-sized firms paid in Montreal (9.11 cents) and Vancouver (9.49 cents), and nearly three times what they paid in Calgary (6.53 cents).

And although industrial electricit­y costs in New York and Boston remain higher than those in Ontario cities, the differenti­al is shrinking over time as Ontario cities experience faster increases. In 2010, for example, electricit­y costs for small industrial users in Toronto were 85 per cent lower than in New York. By 2016, the differenti­al had shrunk to 51 per cent.

The same pattern exists with large industrial consumers. In 2016, large users (with a power demand of five megawatts and monthly consumptio­n of 3,060 megawatt hours) in Toronto and Ottawa paid almost three times more than consumers in Montreal and Calgary and almost twice what large consumers in Vancouver paid. Even some select large industrial consumers (class A) that were granted rate reductions from the provincial government still paid higher rates than large users in Quebec, Alberta and British Columbia.

Between 2010 and 2016, electricit­y costs paid by large industrial consumers rose 53 per cent in Ottawa and 46 per cent in Toronto compared to 14 per cent in the rest of Canada. Montreal saw a modest increase of 10 per cent, while costs dropped in Edmonton (-7 per cent), Calgary (-5 per cent) and Chicago (-19 per cent).

Out of 16 cities examined, the fastest rates of increase were in Portland and Seattle. But even with their rapid growth, their electricit­y costs for large industrial consumers were significan­tly lower than Toronto’s in 2016 (71 per cent lower in Portland and 62 per cent Seattle).

So what’s caused surging electricit­y prices for residents and industries in Ontario?

Government policy choices are to blame, in particular the province’s aggressive promotion of renewable energy sources (solar, wind and biomass). Other policy decisions — including poor structurin­g of long-term contracts with generators and phasing out coal — have also contribute­d to the pain.

To finally lower electricit­y bills for current and future ratepayers, the government should look at electricit­y costs in other jurisdicti­ons and pursue meaningful policy reform.

 ?? DARREN CALABRESE, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A recent Fraser Institute study showed that, in 2016, that industrial electricit­y rates out of 16 major cities, Toronto and Ottawa ranked third and fourth behind only New York and Boston.
DARREN CALABRESE, THE CANADIAN PRESS A recent Fraser Institute study showed that, in 2016, that industrial electricit­y rates out of 16 major cities, Toronto and Ottawa ranked third and fourth behind only New York and Boston.

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