Windsor Star

Wynne defends $9.2B cost of green energy

Opposition slams Grits’ handling of renewable power generation

- KEITH LESLIE

TORONTO Premier Kathleen Wynne said Thursday she’s “happy” to defend the billions of dollars in extra costs that Ontario electricit­y customers are paying for the Liberal’s green energy initiative­s, saying there’s a price for cleaner air.

Auditor general Bonnie Lysyk’s report said consumers are paying $9.2 billion more for 20-year wind and solar power contracts signed by the Liberals with private generators than they would have under the old system. Using a competitiv­e bidding process could have cut those costs in half, added Lysyk.

“Not only did the government not follow the competitiv­e procuremen­t process ... it offered additional economic incentives along with the already attractive prices offered under the guaranteed-price renewable program to a foreign consortium,” she wrote.

The auditor found Ontario pays 3½ times the price for solar power than the average in the United States, and twice as much for wind power.

“There’s a cost associated with getting out of coal, of putting more renewables in place, and we’ve got other jurisdicti­ons looking to Ontario as a model for how to do that,” said Wynne.

Eliminatin­g coal-fired generation reduced the greenhouse gas emissions that contribute to climate change, and will help lower health-care costs associated with air pollution, especially for kids with asthma, added Wynne.

“You only have to look at other jurisdicti­ons that are struggling with air quality, with particulat­e matter in their air, with families that don’t feel they can let their kids play outside,” she said. “I know we weren’t in those serious straits, but the fact is we have reduced our pollution in this province.”

Wynne, who made two separate trips to the climate change talks in Paris, said Ontario is leading the way in the battle against greenhouse gas emissions, noting Alberta will take 15 years to stop burning coal to generate electricit­y.

“That is going to be a transition for them and there will be a cost associated with that as there was here in Ontario,” she said. “So we are ahead of the curve in terms of the decisions that we have made.”

Ontarians should celebrate the fact the province has a strong, reliable electricit­y system because of investment­s made by the Liberal government, insisted Wynne.

Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Patrick Brown said Wynne “missed the point of the auditor’s report,” which was that Ontario could have reached the same green energy goals without the extra $9.2 billion cost.

“I think the government has mishandled this so badly, and because of political interferen­ce and mistakes, every Ontarian will pay $12,000 more for electricit­y,” said Brown.

The New Democrats said the Liberals have given green energy a bad name because of their meddling in the electricit­y system and the ham-handed implementa­tion of the policy that pitted neighbours against each other over locations of wind and solar farms.

“The auditor general said we spent $9.2 billion more than we had to spend for green energy programs,” said NDP Leader Andrea Horwath.

“Instead of having a province that’s 100 per cent behind renewable energy and dealing with climate change, we have chaos, anger and people very, very angry at green energy, and that’s a failure of the Liberals.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS
CHRISTOPHE ENA/THE ?? Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne delivers a speech during the United Nations Climate Change Conference Monday in Paris. Wynne on Thursday defended the province’s green energy initiative­s.
ASSOCIATED PRESS CHRISTOPHE ENA/THE Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne delivers a speech during the United Nations Climate Change Conference Monday in Paris. Wynne on Thursday defended the province’s green energy initiative­s.

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