Tags
electricity bills Ontario, Green Energy Act, High Hydro Bills, Kemptville College, Lisa MacLeod MPP, Ontario Budget concerns, Pre-Budget Consultations, wind farm RichmondP, wind farms North Gower, wind power Ontario
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18 Tuesday Mar 2014
Posted in Renewable energy, Wind power
Tags
electricity bills Ontario, Green Energy Act, High Hydro Bills, Kemptville College, Lisa MacLeod MPP, Ontario Budget concerns, Pre-Budget Consultations, wind farm RichmondP, wind farms North Gower, wind power Ontario
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16 Sunday Mar 2014
Posted in Renewable energy, Wind power
Tags
air quality Ontario, coal power Ontario, cost of renewables, GHGs, Green Energy Act, IPCC, Robert Lyman, wind farms, wind power Ontario
Here, from energy economist Robert Lyman, an excellent view of the situation we are in because of the Ontario government’s “green energy” tactic. never mind that has failed as an economic driver and job creation mechanism, did it ever have a hope of what it was supposed to do? “Save” the environment?
Will Ontario’s Green Power plan save the planet?
The Ontario government has to date committed almost $60 billion over the next 20 years to building industrial wind turbines and solar power generators. In the case of wind turbines, the construction of hundreds of plants across the province has given rise to major conflicts between those who stand to benefit from the huge electricity ratepayer subsidies and those whose health and property values are threatened. Ontario’s electricity generation capacity is already 40% above the peak requirements, and yet the provincial government continues to contract for more power. When those concerned about the economic, social and health impacts of adding so much “green” energy complain, they are often confronted with an argument expressed with almost religious conviction. Supporters of green energy insist we need it to “save the planet” from the threat of climate change.
There are many reasons to question the scientific arguments behind the thesis that human beings are responsible for what may be “catastrophic” climate change 100 years hence. The arguments about this are highly technical. Instead, let us examine two things:
The primary source of expert advice to governments concerning climate change is the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). It advises the governments that are party to the 1992 Framework Convention on Climate Change and subsequent related agreements. In the 2009 Copenhagen Accord, these parties agreed that, to avoid what they considered a dangerous level of “global warming”, it would be necessary to limit increases in the average global temperature to no more than two degrees Celsius relative to pre-industrial times. To accomplish this, atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide, now about 395 parts per million (ppm), would have to be reduced to at least 350 ppm. As stated by the United States Presidential Climate Change Action Project and other sources, this means that global emissions would have to decline by 60% by 2050 and that emissions in the industrialized countries of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) would have to decline by 80%. These reductions are from current levels. In the case of industrialized countries, an 80% reduction from current levels by 2050 means the virtual elimination of fossil fuel use, except in certain areas where this is technically impossible. The advocates insist that nothing less than this reduction is enough.
The best current estimates of present and future global energy supply and demand and related emissions are those produced by the United States Energy Information Administration (EIA) and the OECD International Energy Agency (IEA). Both organizations issued updated projections in 2013. The EIA analysis uses a “reference case” that includes assumptions concerning economic growth but not changes in current policies and laws; its projection period runs to 2040. The IEA analysis uses a reference case that assumes significant changes in policies and laws, especially in the OECD, to reduce GHG emissions; its projection period runs to 2035.
The results of the two studies are similar in several respects. Notably:
In short, the best available expert projections of global energy use and GHG emissions shows that these are moving significantly counter to the direction that the IPCC regards as essential. This growth is driven by the desire of people in the developing countries to attain higher levels of income, economic development and wellbeing, much of which is directly tied to increased energy use.
Those who are persuaded that climate change mitigation must be pursued at all costs to “save the planet” are left with radical solutions. James Hansen, the former head of the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space administration who is now perhaps the most prominent advocate for dramatic action, has recommended immediately taking steps to “leave all fossil fuels in the ground” which presumably means banning all future exploration, production, distribution and consumption of coal, oil and natural gas either through regulation or taxation (Hansen recommends a tax of up to $1000 per tonne of carbon dioxide, but is willing to contemplate a beginning tax of $15 per tonne, rising $10 per year indefinitely.). Unfortunately for Dr. Hansen, the world is not listening.
In these circumstances, people in Canada and the rest of the OECD have to question the rationale for costly emission-reduction measures that have relatively modest effects. To illustrate this point, if one takes as accurate the EIA estimate of 31.2 billion metric tons of annual global GHG emissions in 2010, and accepts the need for a 60% reduction in that level by 2050, this would mean that the world would have to achieve an 18.7 billion metric ton reduction in 36 years. If one further assumes that the non-OECD countries will continue their present path of emissions growth related to their desire for economic development and improvement in standards of living, then all OECD countries could suddenly disappear from the planet, thereby emitting not one whiff of CO2, and the target still would not be attained!
Those who believe the science may perhaps be persuaded that it makes far more sense to give up on mitigation approaches and concentrate instead on investing in adapting to what they view as inevitable climate change impacts. The investments may be large, but they could be tailored to the specific effects that occur and they would be within each country’s control. Those of us who fundamentally question the science and economic projections of the IPCC have less cause for concern.
There are those who argue that, even if the emissions reductions that are likely to occur are nowhere close to enough to affect the (alleged) path of global warming, the people of Ontario have a “moral obligation” to incur those costs anyway. The author admits to being completely baffled by this logic, but it may be useful to examine just how much, in fact, Ontario’s $40 billion in renewable wind and solar generation is likely to affect global emissions.
According to the United Nations Statistics Division, Canada’s share of greenhouse gas emissions represents 1.8 % of global emissions. Environment Canada’s National Emissions Inventory shows that electricity and heat generation from all provinces totals 98 megatonnes (Mt) of GHGs, or 14% of Canada’s total emissions of 690 Mt. Emissions from Ontario’s electricity production and consumption represent about 15 % of those from all electricity in Canada. Therefore, all of Ontario’s electricity-related emissions represent 0.039% of global emissions. If Ontario ceased to produce and consume all electricity overnight, it would reduce global emissions by less than one twenty-fifth of one per cent.
In fact, all of the renewable energy associated with Ontario’s Green Energy Plan would only decrease Ontario’s electricity emissions by 20% in the most optimistic scenario. In other words, this would reduce global emissions by 0.008%.
However, there are reasons to question whether the massive investment in renewable generation sources would have been needed to achieve even this small effect. The Fraser Institute published a report in 2013 entitled, “Environmental and Economic Consequences of Ontario’s Green Energy Act”. Here is an excerpt from that report:
“Electricity supply is divided into base-load capacity, which comes from sources like hydroelectric and nuclear that deliver a fixed amount of power that cannot easily be adjusted up or down on short notice, and peak capacity, which can be scaled up and down as system demand changes through the day. Ontario power demand currently averages about 18,000 MW and reaches a maximum annual peak of about 26,000 MW. Using figures from the Ontario Power Authority and the Independent Electricity System Operator, the Provincial Auditor General projects average demand to decline to about 16,000 MW and peak demand to fall to about 24,000 MW. Nuclear and hydroelectric facilities alone currently provide 18,000 MW of base-load capacity. In addition, Ontario has 9,500 MW of gas capacity as well as 4,500 MW of the coal-fired power plants much of which is unused. The AGO estimates Ontario will have at least 10,000 MW of surplus generating capacity through 2025.”
In other words, Ontario’s electrical generating capacity already so far exceeds needs that the coal-burning power plants (the principal sources of GHG emissions) could have been shut down without adding a single new wind or solar plant.
The net effect of these plants on reducing Ontario GHG emissions was zero.
Robert Lyman
Ottawa, March 2014
08 Saturday Mar 2014
Posted in Ottawa, Renewable energy, Wind power
Tags
Brinston, Ed Shouten, Green Energy Act, health effects wind turbines, Kincardine wind farms, Not a Willing Host North Gower, property values wind farm neighbours, Prowind, South Branch, wind farm Amaranth, wind farm noise, wind farm North Gower, wind farm Richmond, wind farm Ridgetown, wind farms Europe
Many area residents wrote to Farmers Forum after last month’s edition in which North Gower resident and wind power proponent Ed Schouten made remarks about wind “farms.”
Four were published; we reproduce them here.
I intend to get my house appraised now and re-appraised if wind turbines are erected. I will have no qualms about suing both the property owner and Prowind for loss of property value at the very least. I hope others will be prepared to do the same.*
Julian Hughson, North Gower
*Blog editor note, Oh, they are, they are. Ottawa Wind Concerns has legal counsel on retainer and we have already notified Prowind of the intent to take any and all legal actions available.
It sounds to me like a match made in heaven. Companies offer always cash-starved farms substantial funds to be allowed to build windmills on their farms. They sell the power to Ontario Hydro for enormous amounts of taxpayer money. The farmer is happy with his steady income, the windmill company is happy with its profits. But there are a lot of questions that still need answers about the effects of these monsters. In Europe and the United States, most of them are offshore or in isolated areas. Let’s get some reports from other countries of wind farms located near homes, schools and farms.
J.A. Fournier, North Gower
Blog editor: first of all, the wind power developer had a contract with the Ontario Power Authority or OPA to sell power under the Feed In Tariff subsidy program (which is now halted–a new program begins this year). Second, the farm owners, many unwittingly, gave away many rights to their land as part of the contracts including first right of refusal. An Ontario mayor noted at the August AMO conference that in effect, farmers sold their land for the lease amount. The contracts also contain “gag” clauses so that if the farm owners experience health problems or are disturbed by the noise and vibration, they are not allowed to speak of it. Last, there are problems the world over with wind turbine noise. Denmark alone has 170 community groups, and citizens are opposed in the UK, Germany, France, and the US. The global wind lobby has gone to great lengths to discredit these groups, and currently has a campaign which is based on the idea that the activities of community groups themselves are causing symptoms among turbine neighbours.
As a resident of the proposed wind farm in North Gower, I will be adversely affected as we will be one of the homes closest to the turbines (the minimum distance is 550 meters). I will no longer be able to enjoy my back deck as the turbines will be far closer to my home than the home of the farm planning on erecting the turbines. Along with the health issues associated with turbines, so will our planned retirement of selling our property be adversely affected. The farmer from this area who said keeping the wind farm small will have no negative effects is, oh, so wrong.
Turbines in Europe a dismal failure
I would never have purchased this home if we had known there would be a turbine so close. Never, never, never. Being of European background, I have kept up-to-date on the fall of turbine desire there. They are a dismal failure. Germany, a country on the front line of energy efficiency, has decided not to erect (more) turbines but is instead returning to coal-fired generation.
What more need I say?
Gerry Courtney, North Gower
Farmer Ed Schouten’s comment that the Brinston wind power project (it’s not a “farm”) could be a test case for others is interesting: with 6,700 megawatts of wind power already contracted for in Ontario, I think we have quite enough “test cases.”
What we do have is people sick from the environmental noise near wind power projects at Kincardine, Amaranth and Ridgetown, to name a few. It’s really quite simple: if the noise is so loud people can’t sleep, they become ill.
1,200 of his neighbours signed a petition against the project, that was accepted by Ottawa
I disagree with Mr Schouten’s claim that keeping a wind power project small avoids problems. The one proposed by the Germany-based developer for his farm was a 20-megawatt power plant with eight turbines close to 1,000 families. That’s not “small” in my books. It’s also the reason why over 1,200 of his neighbours signed a petition against the project, which was accepted by Ottawa City Council.
With lawsuits over property values on the rise, and concerns about the health of livestock exposed to the turbine noise and vibration, Mr. Schouten must have a few concerns he hopes the Brinston project will allay.
The question that remains, however, is why is Ontario doing this? Why are we paying millions for wind power projects that have such a high impact on Ontario communities, for power we don’t need?
Ontario never did a cost-benefit analysis on wind power, the Auditor General complained in 2011. That was the real “test case” we needed.
Jane Wilson, North Gower
08 Saturday Mar 2014
Posted in Ottawa, Renewable energy, Wind power
Tags
Brinston, Cornerview Farms, Dixon's Corners, Ed Schouten, FIT program, Leslie Disheau, Prowind, wind farm North Gower, wind farm Richmond, wind farms Ontario, wind power subsidies, wind turbines
You may recall that in last month’s edition of Farmers Forum, North Gower-Richmond farm owner Ed Schouten (the proponent in the North Gower wind power project) said he looked forward to the start-up on the project at Brinston, as it would serve as a “test case” for people who had doubts about how great wind power is.
Lots of letters flew in to the Editor, and we will reproduce them all. First though, the letter from Brinston resident Leslie Disheau who wants to put Mr Schouten straight on a few issues.
Letter, Farmers Forum March 2014
I am going to begin with setting the record straight on the use of the term “wind farm.” This term is a skewed way of making the industrialization of farming practices more palatable to the general public by international wind development companies.
Farming practices and the farming industry have quietly moved into industrial practices while still enjoying the government subsidy/benefit programs to help sustain their bottom line, and keep their competitive edge with fluctuating world markets.
These healthy government subsidy/benefit programs are not available to any other sector of industry in Ontario. If you are going to industrialize then you should have to play by the same industry standards and requirements which currently govern all industry in Ontario.
Farm lands are now being used to host electricity producing machines, not growing food to feed cities. So let us term these industrial electricity projects correctly and allow this industry to be taxed accordingly, and without lucrative FIT contracts for 20 years.
We, the people in Brinston, Dixon’s Corners and Hulbert, directly affected by the siting of 10 30-megawatt industrial wind turbines, have every right to be upset and speak out. The Green Energy Act has stripped us of our rights to say “no” and our right to protect the well-being of our families; allowed for the devaluation of our homes; permits wildlife to be killed, harmed and harrassed; and takes top qality farmland out of food production. The rural community of Brinston is very much living with and feeling divided by this South Branch wind project.
“I am not a test animal, and my community is not a ‘test case,’ Mr Schouten”
I personally take great offence to Mr. Schouten’s comment that the “Brinston turbines will be a good test case for the rest of the area.” I am not a test animal. I am a person and my community should not be referred to as a “test case,” like a lab study.
As for Mr. Winslow’s statement about “negative publicity” and “far too much emotion,” I speak up with passion because I value my family’s health and well-being, take pride in my home and property, and understand what stewardship of the land and animals really means. I get emotional when someone makes a decision, without my consent, which directly changes life for my family and the community.
I have spent three years reading and looking at the research for both sides of this issue, from around the world, and can say I sit on the negative side of the fence–I made an educated decision to do so.
Leslie Disheau
Brinston, Ontario
The writer has one 3-MW turbine 836 meters from the front of her family home, and another 900 meters from the rear.The South Branch project, initiated by Germany-based Prowind,and purchased by US-based EDP, began operations March 4.
Aerial shot of base for one of the Brinston turbines, prior to construction last year. Brinston is 30 minutes south of Ottawa, Ontario
07 Friday Mar 2014
Posted in Renewable energy, Wind power
Tags
Dalton McGuinty, income wind farms Ontario, Ontario electricity bills, Parker Gallant, wind turbine leases
| Farmers Forum, March 2014 edition |
07 Friday Mar 2014
Posted in Renewable energy, Wind power
Tags
income wind farms, leasing land for wind turbines, property value loss wind farms, wind farms Ontario
Read the full story here
07 Friday Mar 2014
Posted in Ottawa, Renewable energy, Wind power
Tags
Amherst Island, James Bradley Environment, lawsuits wind farms, legal action wind farms, Ontario Ministry of the Environment, Prowind, Windlectric

The wind turbines on Wolfe Island are partially obscured by blowing snow during a cold and windy winter day in Kingston recently. IAN MACALPINE/KINGSTON WHIG-STANDARD/QMI AGENCY
AMHERST ISLAND – The group opposed to a wind energy development on Amherst Island is going to court to challenge a recent government ruling that permitted the project to move ahead.
In an application filed Thursday with the Superior Court of Justice in Toronto, the Association to Protect Amherst Island (APAI) asked for a judicial review of the Jan. 2 decision by the Ministry of the Environment to declare complete the Renewable Energy Approval (REA) submitted by Windlectric Inc., the company seeking to build the Amherst Island wind project.
Windlectric plans to build a 75-megawatt wind energy project on the 70-square-kilometre Amherst Island, involving up to 36 turbines.
The January ruling meant the project was entering the technical review stage, during which the different reports filed by the company in support of the development are reviewed.
An REA deemed complete also allowed the project to proceed into 65 days of public comment, a phase set to conclude March 8.
In its application, which named Windlectric, the director of environmental approvals and the provincial ministries of the environment, natural resources and tourism, culture and sport, APAI stated the REA did not contain key components.
“The decision to deem the project application complete surprised the Association as substantial evidence as to why the project should not proceed to the technical review stage of the process,” the association stated in a release Thursday.
The association stated the application for the review is “consistent” with the position of Loyalist Township.
In October, Loyalist Township council passed a motion that called for the rejection of “incomplete” project applications.
APAI said the technical details of the Windlectric REA were far from complete.
The items missing included…
Read the full story here.
Our note: errors are not uncommon in these applications. The application Prowind filed for the South Branch project south of Ottawa originally had the project in the wrong county! Communities are taking a hard look at these documents, and consulting with lawyers.
Email us at ottawawindconcerns@gmail.com
06 Thursday Mar 2014
Posted in Renewable energy, Wind power
Tags
cost benefit wind power, FIT program, Green Energy Act, Lisa MacLeod, subsidies for wind power, wind power Ontario
Yesterday was the occasion for debate on the Green Energy Act, as the government is now scrambling to correct its domestic input policy—illegal as determined by the World economic regulatory body.
Nepean-Carleton MPP and PC Energy Critic Lisa MacLeod covered the gamut of problems with the Green Energy Act in her speech. You may read the full account here (recommended). An excerpt follows:
…But if they want to talk about children’s health, I’ll talk about a child’s health. I’ll talk about Madi Vanstone, who every day we’ve brought up in the assembly here. I can’t help but think that the Ontario that I live in, the Ontario that I’m raising my daughter in, is spending $22 billion for 1% of energy to make Liberal friends rich when little girls in this province who need life-saving drugs can’t get them. And why can’t she get them? Because this Premier said it costs too much. She said that it costs too much; we couldn’t afford it. We could afford to make Mike Crawley a rich man, we can afford to make NextEra a rich company and we can ensure that Samsung basically has a seat at the cabinet table here, but apparently our government cannot and will not choose to support a child who needs help. That’s the reality that we’re in in Ontario today. People can’t understand it. It was well documented, I thought, by Christina Blizzard. I thought she laid out the case on that quite clearly, and I thought that she pointed out what most people in Ontario are saying.You look at the cost of power now—and I had the opportunity to speak to the supply motion, I guess it was a week ago. I talked about the opportunity I had to visit many of my colleagues’ ridings and talk to many people who are in their communities, and we talked about the high cost of energy and how that is hurting the people of this province and hurting manufacturers, and we talked about what our plan would be.We’ve written a number of white papers. Some of them were just, effectively, ideas that we put forward that we’ll run on; others were ideas for discussion that we’ve talked about. But, very clearly, people are looking for a rational solution to the mismanagement by the government.We’ve put forward a number of, I think, very thoughtful ideas and very sensible ideas to review not only the existing Green Energy Act—I think we’ve been very clear that we would repeal it—but we also talked about looking at some of the entities that we have in Ontario, like the OPG and Hydro One, monetizing them to bring more accountability. We know that there are some very serious and straightforward concerns there. We know, for example, that we’re exporting about $1 billion worth of power. …You think about this: He has just acknowledged in this House that to create 1.1% of power is $22 billion. They had to acknowledge, albeit it was the Auditor General who forced them, that it was $1.1 billion for them to save five seats. With that amount of waste and that amount of mismanagement, we could not only eradicate our deficit, but we could make significant investments into our communities in health care and education, and we would still have power that we wouldn’t have to export. A novel idea, Speaker, but that is the reality; it is the truth, and it is something that we have said consistently—and the only party to do so since 2009.That’s why we stand here day in and day out. We stand for the people in Strathroy and Stratford. We talk to the people in Cobourg, the people in Oxford and the people in Barry’s Bay. We talk about the people who are opposing these high subsidies and who are opposing these invasions on their land. We talk to them. We ask them to stay in Ontario and make sure that they continue to support us so that we can change this.…Let me be abundantly clear, Speaker: This is a government who is too concerned with its own ideology, and too concerned with its buddies that they could make a little bit more rich, that they had no concern whatsoever about the people paying the bill; that they have no concern whatsoever of the broader implications in an international trade war that they have now thrust us into. They don’t care, Speaker. They didn’t do their job at the beginning.They’re not doing their job now, they didn’t do their job then, and everybody in Ontario is paying for it.
05 Wednesday Mar 2014
Posted in Renewable energy, Wind power
Posted on March 5, 2014
Members of the community on Amherst Island (who, it must be said, are doing anything and everything to protect their community from a proposed wind power plant) have undertaken a financial analysis of the power project.
Note that this is something the government of Ontario has never done, despite the Auditor General’s chiding of them to do this in 2011. The result of this analysis? Wind power doesn’t make any sense.
Read the report at http://freewco.wordpress.com/2014/03/05/wind-power-on-amherst-island-not-financially-viable/
03 Monday Mar 2014
Posted in Ottawa, Renewable energy, Wind power
Tags
cost of renewable power Ontario, cost of wind power Ontario, electricity rates Ontario, Green Energy Act, IESO, Minister of Energy Ontario, Ontario government, Ontario power bills, Scott Luft
Here from energy economist Robert Lyman, an analysis of what’s going on with the price of electricity in Ontario… and what’s to come.
The average resident of Ontario has a difficult time even understanding his or her electricity bill, let alone comprehending all the costs borne by the Independent Electricity System Operator (IESO), the Crown Corporation that manages provincial electricity supply and demand.
Fortunately for the rest of us, one man spends a lot of time monitoring IESO’s purchases and costs. His name is Scott Luft, and he reports his analysis on a blog entitled “Cold Air.” He takes publicly available data from IESO and translates it into something meaningful. Two tables recently published by Scott Luft tell us a great deal about what has happened to the “commodity cost” of electricity in Ontario since 2006, and especially about the breakdown of costs in 2013. The commodity cost is the charges that IESO pays for the actual power that it purchases from generators plus additional costs that are added on by order of the provincial government. It excludes the cost of electricity transmission and distribution and other special charges like HST.
Read the full article here.Ontario’s Electricity Tragedy by the Numbers (revised)