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Tag Archives: Ottawa wind concerns

Ottawa Hydro rates up: what’s the rest of the story? Subsidies…

10 Thursday Jan 2013

Posted by Ottawa Wind Concerns in Ottawa, Renewable energy, Wind power

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

cost benefit wind power, Don Butler, electricity system Ontario, Feed In Tariff Ontario, Nepean-Carleton MP, Ontario smart meters, Ottawa Citizen, Ottawa Hydro, Ottawa wind concerns, Pierre Poilievre, rising hydro rates Ottawa, Robert Lyman, solar power Ontario, subsidies for Ontario power, subsidies Ontario, wind power Ontario

In today’s Ottawa Citizen, a report from Don Butler on the rise in rates for power from Ottawa Hydro. Here’s a comment from someone whose opinion we regard highly, Robert Lyman, former Director-General, Environmental Affairs, with Transport Canada.

The Citizen story is here: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/technology/Modest+Hydro+Ottawa+increase+masks+steep+rise+electricity+rates/7797528/story.html

With his permission, we post Bob Lyman’s comment here:

It tells only a small part of the story, of course. The focus of the article was on the effects of time-of-use rates as compared to delivery charges, with just a passing reference to the taxpayer subsidy that will expire in a few years. The other way of presenting the increases is in terms of the average costs of electrical energy minus the delivery (transmission and distribution) charges. Those increased 85 % from 2005 to 2011 and were projected by Ontario Power Generation to increase another 46% from 2012 to 2015. There are good reasons to believe that the 46% figure is an under-estimate.
More important, the article did not explain why costs are increasing so much, when demand is falling. The answer lies in much higher costs now being paid for new generation sources like wind and solar and the expensive energy “conservation” programs. The effects of these costs are just beginning to be felt. As industrial wind turbines become a much larger share of generation in future, the cost increases will accelerate.
Add to this the costs of implementing the “smart meters” program, which is probably in the range of $2 billion province-wide for the meters and local distribution costs alone, and the huge costs of expanding the transmission system to pick up all the disparate source of electricity generation from wind, and you have an electrical system headed for major rate increases for the foreseeable future.
We as taxpayers are providing a huge subsidy so that we as ratepayers will be lulled into thinking that the electrical energy system is all right. Unfortunately it isn’t.

 

We would add to this a repetition of the results of a Library of Parliament analysis of the wind power project planned for the south-west rural area of Ottawa, as requested by Nepean-Carleton MP Pierre Poilievre. The research found that the subsidy for this particular project would be on the order of $4.8 MILLION per year.

Email us (join us!) at ottawawindconcerns@yahoo.ca

It’s a bad time to be part of the environment in Ontario

06 Sunday Jan 2013

Posted by Ottawa Wind Concerns in Renewable energy, Wind power

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Bald Eagles, bird kills wind power, dead birds wind farms, health effects wind farms, Ministry of Natural Resources Ontario, NextEra, Ontario Wind Resistance, Ottawa wind concerns, Port Dover wind farm

With the announcement of the approval of the nonsensical wind power project at Ostrander Point in Prince Edward County (Crown land, ought to be a conservation area, not a power project) and yesterday’s destruction of a six-year-old Bald Eagle nest to accommodate a wind power project near Port Dover in Ontario, it’s clear: it’s a bad time to be a bird or a bat or a human being living in rural Ontario.

Wind power profits are in, Nature is “out.”

And, with the Legislature prorogued, there is no public forum in which to decry these acts.

Take a look at the “optics” of the Bald Eagle nest removal: the approval was listed on the government website last Friday (an old trick, much used by this government, to make sure notice is served but at a time when nobody notices) and the removal HAD to take place this weekend. The explanation was that as the Bald Eagle nest was so near a turbine site, its removal would protect the birds. The tree, an ancient and rare Cottonwood, also had to come down, because it’s where an access road is to be built to construct the turbines.

The eagles will not be saved: that is their territory and they will nest elsewhere, and likely, eventually, be killed in the wind power project as so many raptors are near these projects. And, when you consider that raptors like this live as long as 20 years, what is also being killed is generation after generation of Bald Eagles that the dead one would have produced, had they been allowed to live.

It’s a bad time to be part of Nature; it must also be a pretty rough gig to be a public relations spin doctor for the wind companies and the provincial government.

We’re sad and disgusted at ottawawindconcerns@yahoo.ca

Pictures of the nest removal are available at Ontario Wind Resistance at: http://ontario-wind-resistance.org/2013/01/05/wind-turbine-company-nextera-mnr-destroy-bald-eagle-nest-habitat/

BaldEagleNestDestructionHaldimand

Ostrander Point project approval:contemptuous, reprehensible

27 Thursday Dec 2012

Posted by Ottawa Wind Concerns in Wind power

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Alliance to protect Prince Edward County, Dalton McGuinty, Environmental Commissioner Ontario, Gilead Power, Gord Miller, Jim Bradley Minister Environment, Ostrander Point, Ottawa wind concerns, Point to Point Foundation, prince Edward County, Prince Edward County Field Naturalists, Wind Concerns Ontario

Citizens of Prince Edward County were stunned when, just a few days before Christmas, the Ontario Ministry of the Environment announced it had approved the Ostrander Point wind power project.

Ostrander Point is at the southern tip of Prince Edward County and is considered an “Important Bird Area” which, according to Nature Canada, is “globally significant” for the number of migrating birds passing the area each year in the spring and fall.

The Ontario Government doesn’t care.

The Ministry of the Environment doesn’t care.

They don’t care that Ontario’s own Environmental Commissioner Gord Miller not too many months ago, advised the government not to locate wind power generation projects near the 70 or so Important Bird Areas in the province.

Stunning.

Of course, groups are lining up to file an appeal (how contemptuous is this government of democracy? The 15-day appeal period comes at the most holiday-intensive time of the year and actually only affords EIGHT business days for citizens to respond) including Prince Edward County itself.

And of course, the Legislature is pro-rogued so that not even our MPPs can stand up in the House and object.

What can you do?

Learn more about the project and Prince Edward County at

http://www.windconcernsontario.ca

http://appec.wordpress.com/

http://pointtopointpec.ca/

Write to the Minister of the Environment, Jim Bradley and complain. You can email him at:minister.moe@ontario.ca

and write to Ontario’s Environmental Commissioner Gord Miller at commissioner@eco.on.ca

Consider joining one of the community groups in Prince Edward County (see the link to APPEC, above) and join Wind Concerns Ontario (link above)

and donate to Ottawa Wind Concerns.

PO Box 3, North Gower ON  K0A 2T0

Email us at ottawawindconcerns@yahoo.ca to join our (confidential) email list for bulletins.

South-Shore-300x200

South shore, Prince Edward County

Electricity technologist details turbine woes

26 Monday Nov 2012

Posted by Ottawa Wind Concerns in Health, Ottawa, Wind power

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Dave Colling, David Colling, dirty electricity, electricity pollution, North Dundas, North Gower wind farm, North Gower wind power, Ottawa wind concerns, Richmond wind farm, South Mountain, stray voltage, wind farm substation

About 50 people gathered in the Mountain Agricultural Hall in South Mountain yesterday (what a pretty village!) to hear David Colling, former dairy farmer now feed supplier from the Ripley area.

Mr Colling explained that he now measures electricity “pollution” in homes and on farms, and has done more than 500 farms over the last five years. he was visiting three clients in the Eastern Ontario area.

When a Ripley area family came to him several years ago with concerns about the wind power project near them, he said he didn’t believe there could be a problem, but he went out and measured the electricity anyway. His advice: Get out of this house, now. The electricity pollution was so bad, he said it would have destroyed a herd of dairy cattle within six months.

Several families became ill after a wind power project started in the Kincardine area: the source of their problems seemed to be not just the turbines themselves but the substation* that was located across the road from them. Two of the families have now abandoned their homes, while the third family remains–they can’t afford to leave their home behind.

“The government of Ontario only cares about the big corporations producing wind power,” he concludes after speaking with people who have to live near wind power projects all over the province. “They clearly don’t care about you and me.”

One interesting fact about the turbine projects is that earthworms disappear in the area. Sonic vibration and electricity force the earthworms to leave, farmers tell him; the impact zone is a stunning FIFTEEN ACRES.

For more information go to his website HERE: http://www.electricalpollution.com/windturbines.html

Prepare to be stunned by what you read.

You can email us at ottawawindconcerns@yahoo.ca and please, donate to help us with the cost of legal advice. When the Feed In Tariff subsidy program opens again, Prowind will be in a position to re-apply. We’re going to need to step up our activities to protect this community.

PO Box 3, North Gower ON  K0A 2T0

*The substation for the proposed North Gower-Richmond wind power project is to be located just west of Fourth Line Road.

North Dundas votes NO to turbines

01 Thursday Nov 2012

Posted by Ottawa Wind Concerns in Wind power

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Dave Colling, EDP, municipal support for wind farms, municipality votes no to turbines, North Dundas, Ottawa wind concerns, Prowind, Theresa Bergeron

Just a few minutes south of the Ottawa area, the community of North Dundas is facing a wind power development proposed by Germany-based Prowind…which has now been sold to U.S. wind power developer EDP.

A motion was brought before North Dundas council this week…and the council voted AGAINST municipal support of the wind power project.

“This was a resounding NO,” says resident Theresa Bergeron.

The vote was unanimous.

Final recorded vote will take place November 13.
Email us at ottawawindconcerns@yahoo.ca

Donations may be sent to PO Box 3, North Gower ON K0A 2T0

NEXT DATE: November 25 in North Dundas, Ripley area farmer and farm electricity expert Dave Colling travels to Eastern Ontario to talk about experiences with farming and wind power projects.

 

Cancelled gas plants: what’s another 20,000 pages?

12 Friday Oct 2012

Posted by Ottawa Wind Concerns in Ottawa, Wind power

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Atikokan power plant, Bill Mauro MPP, cancelled gas plants Ontario, Chris Bentley, McGuinty government, Mississauga gas plant, MPP Bentley contempt, Oakville gas plant, Ontario Power Authority, OPA, Ottawa wind concerns, Parker Gallant, Robert Lyman

The big news out of Queen’s Park today is that while the Liberals thought they had complied with The Speaker’s request for documents pertaining to the Oakville and Mississauga gas plant cancellations (if you can call hundreds of blank pages complying with anything), there appears to have been an Oops!

Turns out now, the Ontario Power Authority (OPA) has discovered 20,000 more pages of documents connected to the cancellations.

In a nutshell, the Liberal government cancelled the plants because the people in Oakville and Mississauga–who NEED the power–didn’t want them, and an election was coming. So, now the government has decided to move them, guess where, rural locations, and then build the capacity it needs in the form of new transmission lines, new gas lines, whatever, so the resource hinterland of rural Ontario can feed Toronto.

How much is this costing you? Plenty.

Here is a summary from Ottawa Wind Concerns friend Robert Lyman, a former director in the federal government who was involved in energy policy.

ONTARIO ELECTRICITY RATEPAYERS – PAYING FOR POLITICS

Over the past year, there have been a series of announcements by Brad Duguid, Ontario Minister of Energy and his successor, Chris Bentley, about the construction of electricity generation projects in the province. Those announcements have all been related closely to the October 7, 2011 provincial election, which the Liberals won with a minority. Unfortunately, few citizens have understood the implications of the announcements.

This may have changed due to the work of two experts: Parker Gallant, a retired banker who has devoted several years to monitoring and reporting on the financial performance of Ontario’s electrical energy Crown Corporations and Bruce Sharp, an electrical engineer. You can read their excellent analyses in the online version of the Financial Post (“Ontario’ Power Trip: The $733 million gas boondoggle” by Bruce Sharp, and “Atikokan Conversion – Another Seat Saver for the Liberals!” by Parker Gallant). Their analyses are obscured, however, by the complexity of the subject matter. I will attempt to make it clearer.

Atikokan

In the period leading up to the 2011 provincial election, there were a number of announcements concerning electrical energy generation in the Atikokan area:

  • On September 11, 2011, Brad Duguid announced that the existing 200 MW Atikokan coal plant would be convert to biomass. Subsequent announcements promised that the contractor, Aecon, would complete the conversion for $170 million and that there would be 200 construction jobs for two years.
  • Chris Bentley subsequently announced that the Ontario Power Authority had contracted for the supply of 200 MW of electrical energy from wind turbines and solar generation.

These announcements were well received by the residents of Atikokan. In the 2011 election, MPP Bill Mauro of Thunder Bay Atikokan beat out the NDP candidate by 39% to 37%; this was less than 500 votes.

 

Subsequent analysis by Parker Gallant revealed some interesting things:

  • The contractor, Aecon, has contributed more than $45,000 to the Liberal Party of Ontario over the past four years and the Liberal Government has appointed the Aecon CEO to the Board of Directors of the Ontario Power Authority since its creation.
  • Over the last two years, the Atikokan coal plant has produced power at 2.6% of its capacity, which means that it has not been needed to support Ontario’s demands.
  • The conversion of the Atikokan plant to biomass (which would use wood chips as fuel) would actually reduce its ability to produce power from 175,000 to 140,000 megawatt hours.
  • As wind and solar energy plants produce electricity on an intermittent basis (i.e. when the wind blows and the sun shines), they are not sufficiently reliable to serve the needs of the pulp and paper plants in the area. This will require the construction of an east/west transmission line at a cost of $600 million to ensure reliability of energy supply to the region.
  • Considering the cost of the coal plant conversion, of the subsidies to the wind and solar plants and of the east-west transmission line, the total expenditures in this area will be close to $1 billion.

Oakville

Prior to the 2011 election, there was considerable controversy over the proposal by TransCanada Energy Corp., under contract to the Ontario Power Authority (OPA), to build a 900-megawatt natural gas-fired generating station near Oakville. The Ontario Cabinet decided, in the face of the controversy, to breach the $1.2 billion contract with TransCanada and to build the plant instead in Lennox, Ontario on land held by the government-owned Ontario Power Generation (OPG).

On September 24, 2012, Chris Bentley announced that a settlement had been reached between OPA and TransCanada over the breach of contract. The announcement focused on two payments to TransCanada – $40 million to cover sunk costs and a $210 million “turbine payment”, which was not explained.

The details that have emerged subsequently are as follows:

  • The turbine payment is an elaborate shell game. OPA has agreed to pay TransCanada $210 million for two gas turbines at the new plant. By 2017, when the new plant is completed, OPA will be sitting on a $210 million liability. When the plant starts producing electricity, TransCanada will repay the $210 million over the 20-year term of the contract, using revenues received from Ontario ratepayers. Under Ontario’s green-energy plan, even if the Lennox plant’s power is not needed, electricity ratepayers will still pay for the electricity they don’t need.
  • It is likely that the plant will not be needed. It will be located right next to an existing OPG plant that is seldom needed. When that plant does operate, it sells electricity into the export market below cost.
  • The turbine payment was far too high. If the plant had been located at Oakville, TransCanada would have been fully compensated for its costs with a payment of $113 million, $97 million less than the government has agreed to pay.
  • The gas services costs for the Lennox site, further away from the natural gas hub, may be higher than anticipated. Bruce Sharp estimates that they will be $346 million over the 20-year project term.
  • Locating the power plant farther away from the GTA will require up to $250 million in additional transmission facilities.
  • The total estimated cost of moving the project from Oakville to Lennox may thus be $733 million. This does not include other, to-be-determined costs, such as the compensation that will have to be paid to Ontario Power Generation for its land at Lennox. The figures contrast sharply with the $40 million the Ontario government has been citing.

Mississauga

The Atikokan and Oakville plants are in addition to the $190 million that the Ontario government had to pay to cancel a plant that would have been built in Mississauga. Similar to the Oakville decision, the cancellation of the Mississauga plant, made two weeks before the election, was followed by a decision to build the needed gas plant in Lambton, near Sarnia, which will add significantly to the electricity transmission costs.

In May, 1997, the MacDonald Commission issued its report recommending that the Ontario government introduce more competition into Ontario’s electricity system, including privatization of Ontario Hydro. Fifteen years later, electricity remains a publicly-owned and managed political football in Ontario.  Consumers will continue to pay dearly until this is changed.

Email us at ottawawindconcerns@yahoo.ca

Donations welcome for legal advice etc PO Box 3 North Gower ON   K0A 2T0

(Our mailbox is courtesy of the generous donation from a community member—thank you!)

A word about our photo

24 Monday Sep 2012

Posted by Ottawa Wind Concerns in Health, Ottawa, Wind power

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

cost benefit wind power, health effects wind farms, how big are wind turbines, infrasound wind turbines, North Gower wind power project, Ottawa wind concerns, Richmond wind project, wind farms industrialize Ontario, wind power project Ottawa

The rather elegant photo of Ottawa in our header needs an explanation: if there were a wind turbine in it, of the scale being proposed for south Ottawa, it is so tall you wouldn’t be able to see the nacelle or hub of it …. that is exactly how big these machines are. And of course, what they look like isn’t the issue, it’s the noise and the vibration they produce.

But, we need people to understand the scale of these power generating machines. Now, imagine TEN of these machines in the background of our photo…or 20 or 40 or 60 or—as in the Enbridge project near Kincardine, 120, or as in what Samsung is doing in Haldimand-Norfolk and Chatham-Kent, FIVE HUNDRED turbines…and you get an idea of what we mean when we say wind power projects are industrializing the small communities of Ontario.

It is expropriation with compensation. It is sacrificing the quality of life in our communities, reducing property values and harming health…all for an ideology for which there is no evidence of benefits.

We repeat a comment from then sales rep for Prowind, headquartered in Germany, who is behind the project in Richmond-North Gower and South Dundas. When asked by Mark Sutcliffe whether the wind turbines make noise (Talk Ottawa, April 2010) he said, “Of course they do! They’re power plants!”

What we need is a safe reliable power source that does not sacrifice anyone’s health or quality of life.

Email us at ottawawindconcerns@yahoo.ca and please consider donating toward our legal and other costs. We accept PayPal or cheques at PO Box 3 North Gower On  K0A 2T0 Ottawa Wind Concerns is a corporate member of Wind Concerns Ontario http://www.windconcernsontario.ca

What kind of person…?

13 Thursday Sep 2012

Posted by Ottawa Wind Concerns in Health, Ottawa, Wind power

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Andy Braid, cost benefit wind power, health effects wind power, health effects wind turbine noise, infrasound wind turbines, Manotick Messenger, moratorium wind power projects, North Gower, North Gower wind power project, Ottawa wind concerns, Pierre Poilievre, wind power project Ottawa

We’re not sure who “Andy Braid” of Kars is, nor do we get why Mr Braid seems to have letters published with regularity in The Manotick Messenger (3 weeks in a row, by our count) but at least our response to his recent letter about the wind power project was published, yesterday.

Here is the letter.

Mr Braid claims that MP Pierre Poilievre hasn’t got his facts straight in asking for a moratorium on the proposed wind power project for our community. It is Mr. Braid who is in error.

Ontario uses coal power for less than three percent of its electricity needs, and could shut them off altogether for seven months of the year when they are not needed for spikes in demand due to hot weather. The truth is, Ontario’s pollution comes from cars and trucks, and from industry south of the border.

Most worrying, however, is his objection to Health Canada spending time studying the noise problem. What kind of person does not want more information on a public health issue, and is in fact willing to sacrifice the health of his neighbours in North Gower, Richmond and Manotick?

Wind power has not been proven to reduce greenhouse gases anywhere in the world.

Jane Wilson

Ottawa Wind Concerns

Mr Braid’s comments, it might also be noted, come right out of the wind power developers’ lobby group playbook. They don’t want Health Canada to study the turbine noise and infrasound. If the study is done right–and many are commenting on the current proposed study design (it has flaws) to improve it–it will show that there are questions about setbacks and nighttime noise.

Ontario could end up with 2-km setbacks (minimum in the view of the World Health organization and the Society for Wind Vigilance) and perhaps also having the turbines turned off at night, as they are now doing in some areas of France. That means less profit in the form of taxpayer subsidy for the big companies.

Email us at ottawawindconcerns@yahoo.ca and donate to PO Box 3, North Gower ON   K0A 2T0

MPPs call for halt to wind power development in North Gower-Richmond

03 Monday Sep 2012

Posted by Ottawa Wind Concerns in Health, Ottawa, Wind power

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Bob Bailey MPP, cost benefit wind power, electricity cost Ontario, Emma Jackson EMC, Feed In Tariff Ontario, FIT Ontario, jobs Ontario, Lisa MacLeod, North Gower wind power project, Ontario economy, Ottawa wind concerns, Randy Pettapiece, Richmond wind farm, Richmond wind power project, Rideau Township, Tim Hudak, Vic Fedeli, wind power Ontario

From the latest online version of the EMC Manotick-Winchester, an account of a news conference held by Conservative MPPs Lisa MacLeod, Vic Fedeli, Randy Pettapiece and Bob Bailey.

The story is here http://www.emcmanotick.ca/20120830/news/Conservative+MPPs+decry+wind+power+in+North+Gower

and here:

Conservative MPPs decry wind power in North Gower

Posted Aug 30, 2012 By Emma Jackson


1

EMC news – A group of Progressive Conservative MPPs joined Nepean-Carleton MPP Lisa MacLeod in North Gower on Aug. 21 to oppose the Ontario government’s commitment to wind power in Ontario.

A small group of North Gower residents have been fighting a Prowind proposal to build 10 industrial wind turbines just outside the village boundaries, and PC energy critic Vic Fedeli and MPPs Bob Bailey and Randy Pettapiece took time from the Association of Municipalities Ontario conference in Ottawa to show their solidarity.

Fedeli did most of the talking at the brief event at the Rideau Township Archives on North Gower’s main street. He said the McGuinty government’s plan to bring green energy into the province is failing.

“The government’s dream of bringing green energy was forced on Ontario by overpaying for FIT (the feed-in tariff program) and guaranteeing to buy the power whenever it’s made, which is usually at night,” he told a small gathering of residents. “And they stripped municipalities of their decision-making power.”

He said the PC party would like to reverse those three elements of the Green Energy Act, so that residents can have more power to decide what energy projects are built in their communities.

“When you want green energy in your community, (municipalities can ask) is it in a willing host community, do we need the power and is it at a price we can afford,” Fedeli said.

The party is also asking to put all proposed wind projects in the province on hold until a federal study on the health effects of wind turbines is completed.

Gary Thomas, owner of Thomas Tree Farm on McCordick Road, said his house and farm will be within one kilometre of “four or five” turbines planned for the area. He said he’s done some basic calculations and thinks that from about December to February he will experience shadows from the turbines in the afternoons.

“It would drive you crazy. I couldn’t live there, and we’ve been here for 32 years,” said his wife Ruth Thomas.

Thomas said he’s concerned that it will ruin his old-fashioned Christmas tree cutting events. “With the turbines across the road, I don’t know how old-fashioned it will be,” he said.

Passing on the family farm will become difficult as well, because his son’s family will likely refuse to come because of health concerns.

Thomas said he wishes he could be more supportive of such an initiative.

“If they were of any benefit, it would be a different story,” he said. The Conservatives have long lambasted the McGuinty government for their commitment to wind power, claiming that turbines are inefficient and less green than traditional sources of power such as hydro.

Fedeli said he wants the government to focus on retrofitting existing dams and hydro plants to harness water energy, which he said would be more environmentally-friendly and more cost-effective.

Email us at ottawawindconcerns@yahoo.ca

Donations gratefully received: PO Box 3, North Gower ON   K0A 2T0

MP Poilievre commissions Library of Parliament research: what wind power costs YOU

17 Friday Aug 2012

Posted by Ottawa Wind Concerns in Health, Ottawa, Wind power

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

cost-beefit analysis wind power, Dalton McGuinty, North Gower wind power project, Ottawa wind concerns, Pierre Poilievre, Wind Concerns Ontario, wind power project Ottawa, wind power projects Ottawa

A news release from Nepean-Carleton MP Pierre Poilievre today, see below. This pertains to the 20-MW proposed project in North Gower. Savings of the “cost premium” amounts to $3-4.8 million per year–this is in line with the $500,000 per turbine, estimated as a subsidy for turbines by Wind Concerns Ontario.

Now remember, Mr McGuinty wants to have 10,700 MW of wind power running in Ontario. You do the math.

Pierre Poilievre, M.P., Nepean-Carleton

News Release

Contact: Austin Jean

T: 613.990.4301 | F: 613.990.4333 | E: poilip1@parl.gc.ca

August 17, 2012

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Marlborough Moratorium Makes Cents

North Gower, ON — Nepean-Carleton MP, Pierre Poilievre, released information from the Library of Parliament confirming that a moratorium on the Marlborough Wind Turbine Project could result in an annual savings of up to $4.8 million on Ontarians’ energy bills. Due to its unreliability and set-up costs, wind-generated power in Ontario is far more expensive than alternatives like conservation efforts or refurbished nuclear plants. Poilievre has been calling for a moratorium, while Health Canada (a federal department) conducts a study into the safety of wind turbine noise.

The Marlborough project proposed for the outskirts of North Gower is expected to produce approximately 60 million kilowatt hours (kWh) of electricity annually, at a cost of 13.5 cents/kWh, a price the Ontario government has guaranteed for 20 years.  In comparison, the Ontario Power Authority purchases electricity generated from coal, natural gas and nuclear plants at a cost of 6 to 9 cents/kWh.  A moratorium on this industrial wind turbine project would allow the Power Authority to purchase the same electricity at roughly half the price from these cheaper energy sources while Health Canada conducts its study.

“The planned industrial turbines near North Gower should be put on hold until the results of Health Canada’s federal study are published,” said Poilievre. “Not only would this ensure the safety of these residents, but it would save money for the power system and its consumers.”

In 2011, wind-generated energy accounted for an average of 2.7% of the total power grid in Ontario, costing taxpayers $519.5 million. The same amount of energy from natural gas generation plants would have cost $96.2 million less.

For further information, please contact:

Austin Jean
Office Manager

Pierre Poilievre, M.P. Nepean-Carleton
T: 613.990.4301 | F: 613.990.4333 | E: poilip1@parl.gc.ca

See the note from the Library of Parliament, HERE

Library of Parliament research[1]

Please see the petition under Important Documents. If you are copying it, it MUST have both pages on a single piece of paper to be legal.

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