Hydro rates hurting business, family budgets

HAMILTON, ONTARIO - OntarioÂ’s Progressive Conservative leader visited a hydro transfer station in Hamilton to talk about rising hydro bills.

Tim Hudak says the price of hydro is having an impact on the cost of doing business in Ontario and is straining family budgets.

Hudak says smart meters, the Green Energy Act and massive subsidies to the foreign company Samsung are causing electricity bills to skyrocket.

Hudak says hydro rates have increased by 75 per cent — or more than 100 per cent if you have a smart meter.

But Energy Minister Brad Duguid says smart meters arenÂ’t the reason for the increase, itÂ’s the cost of improving the energy infrastructure.

Duguid says there is a cost to building a clean, modern and reliable energy system.

Meanwhile, Hudak has called on Premier Dalton McGuinty to make time-of-use pricing optional for families.

And Hudak said if the Tories are elected in October he will create a consumer advocate at the Ontario Energy Board to ensure all decisions reflect the consumerÂ’s ability to pay.

Duguid said Ontario residents will see through Hudak’s “shiftiness” on energy.

“He’s trying to hoodwink Ontario families into believing you can have a modern, clean, reliable energy system without making the important investments that we’re making,” Duguid said. “Ontario families are smarter than that.”

The Tory leader faced a group of protesters earlier in the day.

A group opposed to HudakÂ’s support of a mid-peninsula highway expressed their feelings at a breakfast meeting in Flamborough, Ont.

Twenty-two people braved the frigid early morning temperatures for more than an hour to tell Hudak the highway isnÂ’t needed, wanted or affordable.

The proposed highway would cross the Niagara Peninsula, linking the Hamilton area to Niagara Falls, Ont.

Related News

lightning bolts

Big prizes awarded to European electricity prediction specialists

LONDON - Three European prediction specialists have won prizes worth €2 million for developing the most accurate predictions of electricity flow through a grid

The three winners of the Big Data Technologies Horizon Prize received their awards at a ceremony on 12th November in Austria.

The first prize of €1.2 million went to Professor José Vilar from Spain, while Belgians Sofie Verrewaere and Yann-Aël Le Borgne came in joint second place and won €400,000 each.

The challenge was open to individuals groups and organisations from countries taking part in the EU’s research and innovation programme, Horizon 2020.

Carlos Moedas, Commissioner for Research, Science and…

READ MORE
working from home

Working From Home Will Drive Up Electricity Bills for Consumers

READ MORE

offshore wind turbine

Huge offshore wind turbine that can power 18,000 homes

READ MORE

Three New Solar Electricity Facilities in Alberta Contracted At Lower Cost than Natural Gas

READ MORE

byron_unit_2_nuclear

Hitachi freezes British nuclear project, books $2.8bn hit

READ MORE