Is alternative energy out of juice in Canada?

By Canadian Business Magazine


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Ian MacLellan has a message when it comes to renewable energy: “Canada needs to get with the program.” MacLellan is the founder and chief technology officer of ARISE Technologies, which manufactures 35 megawatts worth of solar cells each year.

The company is not producing cells anywhere near its home in Waterloo, Ont., however; instead it is doing so in Bischofswerda, a town in eastern Germany. The transatlantic flights may not be the most pleasant experience for MacLellan, but he had little choice when it came to deciding where to locate ARISE’s first factory. “Germany is where the action is,” he says. “Canada continues to fall further and further behind in renewable energy.”

Others in the industry have similar stories. When it comes to building a renewable energy industry, Canada is simply not really a go-to destination. ThatÂ’s not to say there is no appetite domestically or that federal and provincial governments are ignoring the issue. Canada actually scores fairly high on the Ernst & Young renewable energy country attractiveness index, a ranking of nations based on the climate for clean power investment.

The most recent edition, released in August, places Canada eighth out of 25, where it has more or less remained for the past two years. “Canada could move up if it was more aggressive,” says Jonathan Johns, head of renewable energy at Ernst & Young in London. Meanwhile, Germany, Spain and the U.K. have positioned themselves as leaders by attracting investment.

Subsidies for wind and solar power are marginal in Canada, and virtually non-existent for wave, geothermal, and biomass energy. The main funding mechanism at the federal level is the ecoEnergy program, which provides a 1¢-per-kilowatt-hour subsidy for renewable energy. The initiative is set to expire in 2011 and is already close to using up its $1.48-billion budget. That’s in part driving Canadians to find more business abroad than at home.

International success is generally something to be lauded, but in this case it means Canada is missing out not only on the environmental benefits, but also on job creation and the chance to become an exporter of renewable-energy technology. “One of my frustrations is certain politicians feel that if you do what’s right for the environment, you’ll hurt the economy,” MacLellan says. “What I’m seeing first-hand is that if you do what’s right for the environment, you’ll create thousands of jobs.”

John MacDonald, co-founder of solar module manufacturer Day4 Energy in Burnaby, B.C., a fledging company that went public in a $100 million IPO last year, echoes that sentiment. “Renewable energy will be the future of energy,” he says. “There is always tons of money to be made when fundamental things change.” Canada has to make major policy changes to fully cash in.

If there is a world leader in renewable energy development, then Germany is probably close to the top of the list. The German government made a serious push for alternative energy in 2000, when it implemented the Renewable Energy Sources Act. (The German acronym is EEG.)

The program uses whatÂ’s called a feed-in tariff, a guarantee that any company producing renewable electricity can distribute it on the grid, and utilities will buy the power at a premium. The increased price allows producers to turn a profit, and the feed-in tariff is guaranteed for 20 years, ensuring a long-term market. The subsidy also decreases incrementally each year, forcing producers to increase efficiency and reduce costs.

“We did not even need to increase any taxes,” says David Wortmann of Invest in Germany, a government organization that aims to attract business to the country. Instead, the utilities pass on the price to consumers. That obviously results in higher electricity bills, but not significantly so — the average household in Germany pays an additional €2.50 for renewable power. As Wortmann puts it, “This is less than a pint of beer.” (Germans already pay about twice as much for electricity as Canadians, however.)

Solar and wind power developers have flocked to Germany largely as a result of the feed-in tariff. The photovoltaics sector alone generated €5.7 billion in revenue last year, and the country now employs about 250,000 people in alternative energy. Many of the facilities are located in eastern Germany, an area that has traditionally had high unemployment but is now experiencing a rebirth as a hub for renewable energy manufacturing.

About 15% of GermanyÂ’s electricity production is renewable (the comparable Canadian figure: 4%), and the country has ambitious goals. By 2020, it plans to boost its share of renewable electricity to 30%.

Germany isnÂ’t the only country to implement a feed-in tariff. Denmark generates about 20% of its electricity from wind, in part due to a feed-in tariff, and Spain is following GermanyÂ’s example, making an aggressive push for solar power.

Job creation may have been a significant motivator for the Germans, but they also acted out of necessity. The country is virtually devoid of natural resources, so financing ways to develop energy domestically only makes sense for its long-term security. That partly explains why Canada has been slow to move: there simply hasnÂ’t been much reason to.

The country is blessed with an abundance of natural resources — nearly 60% of its electricity is generated by hydropower. The environment is an increasing concern — but not enough to prompt the kind of action seen in Europe — and energy security is barely on the radar.

While Canada plods along, Germany is busy building an industry and attracting companies by using more than just a feed-in tariff. Invest in Germany (though not entirely focused on alternative energy) has offices around the world and actively lures companies. ThatÂ’s how ARISE Technologies ended up with a factory in Bischofswerda.

MacLellan was approached by representatives from Invest in Germany at a solar energy industry conference in 2006. “They basically said, ‘If you build your factory in Germany, we’ll give you half the money,’” MacLellan recalls. That amounted to around €24.5 million. MacLellan refers to Invest in Germany as a “one-stop shop” that provided advice, connected the company with banks, engineering and construction firms, and took him to visit approximately 20 different potential sites for the company’s factory. “They even booked my hotels and arranged my car rentals,” he says.

Locating in Germany also allowed ARISE to tap into a network of talented and experienced partners. The construction firm ARISE hired had built similar plants before, and the Canadian company would have been hard-pressed to find a plant manager with the same level of experience as the one hired in Germany. And then of course thereÂ’s the huge market in Europe.

Only 23 months elapsed between the time MacLellan was approached and when ARISE produced its first cell this past April — something that would have been next to impossible to do in Canada. “It’s not a criticism of Canada,” MacLellan points out. “If you’re building your first plant, you need to go where you can leverage off experienced people.”

Day4 Energy is having just as much success outside of Canada as ARISE. CEO John MacDonald, a co-founder and former CEO of MacDonald Dettwiler and Associates, came out of retirement to head the solar company in 2002. “We’re doing over 90% of our business in Europe,” he says. “Canada isn’t really a factor at this stage.”

And itÂ’s not just solar companies that are looking further afield, either.

Finavera Renewables, based in Vancouver, develops wind and wave energy projects. About a year and a half ago, it assessed the business opportunities in B.C. versus Oregon for developing a prototype turbine for wave energy. The company built an office in Portland, Ore., primarily because of a tax credit that allows it to recoup 33% of the costs of deploying a prototype. “The governor down there has been quite forward-thinking in terms of renewable energy. He saw the potential to build an industry,” says Myke Clark, Finavera’s senior vice-president of business development. “That’s what the tax incentive is for — to attract companies and to start developing intellectual capital.”

Geothermal companies haven’t fared much better. Although geothermal is eligible for the 1¢-per-kilowatt-hour ecoEnergy subsidy, the amount is small and does little to help companies, since the most challenging and expensive parts of building a plant are the initial exploration, drilling and construction costs. As well, a plant would have to be operational by 2011 to receive the subsidy.

“That pretty much kills any geothermal project, because there’s no way you’re going to get anything online in three years time in Canada,” says Gary Thompson, CEO of Sierra Geothermal Power in Vancouver. “We just found it very difficult to get any traction here.” Thompson says not only is the lack of incentives stalling geothermal, but the time it takes to obtain land for development is a significant factor as well. The company has submitted proposals with the B.C. government that have been sitting around for more than two years.

Sierra Geothermal is currently developing five projects, all of which are in Nevada. Up until recently, the U.S. Department of Energy funded up to 80% of exploration costs for geothermal firms. Now, the U.S. and countries such as Germany and Australia are funding research into enhanced geothermal systems, which can now be located in areas traditionally thought of as unsuitable for this form of power.

Western Geopower, also of Vancouver, is forging ahead with feasibility studies for a plant in B.C., but there are currently no such commercial projects in Canada, despite what is believed to be significant potential for geothermal power on the west coast — although just how much potential is not exactly clear, since the last time the Canadian government did any research into geothermal was in the 1980s.

A good start for Canada, Thompson says, would be for the government, along with industry, to conduct a new geothermal assessment — otherwise, Canada will fall farther behind.

“What we would miss out on is the opportunity to develop skilled jobs, and keep those jobs here,” he adds. “If the Democrats win in the U.S., you’ll see a ton of people flocking to develop projects there, which is really pulling away talent, investment and resources from here.”

What many alternative power producers say will help get the industry off the ground is a feed-in tariff similar to Germany’s. The Pembina Institute, an environmental policy think-tank based in Alberta, released a report earlier this year calling feed-in tariffs the most effective mechanism to foster renewable energy. Ontario implemented a kind of feed-in tariff in 2006, known as the Standard Offer Program, but it doesn’t go far enough for solar, according to MacDonald at Day4. “Once the investor looks at the price, it’s hard for them to see a return,” he says.

That hasnÂ’t stopped large developers from rolling in. OptiSolar, based in California, has three projects in Ontario, totaling 90 megawatts, and SkyPower out of Toronto is working on a 19-megawatt solar farm, due to be completed next year.

Still, there are improvements that can be made. MacDonald says raising the price paid for solar would be a good start, as would guaranteeing power producers access to the electricity grid. Ontario also capped the amount of power that can be generated from renewable energy under its program.

The original plan was to develop 1,000 megawatts of renewable power over 10 years, but the interest was so great the province ended up signing 1,200 megawatts of power in less than one year — a sign that producers will certainly flock to a market when the conditions are right. But now, future development under the program is currently stalled while the government reassesses how to bring on more power gradually.

Other provinces would have to implement a similar measure to fully capture the employment and environmental benefits of alternative power, of course, and there has been little interest so far. FinaveraÂ’s Clark has had informal conversations about feed-in tariffs with BC Hydro over the years, but hasnÂ’t been encouraged by the result.

“From our point of view, that’s not something that they’re willing to consider right now, given the lower cost electricity out there that’s available,” he says. MacDonald, meanwhile, says politicians may be reluctant to implement feed-in tariffs because it would be unpopular with industrial users of electricity, who would bear most of the cost.

He argues thatÂ’s necessary, however.

“People who consume the most electricity give the most support to renewable energy,” he says. “In the long run, that ultimately has to happen.”

Certainly feed-in tariffs have detractors. A German think-tank called RWI Essen released a report in March targeting the government’s promotion of the solar industry, saying it has the “potential to become a notoriously outstanding example of misguided political intervention.”

The authors’ primary concern is the amount of money put toward what they argue is among the most expensive greenhouse-gas abatement options. Germany’s support for solar tallied around €1.18 billion in 2006; the sector receives the largest subsidy of any form of power under the EEG, and yet it only made up 0.4% of the country’s electricity generation in 2007.

Since producers are guaranteed to receive the subsidy for 20 years, Germany has committed itself to funding what the authors see as an inefficient technology. Or, as the authors of the report put it, the “long dark shadows of this support will last for another two decades even if the EEG were to be abolished immediately.”

Solar is so far from cost-competitiveness that forcing it into the market at this point doesnÂ’t make sense, they argue. It would be more beneficial to invest in research and development to bring costs down.

Invest in GermanyÂ’s Wortmann says a feed-in tariff does fuel R&D, since the subsidy decreases each year, forcing companies to generate solar power more efficiently. He points out the cost of solar has been cut in half since 2000.

Canada doesnÂ’t have to adopt a feed-in tariff, however, as there are perhaps less controversial policy measures to take. For new power generation, most provinces use a competitive process. The utilities determine a certain number of megawatts of renewable energy to be developed, and invite companies to submit proposals. Utilities inevitably get more proposals than they know what to do with.

Quebec, for example, issued a call for 2,000 megawatts of wind energy, and had nearly 8,000 megawatts worth of proposals earlier this year. A company can spend millions developing a proposal, and if it doesnÂ’t win, it can be left with a lot of uncertainly about when, and even if, there will be another call for power.

“This has raised the spectre of a boom-and-bust kind of market in Canada, which is not particularly attractive to manufacturers because they’re very keen to see steady demand for their products,” says Robert Hornung, president of the Canadian Wind Energy Association. Utilities can ensure more stability for developers by announcing multiple bids over a number of years, for example — allowing developers to plan ahead.

A further complication with the Canadian market is that electricity falls under provincial jurisdiction, resulting in multiple policy frameworks. Hornung says the provinces need to start thinking outside of their borders and create agreements to buy and sell power with neighbouring regions. Not only would that be a way to essentially increase the market size, but it would also help address the irregularities of renewable energy, since solar modules and wind turbines cannot generate electricity every hour of the day.

Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick are already looking at generating renewable energy to export to the northeastern United States, an encouraging sign. “There are a bunch of challenges in doing that, transmission being one of them,” Hornung says. “But we’re starting to see the first discussions to address those challenges.”

Simply creating a market isnÂ’t enough to attract manufacturers these days, though.

Hornung says that’s just a miimum requirement. Other regions are aggressive at courting manufacturers. Iowa has been one of the most successful American states when it comes to wind turbine manufacturing, and that’s in part because its governor, Chet Culver, a Democrat, makes jaunts to Europe to visit with companies and encourage them to build in the state. “We have to recognize that it isn’t just going to happen just because we’re building wind projects here,” Hornung says.

There are a few positive signs in Canada. Quebec required a percentage of material to be produced locally when it issued its call for wind power, and Ontario set up its Next Generation of Jobs Fund last year, in which “green” jobs are a priority.

Regional governments are getting involved, too. Windsor, Essex and Chatham-Kent in southern Ontario launched the Green Collar Jobs Coalition to attract renewable energy companies in July, hoping to breathe new life into the manufacturing industry. Such work is proceeding slowly, however.

“We’re coming somewhat late to the game,” admits David Timm, one of the co-founders of the coalition. In wind power, Canada has just a handful of manufacturers,whereas the U.S. has announced 41 new turbine facilities or expansions and 9,000 new jobs since January 2007.

ARISE’s MacLellan thinks Canada is well-suited for renewable energy development. He points to the country’s significant wind resources, and says Ontario actually gets more sun than Germany, making it a better location for solar. “I kind of view Ontario as the glass being half full,” he says, “and the good news is they’re interested in having a full glass.”

Even so, MacLellan is not fully committed to building a manufacturing plant in Canada just yet.

ARISE is in the process of deciding where to build its second manufacturing facility, and the top two choices are Germany and Ontario. But MacLellan also says he’s been approached by representatives from several other countries — an indication of just how competitive the sector is.

“What I find amazing is the interest there is in building our next plant,” he says. “Invariably people tell us, ‘We can match what they do in Germany.’”

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Nova Scotia Power delays start of controversial new charge for solar customers

Nova Scotia Power solar charge proposes an $8/kW monthly system access fee on net metering customers, citing grid costs. UARB review, carbon credits, rate hikes, and solar industry impacts fuel political and consumer backlash.

 

Key Points

A proposed $8/kW monthly grid access fee on net metered solar customers, delayed to Feb 1, 2023, pending UARB review.

✅ $8/kW monthly system access fee on net metering

✅ Delay to Feb 1, 2023 after industry and political pushback

✅ UARB review; debate over grid costs and carbon credits

 

Nova Scotia Power has pushed back by a year the start date of a proposed new charge for customers who generate electricity and sell it back to the grid, following days of concern from the solar industry and politicians worried that it will damage the sector.

The company applied to the Nova Scotia Utility and Review Board (UARB) last week for various changes, including a "system access charge" of $8 per kilowatt monthly on net metered installations, and the province cannot order the utility to lower rates under current law. The vast majority of the province's 4,100 net metering customers are residential customers with solar power, according to the application. 

The proposed charge would have come into effect Tuesday if approved, but Nova Scotia Power said in a news release Tuesday it will change the date in its filing from Feb. 1, 2022, to Feb. 1, 2023.

"We understand that the solar industry was taken off guard," utility CEO Peter Gregg said in an interview.

"There could have been an opportunity to have more conversations in advance."

Gregg said the utility will meet with members of the solar industry over the next year to work on finding solutions that support the sector's growth, while addressing what NSP sees as an inequity in the net metering system.

NSP recognized that customers who choose solar invest a significant amount and pay for the electricity they use, but they don't pay for costs associated with accessing the electrical grid when they need energy, such as on cold winter evenings when the sun is not shining.

"I know that's hit a nerve, but it doesn't take away the fact that it is an issue," Gregg said.

He said this is an issue utilities are navigating around North America, where seasonal rate designs have sparked consumer backlash in New Brunswick, and NSP is open to hearing ideas for other models of charges or fees.

The utility's suggested system access charge closely resembles one proposed in California, which has also raised major concerns from the solar industry and been criticized by the likes of Elon Musk, and has parallels to Massachusetts solar demand charges as well.

Although the "solar profile" of Nova Scotia and California is very different, with far more solar customers in that state, and in other provinces such as Saskatchewan, NDP criticism of 8% hikes has intensified affordability debates, Gregg said the fundamental issues are the same.

For those with a typical 10-kilowatt solar system, which generates around $1,800 of electricity a year, the new charge would mean those customers would be required to pay $960 back to NSP. That would roughly double the length of time it takes for those customers to pay off their investment for the panels.

David Brushett, chair of Solar Nova Scotia, said he relayed concerns from solar installers and others in the industry to Gregg on Monday. 

Brushett said the year delay is a positive first step, but he is still calling on the province to take a strong stance against the application, which has led to customers cancelling their panel installations and companies considering layoffs.

"There's still an urgency to this situation that hasn't been addressed, and we need to kind of protect the industry," he said Tuesday.

NSP's original application proposed exempting net metering customers who enrolled before Feb. 1, 2022, from the charge for 25 years after they sign up. But any benefit would be lost if those customers sold their home, and the exemption wouldn't extend to the new buyers, said Brushett.


Carbon offsets missing from equation: industry
Brushett said NSP "completely ignored" the fact that it's getting free carbon offset credits from homeowners who use solar energy under the provincial cap and trade program.

If the net metering system continues as is, NSP has said non-solar customers would pay about $55 million between now and 2030. That number assumes about 2,000 people sign up for net metering each year over the next nine years.

When asked whether those carbon emission credits were factored into the calculations for the proposed charge, Gregg said, "I don't believe in the current structure it is, but it's something that certainly we'd be open to hearing about."

Brushett said his group is finalizing a legal response to NSP's proposal and has already filed an official complaint against the company with the UARB.


Base charge on actual electrical output: customer
At least one shareholder in NSP parent company Emera is considering selling his shares in response to the application.

Joe Hood, a shareholder from Middle Sackville, said the proposed charge won't apply to his existing 11.16-kilowatt solar system, but if it did, it would cost him $1,071 a year.

"I am offended that a company I would invest in would do this to the solar industry in Nova Scotia," he said.

According to his meter, Hood said he pushed 9,600 kilowatt hours of solar electricity to the grid last year— some only for a brief period, and all of which was used by his home by the end of the year.

Under the proposed charge, someone with one solar panel who goes away on vacation in the summer would push all their electricity to the grid, and be charged far less than someone with 10 panels who has used all their own power and hasn't pushed anything.

"Nova Scotia Power's argument is that it's an issue with the grid. Well, then it should be based on what touches the grid," Hood said.

Far from actually making the system fair for everyone, Hood said this charge places solar only in the hands of the super-rich or NSP, with projects like its community solar gardens in Amherst, N.S.


Green Party suggests legislation update
Nova Scotia's Green Party also said Tuesday that Gregg's arguments of fairness are misleading, echoing earlier premier opposition to a 14% hike on rates.

The party is calling for an update to the Electricity Act that would "prevent penalizing any activity that helps Nova Scotia reach its emissions target," aligning with calls to make the electricity system more accountable to residents.

In its application, NSP has also asked to increase electricity rates for residential customers by at least 10 per cent over the next three years, amid debate that culminated in a 14% rate hike approval by regulators. 

The company wants to maintain its nine per cent rate of return.

NSP expects to earn $153 million this year, $192 million in 2023, and $213 million in 2024 from its rate of return. 

 

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Cabinet Of Ministers Of Ukraine - Prime Minister: Our Goal In The Energy Sector Is To Synchronize Ukraine's Integrated Power System With Entso-e

Ukraine's EU Energy Integration aims for ENTSO-E synchronization, electricity market liberalization, EU Green Deal alignment, energy efficiency upgrades, hydrogen development, and streamlined grid connections to accelerate reform, market pricing, and sustainable growth.

 

Key Points

Ukraine's EU Energy Integration syncs with ENTSO-E, liberalizes power markets, and aligns with the EU Green Deal.

✅ ENTSO-E grid synchronization and cross-border trade readiness

✅ Electricity market liberalization and market-based pricing

✅ EU Green Deal alignment: efficiency, hydrogen, coal regions

 

Ukraine's goal in the energy sector is to ensure the maximum integration of energy markets with EU markets, and in line with the EU plan to dump Russian energy that is reshaping the region, synchronization of Ukraine's integrated energy system with ENTSO-E while leaning on electricity imports as needed to maintain stability. Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal emphasized in his statement at the Fourth Ukraine Reform Conference underway through July 7-8 in Vilnius, the Republic of Lithuania.

The Head of Government presented a plan of reforms in Ukraine until 2030. In particular, energy sector reform and environmental protection, according to the PM, include the liberalization of the electricity market, with recent amendments to the market law guiding implementation, the simplification of connection to the electrical grid system and the gradual transition to market electricity prices, alongside potential EU emergency price measures under discussion, and the monetization of subsidies for vulnerable groups.

"Ukraine shares and fully supports the EU's climate ambitions and aims to synchronize its policies in line with the EU Green Deal, including awareness of Hungary's energy alignment with Russia to ensure coherent regional planning. The interdepartmental working group has determined priority areas for cooperation with the European Union: energy efficiency, hydrogen, transformation of coal regions, waste management," said the Prime Minister.

According to Denys Shmyhal, Ukraine has supported the EU's climate ambitions to move towards climate-neutral development by 2050 within the framework of the European Green Deal and should become an integral part of it in order not only to combat the effects of climate change in synergy with the EU but, as the country prepares for winter energy challenges and strengthens resilience, within the economic strategy development aimed to enhance security and create new opportunities for Ukrainian business, with continued energy security support from partners bolstering implementation.

 

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UCP scraps electricity price cap, some will see $7 bill increase this month

Edmonton Electricity Rate Increase signals Alberta RRO changes as the UCP ends the NDP price cap; kilowatt-hour rises to 7.5 cents, raising energy bills for typical households by 3.9 percent in December.

 

Key Points

The end of Alberta’s RRO cap lifts kWh to 7.5 cents, raising an average Edmonton home’s bill about 3.9% in December.

✅ RRO price cap scrapped; kWh set at 7.5 cents in December.

✅ Average 600 kWh home pays about $7.37 more vs November.

✅ UCP ends NDP-era cap after stakeholder and consumer feedback.

 

Electricity will be more expensive for some Edmontonians in December after the UCP government scrapped a program that capped rates amid prices spiking in Alberta this year.

Effective Nov. 30, the province got rid of the consumer price cap program for Regulated Rate Option customers.

In 2017, the NDP government capped the kilowatt per hour price at 6.8 cents under a consumer price cap policy, meaning Edmontonians would pay the market rate and not more than the capped price.

In December, kWh will cost 7.5 cents amid expert warnings to lock in rates across Alberta. Typical Edmonton homes use an average of 600 kWh, increasing bills by $7.37, or 3.9 per cent, compared to November.

In Calgary, electricity bills have been rising as well, reflecting similar market pressures.

The NDP created the capacity system to bring price stability to Albertans, though a Calgary retailer urged scrapping the market overhaul at the time.

Energy Minister Sonya Savage said the UCP decided to scrap it after "overwhelming" feedback from consumers and industry stakeholders, as the province introduced new electricity rules earlier this year. 

 

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Texas utilities struggle to restore power as Harvey hampers progress

Texas Gulf Coast Power Outages from Harvey continue as flooding, high winds, and downed lines paralyze Houston and coastal utilities, while restoration crews from out-of-state work to repair infrastructure and restore electricity across impacted communities.

 

Key Points

Power disruptions across Houston and the Gulf Coast from Harvey, driven by flooding, wind damage, and blocked access.

✅ CenterPoint warns multi-day outages in flooded zones.

✅ AEP Texas aided by crews from Kentucky, Illinois, Missouri.

✅ Entergy expects more outages as storm nears Galveston.

 

Hundreds of thousands of Texans were without power along the Gulf Coast as Tropical Storm Harvey left parts of the Houston area under water, with extended Houston outages compounding response efforts.

There were roughly 280,000 customers without power along the Texas's coast and in Houston and the surrounding areas on Monday, according to reported outages by the state's investor-owned utilities. Harvey, which made landfall on Friday, caused devastating flooding and knocked out power lines along its destructive path, similar to the Louisiana grid rebuild after Laura that required weeks of restoration.

CenterPoint Energy reported more than 100,000 outages earlier on Monday, though that figure was down to 91,744 shortly after 1 p.m. on Monday.

The company said it was unable to access hard-hit areas until floodwaters recede and electric infrastructure dries out, a challenge that, as seen in Florida power restoration efforts elsewhere, has taken weeks to resolve. Outages in the most flooded areas could last for several days, CenterPoint warned.

AEP Texas's coverage area south of Houston had 150,500 customers without electricity as of 11 a.m. ET on Monday. That was down from the peak of its outages on Saturday afternoon, which affected 220,000 customers.

Former FEMA deputy director: Texas has already begun recovery from storm  1:54 PM ET Mon, 28 Aug 2017 | 05:57

Corpus Christi and the surrounding areas along the Gulf Coast were still experiencing the most outages, while persistent Toronto outages after a spring storm underscored how long recovery can take in urban areas. AEP credited assistance from out-of-state workers for helping to get the lights back on.

"Thousands of resources have arrived from across the country to help AEP Texas with restoration efforts following this historic weather event. Crews from Kentucky, Illinois, Missouri and other states have arrived and are working on restoring power to those impacted by Hurricane Harvey," AEP said in a statement.

Entergy reported 29,500 customers were without power on Monday in areas north of Houston. The company warned that additional outages were expected if Harvey moves inland near the island city of Galveston on Wednesday as anticipated, a pattern similar to New Orleans during Ida where electricity failed despite levees holding.

Houston, Beaumont and Victoria are expected to see continued periods of torrential rain through Tuesday, before Harvey begins to move north on Wednesday and out of the flood zone by Thursday.

"Our crews are safely restoring power as quickly as possible, but the continued wind, rain and flooding are having an impact on restoration efforts," Entergy said in a statement.

South of Houston, about 7,500 Texas New Mexico Power Company customers were still experiencing outages, according to the company's outage map.

 

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BC residents split on going nuclear for electricity generation: survey

BC Energy Debate: Nuclear Power and LNG divides British Columbia, as a new survey weighs zero-emission clean energy, hydroelectric capacity, the Site C dam, EV mandates, energy security, rising costs, and blackout risks.

 

Key Points

A BC-wide debate on power choices balancing nuclear, LNG, hydro, costs, climate goals, EVs, and grid reliability.

✅ Survey: 43% support nuclear, 40% oppose in BC

✅ 55% back LNG expansion, led by Southern BC

✅ Hydro at 90%; Site C adds 1,100 MW by 2025

 

There is a long-term need to produce more electricity to meet population and economic growth needs and, in particular, create new clean energy sources, with two new BC generating stations recently commissioned contributing to capacity.

Increasingly, in the worldwide discourse on climate change, nuclear power plants are being touted as a zero-emission clean energy source, with Ontario exploring large-scale nuclear to expand capacity, and a key solution towards meeting reduced emissions goals. New technological advancements could make nuclear power far safer than existing plant designs.

When queried on whether British Columbia should support nuclear power for electricity generation, respondents in a new province-wide survey by Research Co. were split, with 43% in favour and 40% against.

Levels of support reached 46% in Metro Vancouver, 41% in the Fraser Valley, 44% in Southern BC, 39% in Northern BC, and 36% on Vancouver Island.

The closest nuclear power plant to BC is the Columbia Generating Station, located in southern Washington State.

The safe use of nuclear power came to the forefront following the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster when the most powerful earthquake ever recorded in Japan triggered a large tsunami that damaged the plant’s emergency generators. Japan subsequently shut off many of its nuclear power plants and increased its reliance on fossil fuel imports, but in recent years there has been a policy reversal to restart shuttered nuclear plants to provide the nation with improved energy security.

Over the past decade, Germany has also been undergoing a transition away from nuclear power. But in an effort to replace Russian natural gas, Germany is now using more coal for power generation than ever before in decades, while Ontario’s electricity outlook suggests a shift to a dirtier mix, and it is looking to expand its use of liquefied natural gas (LNG).

Last summer, German chancellor Olaf Scholz told the CBC he wants Canada to increase its shipments of LNG gas to Europe. LNG, which is greener compared to coal and oil, is generally seen as a transitionary fuel source for parts of the world that currently depend on heavy polluting fuels for power generation.

When the Research Co. survey asked BC residents whether they support the further development of the province’s LNG industry, including LNG electricity demand that BC Hydro says justifies Site C, 55% of respondents were supportive, while 29% were opposed and 17% undecided.

Support for the expansion of the LNG is highest in Southern BC (67%), followed by the Fraser Valley (56%), Metro Vancouver (also 56%), Northern BC (55%), and Vancouver Island (41%).

A larger proportion of BC residents are against any idea of the provincial government moving to ban the use of natural gas for stoves and heating in new buildings, with 45% opposed and 39% in support.

Significant majorities of BC residents are concerned that energy costs could become too expensive, and a report on coal phase-outs underscores potential cost and effectiveness concerns, with 84% expressing concern for residents and 66% for businesses. As well, 70% are concerned that energy shortages could lead to measures such as rationing and rolling blackouts.

Currently, about 90% of BC’s electricity is produced by hydroelectric dams, but this fluctuates throughout the year — at times, BC imports coal- and gas-generated power from the United States when hydro output is low.

According to BC Hydro’s five-year electrification plan released in September 2021, it is estimated BC has a sufficient supply of clean electricity only by 2030, including the capacity of the Site C dam, which is slated to open in 2025. The $16 billion dam will have an output capacity of 1,100 megawatts or enough power for the equivalent of 450,000 homes.

The provincial government’s strategy for pushing vehicles towards becoming dependent on the electrical grid also necessitates a reliable supply of power, prompting BC Hydro’s first call for power in 15 years to prepare for electrification. Most BC residents support the provincial government’s requirement for all new car and passenger truck sales to be zero-emission by 2035, with 75% supporting the goal and 21% opposed.
 

 

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The Banker Trying to Fix the UK's Electricity Grid

UK power grid bottleneck is stalling renewable energy, with connection queues, planning delays, and transmission infrastructure gaps raising costs, slowing decarbonization, and deterring investment as government considers reforms led by a new chief adviser.

 

Key Points

Delays and capacity gaps that hinder connecting new generation and demand, raising costs and slowing decarbonization.

✅ Connection queues delay projects for years

✅ Planning and NIMBY barriers stall transmission builds

✅ Investment costs on bills risk political pushback

 

During his three decades at investment bank Morgan Stanley, Franck Petitgas developed a reputation for solving problems that vexed others. Fixing the UK’s creaking power grid could be his most challenging task yet.

Earlier this year, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak appointed Petitgas as his chief business adviser, and the former financier has been pushing to tackle the gridlock that’s left projects waiting endlessly for a connection, an issue he sees as one of the biggest problems for industry.

But there are no easy solutions to tackle the years-long queue to get on the grid or the drawn-out planning process for building clean power generation, with the energy transition stalled by supply delays compounding the problem. And sluggish progress in expanding and improving the electricity network is preventing the construction of new housing developments and offices, as well as slowing the transition to greener power.

That transition has already taken a knock after Sunak last week controversially watered down some of the UK’s climate ambitions, citing in part the cost to consumers. He also acknowledged the issues surrounding the grid and promised the “most transformative plans” in response, drawing on lessons from Europe’s power crisis where applicable. Those are due to be unveiled within weeks. 

Shortly after his appointment, Petitgas offered reassurances to business leaders at a meeting in Downing Street that solutions were being worked on, according to people familiar with the matter. But there’s a lack of confidence across business that enough will be done.

Cost is a big factor in the expansion of the electricity grid, and some argue a state-owned generation model could ease bills over time. Improving the onshore network alone could require investment of between £100 billion and £240 billion ($122-$293 billion) by 2050, according to a government analysis last year. 

With network expansion funded through power bills, that’s a big ask, particularly with Sunak trailing in polls ahead of an election expected next year.

“It’s very difficult for politicians to say more money should be on bills,” said Emma Pinchbeck, chief executive of Energy UK, a trade body. “So you get to a situation where no one wants to pay for the infrastructure investment until it’s really sticky, and that’s where we’ve got to with the grid.”

There are huge competitive and economic implications if the UK falls further behind. With US President Joe Biden spending an estimated $370 billion on climate measures through his Inflation Reduction Act, and China already a world leader in electric vehicles, Britain’s grid inaction is holding it back in the global race to decarbonize, said Jess Ralston, an analyst at the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit think tank.

“The UK is dithering and delaying, and not making any strategic decisions,” she said. “You can see companies just saying ‘I’m going to the US, or I’m going to China’.” 

In a statement, the government said it’s a “priority to speed up the time taken to connect new power generators and power consumers to the grid.” It added that it’s taking “significant steps to accelerate grid infrastructure,” including support for new Channel interconnectors announced this year.

The government expects demand for electricity to double by 2035 and that will mean more generation that needs to be linked up to the network by cables and pylons. Local grids will also have to expand to accommodate more connection points for electric vehicles and homes, and invest in large-scale energy storage capacity to balance supply.

But so far, the rapid rise in renewable energy investment has not been accompanied by matching spend on the power network, according to BloombergNEF, a pattern seen in Germany’s grid expansion woes as well.

“The pace and scale of what we now have to deliver is significantly different from the last few decades,” said Carl Trowell, president of UK strategic infrastructure at National Grid. “It’s a national endeavor.”

In June, Electricity Networks Commissioner Nick Winser sent the government recommendations for how to accelerate construction of more transmission infrastructure. He said efforts to decarbonize the power sector will be “wasted if we cannot get the power to homes and businesses.”

“We need a seriously stronger sense of urgency,” said Kevin O’Donovan, country manager for Statkraft UK, which is holding off investment in four wind farms and two solar projects due to grid connection delays.

In addition to cost, the other major stumbling block is planning. Politicians in the governing Conservative Party are wary of angering voters with new infrastructure in rural areas that typically vote Tory. Across the country, “Not In My Back Yard” campaigners – NIMBYs — pose a major challenge to projects.

Petitgas, 62, retired from Morgan Stanley last year after nearly 30 years at the bank, where he led its international division from London. The issues over connections and planning have been repeatedly pointed out to Petitgas by investors and trade groups over a series of meetings this year, according to people familiar with the matter, requesting anonymity discussing private talks.

Yet with a general election looming and the issue plagued by political headaches, many are skeptical that Sunak can find the solutions needed.

One business chief said Downing Street considers the issue too tricky and expensive to tackle in the short-term. Others are concerned that while Petitgas has license from Sunak, he doesn’t have influence across the relevant departments to get grids to the top of the agenda.

 

Wind Farms

Multiple parts of the UK’s climate plans are under pressure. Earlier this month, an auction for contracts to build new wind farms received zero bids from developers, even as wind leads the power mix in many regions, marking yet another green setback. 

The UK is already behind on its target of having 50 gigawatts of offshore wind built by 2030, up from 14 GW today. The challenge is accelerating development without railroading local communities.

Within Sunak’s Conservative Party, some lawmakers are pushing back on new infrastructure in their local areas. A group including Environment Secretary Therese Coffey and former Home Secretary Priti Patel is campaigning against building new pylons across a stretch of eastern England.

According to Adam Bell, director of policy at consultancy Stonehaven, backbench pressure means Sunak is unlikely to take major action on the grid in the near term. He doesn’t see the prime minister accepting Winser’s recommendations, least of all accelerating planning decisions.

“Over the last year, Sunak has favored party management over things that will benefit the country,” Bell said. 

 

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