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Ontario Electricity Price Increases reflect rising hydro bills as energy investment, power grid upgrades, and inflation pressures mount; nuclear and hydropower remain core while renewables integration challenges add costs across Ontario.

 

In This Story

Ontario rates rising from $87B grid upgrades, aging assets, and renewables to keep power reliable and cleaner.

  • $87B over 20 years in Ontario's long-term energy plan
  • Typical bill: $114 (2009) to $218 by 2021; $172 in today's $
  • Aging equipment and offshore transformers raise costs

 

Canada needs to invest $15 billion a year over the next 20 years to upgrade its electricity system, says the head of the Canadian Electricity Association.

 

But Pierre Guimond wouldn’t say exactly how much that massive investment is likely to cost Ontario consumers and businesses on their hydro bills.

Rising bills have been drawing anger from some consumers, and are being used by the Conservatives to attack the Liberals’ green power stance in the run-up to this fall’s provincial election.

Guimond insisted in a speech to the Economic Club of Canada that “electricity is still a bargain” at current prices.

But he warned that prices can’t stay where they are.

Investment in the power system has slowed significantly in the past 20 years, Guimond said.

“During this time, government and the electricity industry shifted their attention to keeping electricity prices as low as possible for customers,” he said.

Now, equipment is wearing out and has to be replaced, he said, triggering the need for heavy investment.

Asked afterward how much consumers should expect to pay if investment ramps up, he replied, “I don’t know what the answer is to that question, but we should be paying for the most reliable, low-cost system that’s environmentally sound that we can afford.”

Ontario isn’t alone, he said. “Right across North America over the next two decades, we’ll be paying more for electricity.”

Ontario has already signaled that investment and prices are heading higher in the province.

Its long-term energy plan, released last year, projects investment of $87 billion over the next 20 years, and many Ontario power users expect increases of more than 50 percent over that time as well, in the electricity system.

A typical monthly hydro bill of $114 in 2009 will by $218 by 2021, the province projects. That’s the equivalent of $172 in today’s dollars, if inflation is factored out, offering context on why power costs are high already.

The electricity association represents companies that generate and deliver electricity.

Guimond says cost increases are inevitable, a concern for Ontario manufacturers as well today.

“The cost of everything is much higher than when we first built the system,” he said.

Transformers used to be built in North America, for example, and could be expected to last 40 years, he said. Now they’re built offshore.

“They don’t last as long as the ones we used to have, and they cost a lot more,” he said.

Guimond says he expects nuclear and hydropower to remain the workhorses of the power system.

Ontario is investing heavily in renewables such as solar and wind power and gas made from plant waste.

But Guimond said it’s still difficult to integrate big volumes of renewable power into the system, since it can be highly variable, and often is produced when it’s least needed.

“There’s a technical dimension to this,” he said. “The Europeans are struggling with it, the Americans are struggling with the same issues.”

 

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