Ontario Says Green Plan Spurs $20 Billion in Investment


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Ontario Green Energy FIT Program drives renewable energy growth with feed-in tariffs, subsidies, and 20-year contracts, spurring wind and solar capacity, job creation, and emissions cuts amid election debate over electricity rates and Samsung investment.

 

Context and Background

Ontario's FIT scheme with 20-year above-market rates funds renewables to boost capacity, cut emissions, create jobs.

  • C$20B in clean energy investments announced by the ministry.
  • Over 21,000 FIT contracts across small, medium, large projects.
  • 2,000 MW online; 200 MW solar, major wind capacity added.
  • Targeting 50,000 jobs by end-2012; 13,000 by last year.

 

The Canadian province of Ontario says its program of providing incentives for green energy production has brought in commitments for C$20 billion $21 billion in private-sector investment since the program was put in place in 2009.

 

Ontario's energy ministry released a report outlining the investments on Thursday, following 40 renewable energy projects approved across Ontario, and giving an investment figure for the first time, as the province's governing Liberals get set to campaign ahead of the October 6 election in which their green energy plan is seen as a major and contentious issue.

The plan is the most comprehensive subsidy scheme for clean energy production in North America, and the report said Ontario has signed or offered more than 21,000 contracts to developers of small, medium and large clean energy projects, including 40 clean energy projects noted in recent approvals, so far.

The C$20 billion figure includes a C$7 billion commitment by South Korea's Samsung C&T, as well as investments already made and planned by other producers who have contracts under the province's feed-in tariff FIT, Ontario energy minister Brad Duguid said in an interview.

Ontario, Canada's most populous province and its biggest energy consumer, introduced the European-style FIT program two yeas ago as a way to create jobs, cut greenhouse gas emissions and promote clean power across the province and fill some of the electricity supply gap left by its plan to shut down all its coal-fired power stations by 2014.

Polls show the Liberals trailing the opposition Progressive Conservatives, who say the green plan is financially wasteful and has pushed electricity rates too high.

The Conservatives have already said that if elected they will scrap the FIT outright, which offers generous, above-market rates to producers of green energy under fixed 20-year contracts.

They have also vowed to scrap the Samsung agreement, which is the biggest single investment commitment under the program.

"We are quite comfortable that there is no real contract with Samsung. It's a memorandum of understanding, we've seen the redacted copy," John Yakabuski, energy critic for the opposition Conservatives said.

"We've been clear from outset that these expensive energy experiments do not represent good value for Ontario families paying the bills, we're not going to support that," he said.

The green energy program had created 13,000 jobs by the end of last year and is "very much on target" to reach the 50,000 mark by the end of 2012, Duguid said.

"You've got to remember that the bulk of the projects are still about to go under construction in the next year, so the biggest part of that job creation is yet to come," he said.

The 50,000 figure includes jobs for constructing wind and solar farms, which Duguid admitted were not permanent jobs.

The report said the program has so far brought online 2,000 megawatts of renewable energy as the province seeks to boost renewable capacity in coming years, equal to about 5 percent of the province's installed electricity generation.

That includes 200 MW of solar capacity, which produces enough electricity to power about 30,000 homes a year. Wind turbines erected in the province produce enough energy to deliver homegrown green power to roughly 350,000 homes.

Duguid said a review of the FIT rates paid to green energy producers, which are up for review every two years and are almost sure to be cut as prices for green energy components have fallen, is underway, amid debate over the true cost of going green in Ontario, and expected to be completed by year-end.

 

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