Corruption is the Only Reason Why they won’t Research Health Effects from Wind Turbines!

Nurses for Safe Renewable Power

Looking for a healthy environment for everyone

RNAO two years ago: a sad day for nursing

CEO of the Registered Nurses Association of Ontario Doris Grinspun is directing the RNAO’s annual event which consists of meetings, a gala banquet, and of course, the Annual General Meeting for members.

We recall the AGM of two years ago, when two nurses plus an RNAO chapter, put forward a resolution to ask for support for clinical research into the field of environmental noise produced by industrial-scale wind turbines, and further, as a second part of the resolution, that a moratorium on wind power developments be requested until the results of such research are released and analyzed.

The motion was defeated but not before there were dirty tricks aplenty on the part of RNAO staff (the director of research actually interrupted the resolution proponents’ session with voting delegates, so much so that delegates complained they were not able to speak or ask questions), misdirection was given about how much information could be provided to the delegates, and  finally, the proponents’ presentation time was cut off by the chair—who incidentally, and completely illegally, spoke out against the motion before introducing it to the assembly. Easily a dozen delegates abstained from the vote, calling out to the chair that they wanted to hear more, but to no avail. The motion was defeated. (The chair also, erroneously, told the proponents that they would not be able to bring the resolution forward again for TWO YEARS. This is false and is not in the RNAO bylaws.)

So, where are we today? We actually have two clinical studies ongoing in Canada, one by Health Canada, and the other by the Renewable Energy Technology and Health (RETH) team at the University of Waterloo. The RETH team has already presented very preliminary results in poster format at a meeting earlier this year, showing a significant association between the noise from turbines and sleep disturbance.

We also have more studies from a variety of sources, including a recent article by otolaryngologist Dr Alec Salt whose work is increasingly showing a DIRECT link between the noise and vibration/infrasound produced by the machines used to generate power from wind energy and health effects.

http://oto2.wustl.edu/cochlea/wind.html

The growing research on the effects of exposure to the noise and infrasound on children is disturbing.

We also have in Ontario an approval process for wind power projects that is being revealed as sloppy and indicative of the provincial government’s blind support for wind power. Requests have been made for a review by the Ombudsman of the review and approval process, because documents being presented as complete are in fact inaccurate, incomplete, or sometimes completely absent. There are also judicial reviews pending for the approval of individual projects, such as Amherst Island, as the inaccuracies of the documentation supporting the safety of the proposed power developments are egregiously incomplete.

The Chief Medical Officer of Health for Ontario prepared a report that was released in 2010 based on work done in 2009, which maintained there were no direct causal links between the turbine noise and health (the government does not believe infrasound is important and will not even have a protocol to measure it until 2015), which the government and successive Environmental Review Tribunals rely on today expediently.

Complaints of excessive noise and poor health are in the hundreds in Ontario: the Ministry of the Environment has admitted in Tribunal hearings that it relies on the computer noise modelling supplied by the power developers. In other words, if a power project modelling shows it isn’t supposed to make noise at a certain level, then it surely can’t, and the Ministry does not even bother to send staff out to check.

Ontario families have become homeless. In December of the year the RNAO engineered the failure of the resolution of members to support research, 20 families went to Council in the City of Kincardine, requesting funds for emergency housing, as they had had to leave their homes due to the noise.

Today, more than 80 communities have passed bylaws or resolutions to say they are Not Willing Hosts to wind power because of the problems. Today, a coalition of communities is working together to create a noise nuisance bylaw to protect their residents at night from the turbine noise. Today, Ontario communities are taking advantage of every loophole, or minor power they have left after the Draconian Green Energy Act removed all democracy for Ontario’s rural and small-town communities.

And today, Ontario citizens are having to deal with higher electricity bills than ever seen before in this province, traceable to the government’s unproven zeal for renewable sources of power (a cost-benefit analysis as recommended by the Auditor-General was never done). The results are widely feared to be energy poverty as families must choose whether to buy food or pay their electricity bill, as well as job losses and business failure.

All this because a group of business people persuaded Ontario to adopt wind power as a source of power generation to replace coal—wind power cannot replace anything because of its inefficiency and unreliability. Coal has been replaced in Ontario by natural gas. The power developers (many with ties to the Ontario Liberal Party) have made millions–billions–in provincial subsidy dollars for very little benefit to the people of Ontario. One of the strategies suggested to the wind power development lobby by a consultant, the Sussex Strategy Group, was to persuade health-related groups to support wind power as a way to engender public support for the development of power from wind; it appears the RNAO fell in line with the developers’ corporate strategy.

The Registered Nurses Association of Ontario had a chance two years ago to at least listen to a burgeoning community health problem and at least listen to its members whose concern was well founded and genuine.

But it did not.

That was a sad day for nursing in Ontario, and leaves many questions as to the quality of leadership and the ties between politicians and nursing leadership.

In the meantime, the people of rural and small-town Ontario, and the health care professionals who live there and work within these communities, got no support from the organization that claims to “speak out for health.”

Aussies Prepare to Scrap Their Renewable Energy Targets!!

Time to let the RET Review Panel Know What You Think

writing_a_letter

As STT’s loyal followers know, Australia is all set to decouple itself from the international economic suicide pact entered when gullible and unwitting governments all over the world signed up to ludicrously expensive and utterly pointless renewables policies.

The Coalition are itching to scrap the Renewable Energy Target – and the RET Review Panel appear more than ready to give them the ammunition to do so.

The Panel formerly called for submissions on 5 April 2014 (see this document) – setting out the terms of reference and the criteria that submissions should meet (see our post here).

The closing date for submissions is 16 May 2014 and STT hears that it’s about to be inundated by submissions from Australia’s top energy market economists and Australia’s leading power retailers all slamming the lunacy of the mandatory RET. However, the opportunity to make submissions is open to one and all – so don’t just leave it to the boffins – why not make a submission yourself?

STT contains a welter of facts, evidence and information detailing the greatest economic and environmental fraud of all time – piecing that together in a cogent argument as to why the RET simply must go is something that anyone with a computer and time on their hands can do. Remember though, submissions have to address the terms of reference set out in the document linked above – and that, with less than 10 days to go, you’ll need to get cracking.

Set out below is one very solid example put together by STT Champion, Dr Alan Watts. STT recommends it as a basis and template for anyone making their own submissions to the Panel. Although, we have a few comments of our own aimed at strengthening Alan’s arguments – matters of emphasis, really – and which should assist in preparing your own submissions (see below).

Review of the Renewable Energy Target
Expert Panel
RETReview@pmc.gov.au

Re: ‘Renewable Energy Target Review Expert Panel Call for Submissions, Commonwealth of Australia 2014’.

SUBMISSION

This submission deals primarily with the RET as it relates to wind power energy production, LRECs and the effects of these on electricity pricing and production efficiency.

The Call for Submissions summarises the objects of the REE Act as being:

a) to encourage the additional generation of electricity from renewable sources;

b) to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases in the electricity sector; and

c) to ensure that renewable energy sources are ecologically sustainable.

The RET has succeeded in its first object to promote the roll out of renewable energy, particularly translated to the construction of an increasing number of industrial wind turbine (IWT) installations.

The RET has totally failed in its other two objects, i.e. it has failed to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases in the electricity sector and the renewable energy sources have not been shown to be ecologically sustainable.

The RET has as a consequence of renewable energy promotion created a great deal of damaging social and economic effects and has caused in the case of IWTs enormous damage to the Australian nation and way of life by the reckless promotion of:-

1. A system of unpredictable, inefficient and intermittent electricity generation which by every measure is not fit for purpose and therefore is totally without merit;

2. An industry which has a degree of government protection like no other;

3. A system when idle, due to lack of or excessive wind, requireselectricity for maintenance and for restart;

4. A system incapable of base load power generation;

5. A system which does not in any meaningful way lessen greenhouse gas emissions;

6. A system which has not and cannot reduce our foreseeable coal dependency;

7. A system which requires constant coal or gas fired back up running at almost full capacity (stated 90%) due to the very variable and unreliable nature of wind. This represents the most wasteful, inefficient and expensive use of coal and gas;

8. Electrical generation costing at least three times that of coal;

9. A system which has contributed to a lowering of Australia’s standard of living and comfort, especially for those Australians of lower socioeconomic means, due to increased electricity bills;

10. A system which has destroyed Australia’s once comparative manufacturing advantage due to cheap electricity and with it our ability to compete internationally;

11. A system of visual blight due to industrialisation of the rural landscape;

12. A system that causes untold harm and destruction of wild life and unique remnant bushland (important because much of the original vegetation has disappeared from the Tablelands areas and locations favourable to the wind industry);

13. An industrial development resulting in significant reduction in rural land valuation and agricultural land usage especially cropping, fertilizer application, weed control, fencing and farm based disease containment;

14. A system with inherent industrial problems of hazardous fire (and the inherent difficulties of fighting both turbine fire and bushfires), blade throw, flicker and glint as well as dangers to all forms of flight;

15. A development which has serious legal consequences for land owners because of access, disease spread, sale and subdivision rights. And also by “gag” clauses incorporated into IWT contracts effectively removing any host’s freedom of speech;

16. An industrial structure which requires one tonne of a rare earth, Neodymium, to increase the magnetic strength and which is sourced primarily from China (Inner Mongolia which has 95% of the world’s resource). Its extraction process involves boiling sulphuric acid which is highly toxic to both the environment and the operators;

17. An industrial complex with commonly disputed ownership at the time of decommissioning which is typically 120,000 hours or 15-25 years, although international research now estimates the functional life of an industrial wind turbine may be closer to 12-15 years;

18. IWT decommissioning and disassembly that does not remove the huge concrete foundations and which will remain forever present;

19. An electrical system which legally requires the farmer host to decommission and remove the wind towers at the end of their functional life if a legal entity cannot be located with provable ownership. There are international examples of derelict “wind farms” with disputed ownership being left to rot, in excess of 14,500 in California alone;

20. A system where payment of a decommissioning bond by the proponents has been strenuously fought by them, again indicating the fragile economic nature and in some cases the insolvency of this transient industry;

21. A system of electrical generation with such fragile economics that frequent change of ownership is common. This adds to the legal confusion as to who has most direct responsibly for decommissioning and removal of these structures;

22. A system which has produced social disharmony, family destruction and economic hardship in rural communities rivalling only that of coal mining and coal seam gas extraction, and war;

23. A system which has polarised debate to such an extent and level that truth and fairness are now completely compromised;

24. A system based on myth, greed, ignorance, subsidy and institutional deceit that has generated such wealth that there now exists no honourable or honest return from these entrenched self-interested opinions;

25. An industry so inefficient that it is entirely dependent on taxpayer subsidy to exist and without it, it would cease to exist;

26. A system which has captured all irrational thought, concentrated greed, distorted science, befriended the gullible and has ransomed genuine research with the assistance of the politically naïve;

27. A system which has deflected energies and funding away from what can only be described as the most sensible renewable source of energy on earth, namely geothermal. Geothermal is infinite, clean, truly green and possible, as in Iceland. The largest natural nuclear power source on earth is beneath the Earth’s crust as molten magma, an unimaginable source of heat. Geothermal energy is the only renewable energy on earth capable of providing base load power and as such cannot in any way be compared to any other renewable energy source.

28. A system of production which is totally unique to the Australian political landscape and which enjoys political and legislative protection like no other.

Initially conceived by the Coalition Government, the Australian Green-Labor alliance allowed this industry in Australia to flourish and in so doing created a scam that was:

a. Totally and completely devoid of any merit, green, environmentally or climatically;

b. Subsidised to ensure survival;

c. Ineffectual and inefficient;

d. Providing an end product that energy suppliers were required to compulsory purchase, with legislated penalties for noncompliance;

e. Ensuring its future with increasing and possibly endless targets;

f. Artificially supported with industry forward payments and prepayments;

g. Supported with undeclared tax concessions;

h. Overseeing contracts that currently have no Australian companies involved in turbine manufacture of any consequence;

i. Currently operating beyond their legal guidelines;

j. Currently operating beyond conditions of consent with no financial penalty for illegal operation;

k. Placing the Australian Government in a position of implicit state sponsored fraud;

l. Causing adverse health effects (AHE) to Australian families which are disgracefully ignored;

m. Devoid of significant Australian content, ensuring expatriation of Australian funds off shore via foreign companies.

It is now the responsibility of the current Coalition Federal Government to reverse this despicable fraud, remove the RET and withdraw the Recs.

Further, I have been requesting, along with other concerned Australians:

1. A moratorium on further installation of these structures until their safety has been established by;

2. Independently conducted research which justly requires that the industrial wind proponents fund since they alone profit from the establishment of Industrial Wind Turbines; and

3. That all 7 recommendations proposed by the June 2011 Federal Senate Community Affairs References Committee on the Social and Economic Impact of Rural Wind farms, which have not been introduced by any Federal, State or Local Government anywhere in Australia, be implemented immediately.

The previous Labor Federal Government’s 20/20 renewable energy target (RET) and generous taxpayer subsidies are driving an enormous amount of foreign company investment in industrial wind turbines of very dubious effectiveness and efficiency.

While the environmental and social impacts of non-renewable energy production (eg. coal and gas mining, and the production of energy from these sources) are not dismissed lightly, it is counter-intuitive to attempt to replace them with renewable sources of energy which research has shown SAVE VERY LITTLE IF ANY CO2 (see paper by Le Pair et al – attached file)We leave aside the question of whether increasing CO2 poses any sort of threat and whether it is economically viable or necessary to expend large sums of money nationally and internationally for nil or little result.

Your “Call for Submissions” sets out very well the current position with respect to the RET and some of the problems related to it. Worth emphasising however is the fact that the RET scheme including the feed-in tariffs for roof-top solar already adds 7 per cent to the cost of electricity to households, a cost that will more than double on present policies. By 2020 the scheme, if unchanged, will add over 40 per cent to the wholesale cost of electricity and largely negate the benefits from the demise of the carbon tax (should that occur).

The impact on households will increase. Energy poverty is defined as requiring to pay more than 10% of household income on energy and a recent finding states that already 20 per cent of Australian households are now energy poor (Chester, 2013 – see attached file). As the cost of energy inevitably rises – caused in no small way by the contribution of unaffordable renewable energy subsidies (both direct and indirect) – this figure of 20% must increase in tandem.

Concomitantly is the situation where major energy intensive industries are departing Australia in large part because our electricity prices have risen to be among the highest in the world; this from the enviable position of being one of the lowest less than a decade ago.

Whatever else the Review of the RET does it must address the problems of electricity affordability both for Australian households, and for the manufacturing and industrial sectors which implacably hold the key to national prosperity. With prosperity comes the prospect of being better able to address National social and environmental problems.

A fresh approach is undoubtedly required. Firstly there must be a recognition that, to paraphrase the title of the by Le Pair et al, “Wind turbines are as yet unsuitable as electricity providers”. The paper sets out many of the problems attached to the production of energy by IWT and reinforces the insanity of pouring money into an industry which is not and, at the moment, cannot produce energy in an economic, reliable, efficient, non- health adverse, environmentally and socially acceptable manner. Where is the sense?

Good governance demands the overdue withdrawal of RECs from this industry. If the wind industry is correct when it says it is a mature industry and that it is viable, then let it pay its own way and let it stand alone without the buttress of the RET.

If government (i.e. tax payers’) money is to be spent it would be better directed towards:

a. Ensuring that research and development of “true” renewables is the focus and that forthcoming and future sources of energy are tested and matured before being foisted on a hapless public;

b. Ensuring that mining and electricity production from non-renewable sources (which is often forgotten will still be responsible for 80% of our electricity production) are conducted with improving levels of environmental impacts, health consequences, and minimisation of community disruption. Air and water pollution problems in particular require dedicated monitoring and reduction.

The deployment of industrial wind turbines is often met with support because they are considered “clean and green” and will “save the planet” through the claimed reduction of CO2 emissions. But what if they don’t? One is reminded of the fairy story of the Emperor with no clothes! Expensive clothes at that.

Le Pair’s conclusion therefore bears repeating:

“Quantifying the decrease in efficiency of the electric power system and the extra fuel consumption induced by wind developments is by no means a simple matter. To our knowledge there are presently not sufficient data in the public domain to substantiate a definite answer to the question how much fuel and CO2 emission is saved. It depends on the actors, the equipment, the kind of fuel, the amount of wind penetration, the behaviour of the regional wind, the amount of storage, the interconnection of regional grids etc.

“Decisions to install large-scale wind-powered electricity generation are based more on the expectation to save significant amounts of fossil fuel and CO2 emission than on any evidence that this is indeed the case. 

“Wind technology is not suited for large-scale application without a good buffer and storage system. We propose to stop spending public money on large-scale use of wind. This money should be spent on R&D of future power systems. We expect that wind will not play an important role in these future systems.”

Yours faithfully,

Dr. Alan C. Watts OAM

Here are links to the papers referred to in Alan’s submission:

Le Pair et al -Wind turbines as yet unsuitable as electricity providers

Chester – Impacts_Consequences_Low_Income_Households_Rising_Energy-Bills_Oct2013

Alan’s submission is characteristically passionate, but still conveys the scale and scope of the economic and environmental fraud that is wind power.

In our view, submissions should seek to emphasise the following matters:

The panel must refute any claims by the wind industry that it has (or is capable of) reducing CO2 emissions in the electricity sector in the absence of actual data which has been independently peer reviewed. Any such data must include CO2 emissions from all power generation sources in order to capture the increased emissions caused by base-load coal and gas thermal plants holding increased “spinning reserve” – and the increased use of highly inefficient Open Cycle Gas Turbines – which are both needed in order to compensate for the intermittency of wind power.

The panel must refute claims by the wind industry that wind power has reduced power prices for consumers, as claimed by the Clean Energy Council. The Panel must call for the production of Power Purchase Agreements between wind power generators and retailers in order that the prices fixed under those agreements are known to the Panel and its consultants, ACIL Allen. The wind industry and its advocates refuse to make these agreements public and refer only to wholesale prices, which do not determine the price retailers pay for wind power; whereas, the terms of Power Purchase Agreements do. The impact of the prices set by PPAs with wind power generators is a critical part of any analysis of the impact of the RET on retail power prices.

The panel must consider the impact that the intermittent delivery of wind power and its inherent unreliability has on retail power prices. The cost of maintaining spinning reserve – and building capacity in fast start-up generation sources, principally OCGTs – is ignored by the wind industry. So too is the impact on retail power prices from using high cost OCGTs as backup for a substantial proportion of installed wind power capacity. The panel must, therefore, consider the cost of delivering power using fast start-up generation sources, including OCGTs, which are critical to maintaining grid integrity and power supply when wind power output falls to insignificant levels every day – and on hundreds of occasions each year. There have been numerous occasions when wind power output has collapsed across the entire Eastern Grid and, as a result, dispatch prices have soared from the normal average of $30-40 per MWh to reach the regulated cap of $12,500 per MWh (and many occasions when the dispatch price has reached 8-10 times the average – ie $280-300 per MWh, which is the price range needed for OCGT operators to break even and at which they commence supplying power to the grid). These costs are directly attributable to wind power generation – costs ultimately borne by power consumers – and which must, therefore, be included in any consideration of the cost impacts of the RET on retail power prices.

More generally, STT finds it hard to fault anything appearing in Alan’s well structured and detailed argument. However, we disagree with his point 27 when he says that geothermal is the only base-load renewable alternative. Geothermal has tremendous prospects and has, under the current RET policy, clearly been starved of the investment needed to develop it (see our post here). However, with respect, Alan overlooks hydro power.

STT is a huge fan of hydro power – as we have made plain on a number of occasions (see our posts here and here).

Hydro is not only the original renewable, it also satisfies the principal objective of the mandatory RET – as it does not produce CO2 emissions when generating power – and, because it is reliable and always availableon-demand, it does not require backup from fossil fuel generation sources. Accordingly, hydro does in fact reduce CO2 emissions in the electricity sector by actually displacing fossil fuel generation sources and/or properly supplementing those sources – which is as simple as turning on the sluice gate.

Hydro can be used to deliver “base-load” power, but in the Australian energy market is largely used these days as “intermediate power” – balancing the grid during periods of peak demand. The critical point is that hydro is available on demand – whereas wind power will never be.

The Snowy Hydro scheme is – and remains – the greatest and most beneficial renewable energy system in Australia.

Moreover, without it, long-term water management in the Murrumbidgee and Murray River systems (the life-blood for NSW, Victoria and SA) would be impossible: Adelaide would have died of thirst during periods of drought at least a dozen times without the Snowy scheme.

There is huge potential for further investment in hydro power in Australia – all up and down the Great Divide – bringing with it the ability to harvest huge volumes of water in times of flood – and to beneficially manage that water during periods of drought. However, the perverse nature of the mandatory RET provides every advantage to unreliable and costly wind power at the expense of hydro power: the former takes a matter of months to construct and begin earning revenue; whereas the latter takes years and sometimes decades to complete and for investors to start earning a return. Investors looking for a quick return on their cash have simply plumped for the soft option and piled in to wind power, with disastrous results on every level.

The Snowy Hydro scheme was Nation building stuff and took a generation. It should be repeated and policies put in place to ensure that it is, which means the current RET legislation must be amended or repealed.

But, all that is to quibble, Alan’s submission is a great starting point – so use it to best advantage – get cracking and let the RET Review Panel know precisely what you think of the greatest fraud of all time.

subsidies

If you still support the Liberals, I must assume you’re brain-dead, or corrupt!

With the Ontario election officially kicking off Wednesday, remember one thing as we head to the polls on June 12.

Premier Kathleen Wynne and the Liberals are going to talk about everything other than the only thing that counts — their record.

The Liberals don’t want to talk about their political corruption in the gas plants scandal — how they wasted up to $1.1 billion of public money to buy five Liberal seats in the last election and then tried to hide the enormity of what they’d done.

We’ll leave it to the police to decide if criminal charges are warranted by what the Liberals did by allegedly destroying government documents.

What we’re saying is that regardless of whether their actions were criminal, the Liberals used public money not to benefit the people of Ontario, but for the political benefit of the electoral fortunes of the Liberal Party of Ontario. That’s the definition of political corruption.

The Liberals don’t want to talk about the fact their 11-year regime started with a lie — former premier Dalton McGuinty’s signed election promise in 2003 not to raise taxes, followed by the largest single tax grab in Ontario history after the election.

Given that, how can any Liberal promise in this election be taken seriously?

We’ve seen that the Liberals will say anything to get elected, then reverse themselves after winning power.

The litany of billion-dollar Liberal boondoggles — the gas plants scandal, the eHealth scandal, the green energy scandal, the Ornge scandal (the latter giving the Liberals the dubious distinction of being under not one, but two police investigations as we head to the polls) all indicate the same thing.

After 11 years in power the Liberals can’t be trusted to operate government honestly or efficiently.

Their tax-and-spend policies have turned Ontario, once the engine of the Canadian economy, into a financial basket case.

Ontario, riddled with record debt and rising deficits (two years in a row under Wynne) is now a “have not” province.

Manufacturing jobs are fleeing because of high energy costs.

Similarly, seniors on fixed incomes are being forced into fuel poverty, which makes Wynne’s promise to create an Ontario pension plan all the more absurd.

Simply put, it’s time to throw these bums out.

 

Faux-Green Energy is Killing our Wildlife, and Destroying Significant Birding Areas.

Red kites agonizing under wind turbines, State of Navarre, Spain.
- courtesy of GURELUR

HOW MUCH WILDLIFE CAN USA AFFORD TO KILL?

America’s wind farms are actually slaughtering millions of birds and bats annually

By Mark Duchamp

Screen-shot-2014-03-18-at-3.43.47-PMThe Obama administration is issuing 30-year permits for “taking” (killing) bald and golden eagles. The great birds will be legally slaughtered “unintentionally” by lethal wind turbines installed in their breeding territories, and in “dispersion areas” where their young congregate (e.g. Altamont Pass).

By chance (if you believe in coincidences), a timely government study claims wind farms will kill “only” 1.4 million birds yearly by 2030. This new report is just one of many, financed with taxpayers’ money, aimed at convincing the public that additional mortality caused by wind plants is sustainable. – It is not.

Dr. Shawn Smallwood’s 2004 study, spanning four years, estimated that California’s Altamont Pass wind “farm” killed an average of 116 Golden Eagles annually. This adds up to 2,900 dead “goldies” since it was built 25 years ago. Altamont is the biggest sinkhole for the species, but not the only one, and industry-financed research claiming that California’s GE population is stable is but a white-wash.

Beheaded Golden Eagle from Altamont Pass-  Courtesy of Darryl Miller, California

Eagles are not the only victims. Smallwood also estimated that Altamont killed an average of 300 red-tailed hawks, 333 American kestrels and 380 burrowing owls annually – plus even more non-raptors, including 2,526 rock doves and 2,557 western meadowlarks.

In 2012, breaking the European omerta on wind farm mortality, the Spanish Ornithological Society (SEO/Birdlife) reviewed actual carcass counts from 136 monitoring studies. They concluded that Spain’s 18,000 wind turbines are killing 6-18 million birds and bats yearly.

Extrapolating that and similar (little publicized) German and Swedish studies, 39,000 U.S. wind turbines would not be killing “only” 440,000 birds (USFWS, 2009) or “just” 573,000 birds and 888,000 bats (Smallwood, 2013), but 13-39 million birds and bats every year!

However, this carnage is being covered up by self-serving and/or politically motivated government agencies, wind industry lobbyists, environmental groups and ornithologists, under a pile of misleading studies paid for with more taxpayer money.

Wildlife expert Jim Wiegand has documented how areas searched under wind turbines are still confined to 200-foot radiuses, even though modern monster turbines catapult 90% of bird and bat carcasses much further. Windfarm owners, operating under voluntary(!) USFWS guidelines, commission studies that search much-too-small areas, look only once every 30-90 days, ensuring that scavengers remove most carcasses, and ignore wounded birds that happen to be found within search perimeters. (Details at MasterResource.org)

These research protocols are designed to guarantee extremely low mortality statistics, hiding the true death tolls – and the USFWS seems inclined to let the deception continue. In addition, bird mortality data are now considered to be the property of windfarm owners, which means the public no longer has a right to know.

Nevertheless, news has leaked that eagles are being hacked to death all across America. This is hardly surprising, as raptors are attracted to wind turbines. They perch on them to rest or scan for prey. They come because turbines are often built in habitats that have abundant food (live or carrion) and good winds for gliding.

Griffon Vultures – courtesy of the association of ecologists GURELUR, Navarre, Spain

Save the Eagles International (STEI) has posted photographs of raptors perched on nacelles or nonmoving blades, and ospreys building a nest on a decommissioned turbine. Moving blades don’t deter them either: videos show a turkey vulture perched on the hub of a spinning turbine, and a griffon vulture being struck. Birds perceive areas traveled by spinning blades as open space, unaware that blade tips are moving at up to 180 mph. Many are focused on prey. These factors make wind turbines “ecological death traps,” wherever they are located.

By 2030, the United States plans to produce 20% of its electricity from wind. That’s nearly six times as much as today, from three or four times as many turbines, striking more flying creatures due to their bigger size (even the mendacious study predicting 1.4 million bird kills recognizes this). Using the higher but still underestimated level of mortality published by Smallwood in 2013, by 2030 our wind turbines would be killing over 3 million birds and 5 million bats annually.

But this is shy of reality by a factor of ten, because 90% of casualties land outside the search perimeter and are not counted. We are thus really talking about an unsustainable death toll of 30 million birds and 50 million bats a year – and more still if we factor in other hide-the-mortality tricks documented by STEI.

This carnage includes protected species that cars and cats rarely kill: eagles, hawks, falcons, owls, condors, whooping cranes, geese, bats and many others. The raptor slaughter will cause rodent populations to soar. Butchery of bats, already being decimated by White Nose Syndrome, will hammer agriculture.

The U.S. Geological Survey says the value of pest-control services to US agriculture provided by bats ranges from $3.7 billion to as much as $53 billion yearly. These chiropters also control forest pests and serve as pollinators. A Swedish study documents their attraction from as far as nine miles away to insects that swarm around wind turbines. Hence the slaughter.

Wind lobbyists claim they need “regulatory certainty.” However, eagle “take” permits will also ensure extinction certainty – and ecological, agricultural, economic and social disasters that America cannot afford.
____________

Mark Duchamp is president of Save the Eagles International, a nonprofit conservation organization:www.SaveTheEaglesInternational.org and Chairman of WCFN, the World Council for Nature – www.wcfn.org

(Image at top of page: Red kites agonizing under wind turbines, State of Navarre, Spain. – courtesy of the association of ecologists GURELUR, Navarre, Spain)

Julian Falconer to fight for the Rights of Rural Ontarians….

Prominent lawyer slams Ontario wind power

Credit:  By Lee Michaels on May 6, 2014 | blackburnnews.com ~~

Over 600 people tried to cram into the Camlachie Community Centre last night with the overflow standing outside.

We’re Against Industrial Turbines hosted a town-hall meeting to ramp up opposition to Suncor’s 46-turbine Cedar Point Wind Power Project.

WAIT is now trying to raise $300,000 to hire prominent Canadian lawyer Julian Falconer to help challenge the Ontario government’s policy on industrial turbines under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Falconer was a guest speaker at last night’s meeting.

He tells Blackburn News that any suggestion there’s no impact on peoples’ health is “Alice in Wonderland fantasy.”

And he’s skeptical the June 12 Ontario election will change anything.

Falconer says the constitutional challenge that’s been mounted questions the appropriateness of government subjecting its citizens to projects without knowing the health effects currently under study by Health Canada.

He says the cash grab by wind companies has been extreme and the financial genie that’s been let out of the bottle is very difficult to control.

Rob from the Poor, to Give to the Rich….It’s the “Liberal” way!!

Wind Power in Britain: it’s Robin Hood in Reverse

robin hood 3

A while back, there was a plucky young English lad, called Robin Hood, who was pretty handy with both long-bow and sword; and so comfortable with expressing his “feminine side” that he wasn’t afraid to be seen in figure hugging green tights.

Hood hung out with his band of Merry Men in Sherwood Forest, dodging his arch-enemy, the Sheriff of Nottingham. The Sheriff – a fiscal filcher, if ever there was one – spent his days collecting unlimited taxes from the people of Nottingham and hunting Robin Hood and his troupe of generally happy chappies.

But it was Robin Hood’s attitude to wealth distribution that made him stand out from his outlaw peers.

Instead of indiscriminate thieving, Hood became renowned for robbing from the rich and giving to the poor. These days, some might simply call it “good progressive politics”.

In any event, Hood’s policy of “progressive redistribution” (albeit based on stand and deliver tactics) did no apparent harm to Hood’s reputation over the centuries. Indeed, it made him the legend he became – which provides a pretty fair example of the human paradox: people are ready to ignore highway robbery, provided it’s the toffs that are being rolled.

In recent times, however, Robin Hood’s much adored strategy of “targeted wealth redistribution” has been tipped on its head with insane renewables policies – that have set up the largest transfer of wealth from the poorest to the richest in modern history.

Under Britain’s ludicrous wind power policy, ordinary British power punters – who can least afford it – are being fleeced by those who can – and at a rate that would’ve made even the Sheriff of Nottingham blush.

Here’s the Sunday Post on how Britain’s wind power policy is robbing from the poor and giving to the rich.

Special report: The true cost of our wind farms
Sunday Post
Ben Robinson
4 May 2014

The true cost of the massive expansion of wind farms in England can today be revealed by a special Sunday Post investigation.

Staggering new figures show turbine operators have been handed taxpayer-funded subsidies of £7 billion in just over a decade. That means an average of £1,211 has been paid from the public purse every MINUTE since 2002.

The eye-watering costs are recouped by being added to fuel bills, leaving each household £178 worse off.

Now there is concern at the size of the subsidies being siphoned off for renewables at a time when 2.4 million people in England are living in fuel poverty.

The revelations come in the wake of Prime Minister David Cameron’s announcement that the Conservatives will end their support for onshore wind farms if they win the next election.

Tory MP Philip Davies who represents Shipley in West Yorkshire, said: “Not only are they a blight on the landscape, they are the most expensive, inefficient and unreliable form of energy. Many people are struggling to pay their energy bills and the dash for wind energy unnecessarily adds a considerable amount on to everyone’s bills in order to line the pockets of rich landowners.”

“It is Robin Hood in reverse — taking money from the poorest in order to line the pockets of the richest.  It is also making our manufacturers extremely uncompetitive when they are up against other firms based abroad who enjoy much cheaper energy bills.”

European law dictates the UK must achieve 15% of its energy consumption from renewable sources by 2020, which has sparked heavily subsidised incentives for large wind farms and individual turbines to be built.

We can reveal between 2002 and December 2013 wind farm owners received £7bn under the renewables obligation scheme which subsidises large-scale green energy production.

Introduced by the Labour Government to encourage investment in renewables, the money is recouped via a supplement added to all domestic and commercial electricity bills.

According to the Renewal Energy Foundation, since 2002 the levy supporting English renewables has added about £178 to the average UK household’s cost of living, with £89 of that in electricity charges alone.

These subsidies have bankrolled 259 operational wind farms with around 850 turbines.

Our probe has found northern England is bearing the brunt of the drive for renewables by hosting half the country’s wind farms. Using Government planning statistics, the Renewable Energy Foundation looked at the number of wind farms in operation or with planning permission across England.

It found Northumberland has the largest wind farm capacity of any county, with around 155 turbines spread over 19 farms, generating up to 302 megawatts (MW).

East Yorkshire is second highest, while Lancashire is sixth, Durham seventh and Cumbria eighth.

Don Brownlow, from Berwick-Upon-Tweed, who has battled a series of large-scale wind farms in Northumberland, claimed developers see the region as an easy target.

He said: “Contrary to popular belief this is not about the region being windy. Most of Northumberland outside the national park is fairly poor for that. The reason, first and foremost among developers, is landowner compliance.  A lot of wind development in Northumberland has been old estates being broken up which means landowners have borrowed a lot of money to buy them and they see the opportunity to reduce their debts. We are also seen as having compliant local planning authority.”

Across the North West, North East and Yorkshire and the Humber there are 129 wind farms containing around 500 turbines already in operation — half of the entire country’s wind energy capacity.

But planning permission has been given for another 100 farms to be built which will add another 330 turbines to the landscape.

It means residents in the north will see a massive 70% increase in the number of turbines, while a further 150 turbines are in the planning system.

Dr John Constable, director of Renewable Energy Foundation, a UK charity publishing data on the energy sector, said: “The northern counties of England are bearing a disproportionate share of the national onshore wind burden.  Not all of this focus can be explained by better wind conditions.  Northumberland in particular is relatively windless. I’m afraid the explanation is that developers have picked on the rural north because it lacks the resources to defend itself in the planning system.  Extremely high subsidies have overheated and corrupted the wind industry; site choice has been poor and little respect has been shown to the opinions of rural populations, whose local environments have too often been significantly damaged.”

A Department of Energy and Climate Change spokesperson said: “As you would expect, there are more wind farms where there is more wind.  Wind farms will only get planning permission where the impacts – including visual impact, cumulative impact and impact on heritage sites – are acceptable.  We have also changed the law to require wind farm developers to consult with local people before they put in a planning application.”

Top 10 counties with most wind farms

1. Northumberland Onshore wind capacity 311MW – Sites 19 – Approximate turbines 155

2. East Yorkshire – 302MW – sites 49 – turbines 151

3. Lincolnshire* – 281MW – sites 22 turbines – 141

4 Cambridgeshire – 273MW – sites 32 -turbines – 136

5. Northamptonshire – 185MW – sites 20 – turbines 92

6. Lancashire – 177MW – sites 23 – turbines – 88

7. Durham – 168MW – sites 24 – turbines – 84

8. Cumbria – 158MW – sites 38 – turbines – 79

9. Devon – 133MW – sites 22 – turbines – 66

10. Cornwall – 130MW – sites 86 – turbines – 65

*Historic county of Lincolnshire, comprised of Lincolnshire, North Lincolnshire and North East Lincolnshire.
Sunday Post

robin hood famous duel 4

 

Dirty Electricity from Industrial Wind Turbines….Another Health Risk!!

Wind Farm

Excerpted from

Modern Wind Turbines Generate Dangerously “Dirty” Electricity

By Catherine Kleiber

Waveforms and picture courtesy of David Colling

Wind turbines are causing serious health problems. These health problems are often associated, by the people having them, with the flicker and the noise from the wind turbines. This often leads to reports being discounted.

Residents of the area around the Ripley Wind Farm in Ontario where Enercon E82 wind turbines are installed feel that the turbines are making them ill. Residents suffer from ringing in the ears, headaches, sleeplessness, dangerously elevated blood pressure (requiring medication), heart palpitations, itching in the ears, eye watering, earaches, and pressure on the chest causing them to fight to breathe. The symptoms disappear when the residents leave the area. Four residents were forced to move out of their homes, the symptoms were so bad. Residents also complain of poor radio, TV and satellite dish reception. There is no radio reception under or near the power lines from the wind turbines because there is too much interference. Local farmers have found that they get headaches driving along near those power lines.

The waveforms below were taken at one of the residences in the area. The first waveform was taken before the wind farm started operation. (As you can see, a ground current problem existed even before the wind farm started.) The frequency profile of the neutral to earth voltage changed dramatically after the wind farm became operational (second waveform). There are far more high and very high frequencies present; indicated by the increased spikiness of the waveform.

As demonstrated by these waveforms, wind turbines are extremely electrically polluting. Studies and anecdotal reports associate electrical pollution with a similar set of symptoms to those experienced by the residents of the area (1, 2, 3). The symptoms associated with electrical pollution are caused by overexposure to high frequencies and are known as radio wave sickness (4). Technical papers discuss the fact that it requires only very small amounts of high frequency signals (either from transients or communications) on wiring to induce significant electrical currents in the human body. They support findings of human health problems caused by exposure to even small amounts of high frequencies (5, 6). The specific symptoms experienced depend on both the frequencies present and the body type and height of the person being exposed. Increased risk of cancer is associated with exposure to both “dirty” power on wires and electrical ground currents (7, 8). Animals also experience health problems related to electrical pollution exposures. Dairy cow’s milk production and health suffers as exposure to high frequency transients increases (9, 10).

Suncor and Acciona have tried to some degree to correct the problem at the Ripley Wind Farm. They buried the collector line from the turbine near some of the most badly affected homes and gave the homes a separate distribution line. They also put an insulator between the neutral line and the grounding grid for the wind farm. As you can see, from the waveform below, it helped somewhat. It reduced the high frequencies being induced on the distribution system by the proximity of the collectors and the high frequencies put directly on the neutral by the tie to the wind farm grounding grid. However, it is still not as good as before the wind farm installation and neither is their health.

This is not the only wind farm that seems to be causing serious health problems for local residents. The Enercon E82 does not seem to be unique in its design or problems. Wind turbines generate a sine wave of variable frequency in order to be able to take advantage of the full range of wind speeds. However, the grid only operates at 60Hz, so the variable frequency is converted to DC and then an inverter is used to convert the DC signal to 60 Hz AC. This is the signal that is put on the power line. Most inverters generate an extremely “dirty” signal, which is a 60Hz waveform polluted with a lot of high frequency transients. The previous waveforms are examples of this. The people in this house were so sick at home with the wind turbines running that they had to abandon their home and move elsewhere while they waited for the problem to be fixed. The changes made by the wind farm combined with a neutral isolation device installed by the homeowners has made the home livable, but their health is still affected by the operation of the wind turbines.

More information about electrical pollution and health can be found atwww.electricalpollution.com. The author can be contacted with questions about electrical pollution at webmaster@electricalpollution.com.

References:

  1. Havas M, Olstad A. 2008. Power quality affects teacher wellbeing and student behavior in three Minnesota Schools, Science of the Total Environment, July.
  2. Havas M. 2006. Electromagnetic hypersensitivity: biological effects of dirty electricity with emphasis on diabetes and multiple sclerosis. Electromagnetic Biology Medicine 25(4):259-68.
  3. Havas M. 2008. Dirty Electricity Elevates Blood Sugar Among Electrically Sensitive Diabetics and May Explain Brittle Diabetes. Electromagnetic Biology and Medicine, 27:135-146.
  4. Milham S, Morgan L. 2008 A New Electromagnetic Exposure Metric: High Frequency Voltage Transients Associated With Increased Cancer Incidence in Teachers in a California School. American Journal of Industrial Medicine.
  5. Wertheimer N, Leeper E. 1979. Electrical wiring configurations and childhood cancer. Am J Epidemiol 109(3):273-284.
  6. Marha K, Musil J, and Tuha H. Electromagnetic Fields and the Life Environment. Institute of Industrial Hygience and Occupational Diseases, Prague. San Francisco Press 1971. SBN 911302-13-7
  7. Ozen, S. 2007. Low-frequency Transient Electric and Magnetic Fields Coupling to Child Body, Radiation Protection Dosimetry (2007), pp. 1-6.
  8. Vignati, M. and L. Giuliani, 1997. Radiofrequency exposure near high-voltage lines. Environ Health Perspect 105(Suppl 6):1569-1573 (1997)
  9. Hillman D. Relationship of Electric Power Quality to Milk Production of Dairy Herds, 2003 American society of Agricultural Engineers Annual International Meeting, 27- 30 July 2003, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA, Paper Number: 033116
  10. Rogers D.M. 2006. BC Hydro Deals with Farm Neutral to Earth Voltage. September.

The only known cure for Radio Wave Sickness is to stop being exposed to high frequencies.

Why are our Electricity Rates So High??? Read this!

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Paying More for Power

Type: Research Studies
Date Published: May 5, 2014
Authors:
Research Topics:
Energy

Canadians are paying more for their power, on average, than our neighbors to the south. When outlier Honolulu is excluded, rates for small commercial electricity consumers are 19 percent greater in Canada than in the US, while rates for small industrial consumers are almost 30 percent greater. When the comparisons are based only on the rates in cities located in provinces and states that are not well endowed with developed hydroelectric generation capacity, the Canada-US differences are even greater. Canadian commercial and industrial electricity consumers appear to have a competitive disadvantage versus their US counterparts. The authors call on Canadian federal and provincial policy makers to focus on measures that could help to secure lower electricity costs for future generations and reduce the disparity between Canadian and US electricity rates.

Paying More for Power - Infographic

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Revisiting an Article by Parker Gallant….This man knows about energy!!!

Ontario Liberals: 10 years of Mismanagement of the Energy Portfolio

At the advent of the five (5) by-elections in Ontario and as we close in on the 10th anniversary of the current Liberal’s tenure as the governing party in Ontario it is time to look back on their management of the “Energy” portfolio. It is particularly appropriate to examine their past as the energy issue is bound to be on voter’s minds. Additionally, the current Minister of Energy, Bob Chiarelli, has embarked on what he refers to as a “review” of the Long-Term Energy Plan (LTEP) which was never a “plan”! When the LTEP was released in the fall of 2010 by Energy Minister, Brad Duguid it was to be a “guide” to the Ontario Power Authority (OPA) so that they could produce IPSP II. The original IPSP (Integrated Power System Plan) was thrown to the curb by George Smitherman when he held this portfolio and Chiarelli’s predecessor, Chris Bentley tossed LTEP II in the trash!

So let’s examine the list of energy events brought to us by the Ontario Liberal Party after they condemned the predecessor governments of Premier’s Harris and Eves for their management of that portfolio! Please note that the costs of the Liberal policies over the past 10 years are estimates based on the best information available. Here they are:

Ontario Power Authority: The Liberals created the OPA as a temporary agency to generate an IPSP. The OPA annually consumes about $75 million of tax dollars but is responsible for pricing and contracting all electricity generation including the OPG and Hydro One on transmission builds. Nothing happens without Ministry directives. When Smitherman took over the Ministry the OPA lost their mandate to actually plan via the GEA. The OPA was instrumental in generating the first and second IPSP which comprised tens of thousands of pages and input from various parties throughout the province.  As noted, the two IPSP’s were eventually relegated to the trash bin at considerable cost to the ratepayers. Based on the annual budget of the OPA we estimate:

Total Costs over the 10 years since they were created: $750 million

Big BeckyA directive from the Minister of Energy caused Ontario Power Generation (OPG) to build what the current Minister refers to as the “largest renewable energy project in the world”. The cost of “Big Becky” (the new tunnel under Niagara Falls) cost Ontario’s ratepayers $1.6 billion for a marginal increase in hydro electric capacity. The 140 megawatts (MW) that it is rated at, had a capital cost of $11.5 million per MW. Presumably the “largest” reference in the Minister’s announcement refers to those excessive capital costs that were partially caused by being over budget by $600 million. It should be mentioned that “Big Becky” had been rejected by prior governing parties because it was deemed too expensive for the marginal power it would deliver. Normal “levilized” costs for new hydro generation should be in the $1/$1.5 million range or 10% of what Big Becky cost Ontario’s ratepayers.

Total Capital Costs for Big Becky: $1.6 billion

Pensions: When the Liberals came to power the pension plans of the publicly owned electricity sector were not in deficit. OPG and Hydro One are now in deficit by $4.8 billion caused by the excessive amounts spent by both to follow the directives of the Liberal Energy Ministers to build new infrastructure (related to renewable energy) and increasing staff levels to execute those directives instead of sticking to their traditional business roles.

Pension Deficit to be paid by ratepayers: $4.8 billion

Upper & Lower Mattagami: Yet another “directive” to the OPA directed them to negotiate a contract with the OPG for the upper and lower Mattagami project which was eventually contracted for $2.6 billion. This hydro electric project will also add marginal power to the Ontario grid and present itself principally in the spring months when the Ontario power demand is usually at it lowest, meaning we will either spill it or sell it to neighbouring states and provinces at a loss.

Estimated costs of the Upper and Lower Mattagami project: $2.6 billion

Ontario Electricity Financial Corp: The Ontario ratepayers are awaiting the release of the March 31, 2012 and March 31, 2013 Ontario Electricity Finance Corporation’s (OEFC) audited financial statements which the Minister of Finance, has not yet released. One must wonder why financial statements that were presumably delivered to the Minister a year ago have not found their way to the public. Have the Liberals somehow squandered the $2 billion or so that the ratepayers have been obliged to pay for the past two years? What are the Liberals hiding?

Total Estimate of Missing “stranded debt” monies: $2 billion

Transmission BuildsYet again several of the Liberal Energy Minister’s directives instructed Hydro One to construct transmission lines to connect wind and solar energy projects to the grid. Those directives required Hydro One to spend billions of ratepayer dollars to build the transmission lines, purchase transformers for that purpose and included “reserving” transmission facilities for the Korean Consortium, commonly known as the Samsung contract.

Estimated Costs to hook up Wind and Solar to the Grid: $2 billion

Ontario Clean Energy Benefit: As energy costs rose the governing Liberal party became concerned that the ratepayers would balk at the huge increases they were seeing so they launched the “Ontario Clean Energy Benefit” (OCEB) which gave ratepayers a 10% rebate on their electricity bills. This burden of approximately $1.5 billion annually for the years 2011 through to 2014 will be added to the growing provincial debt but will end January 1, 2015.

Estimated Cost to taxpayers of the OCEB over 4 years: $6 billion

Smart Meters: Not to be forgotten is the $2 billion or more spent to install “smart meters” on each household throughout the province. These meters have provided no benefits to ratepayers despite all of the rhetoric from the Ministry. Recently Hydro Ottawa announced that they will be replacing 215,000 of their smart meters, installed only a few years ago, because they are deficient. How many more will need replacement by other local distribution companies (LDC) throughout the province is an unknown. It would appear that the Minister’s (Dwight Duncan) directive at that time didn’t require any standards—the Liberals just thought it was a good idea!

Estimated cost of the “Smart Meters”: $2 billion

Smart Grid: Another ongoing expense related to “smart meters” is the “smart grid” which the Independent Electricity System Operator (IESO) is working on. Preliminary estimates of the cost of the “smart grid” are in the $1.5 billion range and the “smart grid” is/was supposedly required to manage the intermittent power that is delivered by wind and solar along with management of “imbedded generation” (the small and microFIT generator hookups to the LDCs), the charging stations (for the 500,000 electric vehicles) that the Liberals foresaw being installed throughout the province and the ability to turn your air conditioner and refrigerator up at peak demand times.

Estimated Cost of developing the “Smart Grid”: $1.5 billion

Constrained Power: Also aligned with the smart grid was the need to constrain and pay for the power that the grid didn’t need from the “first to the grid” rights of wind and solar generated during times when the Ontario demand for power is low. Commencing in September 2013 we will pay those private developers for power “they might have been able to produce” but which would have caused problems that may have led to blackouts or brownouts. The estimates of this are unknown however 80% of the power they deliver normally presents itself when our demand is low so a best guess is that this will cost ratepayers in the area of $300/$400 million annually based on only the existing wind and solar generation presently installed.

Estimated Cost of Constrained Wind and Solar over 20 years: $6 billion

Gas Plan Idling: Ontario’s ratepayers are also obliged to pay for idling gas plants (backing up wind and solar) at the rate of $15K per MW per month and with approximately 7,000 MW currently installed and another 1,200 MW contracted for that will cost ratepayers upwards of $1 billion annually.

Estimated Cost of idling Gas Plants over 20 years: $20 billion

Nuclear Steam Off: The grid problems that might be caused by wind and solar also affects the nuclear operations of Bruce Power who have been frequently called on to “steam off” power when the Ontario demand is low. The ratepayers are also obliged to pay for that steamed off power. Efforts to determine the costs to the ratepayers of that steamed off power have been fruitless as the grid operator does not post that information nor make it available for analysis. We would expect that as increasing amounts of wind and solar are added the costs will escalate and should easily approach $100 million.

Estimated Cost of “steaming off” nuclear power over 20 years: $2 billion

OPG as scapegoat: The addition of intermittent electricity generation from wind and solar has had a direct effect on OPG operating revenue and profitability as it has lowered the wholesale price of the market, defined as the hourly Ontario electricity price or HOEP. OPG is basically the only market participant exposed to the HOEP so they have been selling their unregulated power from hydro and coal at low prices (2.4 & 2.6 cents a kWh [2012]) and since 2003 have seen their revenues fall by almost $2 billion dollars weakening their value to the shareholders; the Ontario taxpayer.

Estimate of Revenue Losses to OPG over the past 10 years: $15/20 billion

Class A to Class B transfer: As the rates climbed ever higher the Liberal government also heard from large industrial users in Ontario, who were being crippled by high electricity prices which coupled with the recession, cost Ontario an estimated 300,000 manufacturing jobs Extensive lobbying on behalf of those major electricity consumers led to the creation of an incentive for those large users to avoid peak demand days (perhaps by using diesel generators) which allowed them to offload a large portion of their share of the Global Adjustment. As a result the rest of the ratepayers (households and small and medium sized businesses) now pick up upwards of $200 million per annum in costs previously the responsibility of large users.

Estimate of Class A to B Global Adjustment transfer over 20 years: $2 billion

HST: Another cash grab from ratepayers came about when the McGuinty Liberals endorsed the concept of the HST which automatically increased ratepayers electricity bills by 8% which pretty well wiped out that taxpayer supported Ontario Clean Energy Benefit. The cost to the ratepayers is approximately $1.2 billion annually and will grow as electricity and delivery rates increase.

Estimate of Cost to Ratepayers of HST on Electricity Bills over 20 years: $24 billion

Green Energy Act: No list would be complete without referencing the Green Energy and Economy Act (GEA) which the Liberals (Energy Minister, George Smitherman) promised would only raise electricity rates by 1% per annum. The GEA has resulted in Ontario’s ratepayers seeing their electricity and delivery costs rise by over 100% and they have only absorbed about 30% of what the LTEP anticipates in the form of renewable energy. Ontario now has one of the most expensive prices for electricity in all of North America exceeded only by a very small number of US states and has become an unattractive place for investments that might have created jobs. The advent of the march throughout Ontario of industrial wind turbines and solar panels has also had a direct effect on property values of homes located in proximity (within 5 kilometers) to their installation (this will eventually negatively affect the municipal tax base), killed birds and bats, destroyed forest land (via road construction for their installation) and caused various health problems for many families living anywhere near those 500 foot monsters. Most of the costs of the GEA are captured above but a couple of aspects are not and those relate to; “conservation” spending and the monies lost on exporting our “surplus power” below it’s cost. The OPA annually spend over $300 million on conservation efforts and it now appears surplus exports are costing (based on the recent estimates) ratepayers about $500 million per year.

Estimated Costs of Exports & Conservation Spending over 20 years: $16 billion

The biggest issue related to the latter is that the GEA took away the democratic rights of people to object to the construction and siting of these generators. Municipalities were stripped of their ability to stop any of these developments due to the structure of the GEA claiming NIMBYism would not be allowed in the quest to “green” Ontario. Recent events by the current Energy Minister, Bob Chiarelli has paid lip service to that issue by conducting a “study” of siting procedures. The Minister doesn’t claim that he will give those rights back! Conveniently the report is not due out until after the upcoming by-elections so voters in those 5 ridings will be kept in the dark and clueless on whether the Liberals will amend the GEA. The wisest move by voters will be to count on the GEA being left intact.

Gas Plant Moves:If the reader has got this far they will notice that there is one significant item missing from the list above and that of course is the cost of moving those two gas plants from Mississauga and Oakville. The reason to not list it is that the Auditor General’s report on the Oakville move will not be released until late August. The media has consistently stated that the overall costs associated with the moves was $585 million but the likelihood is that the costs will in fact be higher.

Estimated Costs of Gas Plant Moves: $1 billion

Many other ratepayer costs are not listed but most of those above are measured in the hundreds of millions or billions of dollars. There are many other Liberal energy enacted policies measured by tens of millions that would include, the Northern Ontario Energy Credit, the Ontario Energy and Property Tax Credit, electric vehicle grants, the Community Power Fund, the Northern Industrial Electricity Rate Program, etc. just to name a few.

All ratepayers in the province look forward to the day when the Minister of Energy will simply act as the overseer on these publicly owned electricity institutions instead of know-it-alls, led by the nose by unelected environmentalists (OSEA, Environmental Defence, Pembina, David Suzuki Foundation, etc. etc.) bent on saving the world from global warming. We have had a succession of those Liberal lemmings occupying the Ministry chair for the past 10 years and all it has done is to make foreign companies, and perhaps some Liberal insiders like Mike Crawley, rich while draining the pockets of the ratepayer/taxpayer.

While executing those policies, they have ignored real infrastructure problems in the energy portfolio. A recent example of the foregoing was the loss of electricity experienced by hundreds of thousands of people living in the GTA as a result of the floods. Those floods caused the Hydro One Manby transformer station to flood and the grid in the southwestern GTA to collapse causing the outage. The weakness of the Manby station was known to the Liberal Ministers (and was the basic reason to plan for those two gas plants in Mississauga and Oakville) and should have been replaced several years ago but the Ministers ignored the recommendations to replace it and instead directed Hydro One to hook up wind and solar renewables.

Too bad we ratepayers and taxpayers can’t just hit the delete button to eliminate the past 10 years, much like the Minister’s senior staffers did to hide the bad news about the gas plants!

Parker Gallant,
July 16, 2013