More Scandals Involving the Liberals….Does it Never End?

 

ONTARIO ELECTION: WORKING FAMILIES EXPOSED,

AND DEB MATTHEWS ON THE HOT SEAT AGAIN

1)  The Working Families Coalition has been exposed as being nothing more than a gang of old white dudes who spend millions and millions of union member paid dollars to try to keep their arch nemesis — the PC party —  out of Queen’s Park.

Click on the link and sign the petition to stop this kind of third party interference and intimidation in our democratic voting process. 

 

2) Deb Matthews, the Liberal Party’s version of a bumbling inept fool is in hot water once again.  This time over colorectal screening practices in Ontario.  Click here to read article in the Toronto Star.

 

We can dream can’t we?…..

Matthews

Aussies Set to Scrap Renewable Energy Targets!

Australia’s Miners say: “Tony, it’s Time for

the Great Big Toxic REC Tax to GO”

keith-de-lacy

As the RET Review Panel get ready to help axe the mandatory Renewable Energy Target, Australia’s miners have united to brand the RET a guaranteed “job killer” and just “plain crazy”. The miners quite rightly identify the Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs) issued under that policy as an enormous and unnecessary cost burden to households and business.

In truth, RECs are simply a Federal Tax on all Australian electricity consumers, because the entire value of the REC is added directly to power bills and (under the large-scale scheme) is all directed to wind power generators, as a government mandated subsidy.

Currently, around 12% of Australia’s electricity comes from renewable generation sources (with almost half of that coming from hydro power, the great bulk of which pre-dates the RET legislation). Annual demand is around 190,000 GWh, so 12% of that (the “contribution” from renewables) represents 22,800 GWh.

The wind industry and its parasites argue that the REC Tax/Subsidy will lead to “investment” in renewable energy (ie wind power) capacity sufficient to satisfy the current 41,000 GWh mandated annual target. However, satisfying that target by 2020 is economically and practically impossible: a matter which Australia’s biggest generators and retailers all agree upon (see our post here).

To meet that target would require an increase in total installed wind power capacity of around 24,000 MW – from the present capacity of 3,000 MW – to more than 27,000 MW (at a cost of more than $50 billion); and a duplicated transmission network to carry it (at a cost of more than $30 billion) (see our post here).

In addition, financing that “investment” would depend upon the REC price reaching $90 to make all of these new projects commercially viable. Currently, the REC price is $26 and falling – which is way below what is required to even cover wind farm operating costs; and nowhere near enough to cover construction costs. This is the main reason that banks are simply refusing to lend to wind power companies.

With less than 23,000 GWh coming from renewable sources at present – and no likelihood of any significant wind power capacity being added between now and 2020 – Australia will simply fall short of the fixed target by a figure in the order of 18,000 GWh.

Now, at this point, power consumers might breathe a sigh of relief thinking they’ve avoided being slugged with the REC Tax – which would have otherwise been added to their power bills – if all those extra wind farms had been built and were producing the additional 18,000 GWh needed to satisfy the fixed target. Oh, but if it were that simple.

For every MW that a retailer falls short of the mandated target it gets whacked with a $65 fine – what is referred to under the Renewable Energy (Electricity) Act 2000 as the “shortfall charge” – follow the links hereand here.

The big retailers, Origin Energy and Energy Australia have already said that – rather than messing around with intermittent and unreliable wind power – they will simply cop the $65 fine and pass that entire cost on to their retail customers (see our posts here and here).

This means that – instead of just paying the average wholesale price of $35-40 MWh – retailers will end up paying close to $100-105 per MWh – the wholesale price plus the fine. And that will all be passed on to power consumers.

Remember, that the original objective of the mandatory RET was to encourage the generation of electricity by renewable energy sources and, thereby, to reduce CO2 emissions in the electricity sector.

In the end result, however, power consumers will simply end up paying the cost of a whopping $65 per MWh fine – that will be recovered by retailers on over 42% of the fixed annual mandatory RET of 41,000 GWh.

By 2020, the $65 per MWh fine will be levied on a shortfall of around 18,000 GWh – which means a total of around $1.17 billion (18,000,000 MW x $65) will go straight into general revenue every year until 2031 – when the RET expires.

With the mandatory RET continuing until 2031 – and the $65 fine with it – this means that – from 2020 – a total of close to $12 billion will be added to power bills and pocketed by the Commonwealth. However, there will be: NO additional renewable energy; NO “break-through” on-demand renewable energy technologies; NO reduction in CO2 emissions – just a GREAT BIG TOXIC TAX on ALL Australian electricity consumers.

It’s a point not lost on Australia’s miners. Mining investment and mining exports have kept the Australian economy at the top of the international leader-board in terms of growth in incomes and meaningful employment. Australia dodged a GFC bullet thanks to the red stuff being shovelled out of mountains in North-West Western Australia and the black stuff being shipped out of Queensland. And those States with big mining sectors (WA and QLD) continue to out perform the rest by a mile – in terms of growth in incomes and employment.

So, when miners talk, sensible governments listen (see our posts here andhere). Here’s The Australian on what the miners are saying about the mandatory RET.

Subsidies for clean energy to hit $21bn
The Australian
Annabel Hepworth
22 May 2014

SUBSIDIES for renewable energy schemes such as rooftop solar panels and wind farms will cost electricity consumers up to $21.6 billion by 2020, a new analysis has found.

A submission by the Minerals Council of Australia also warns that more gas and coal-fired power stations could be mothballed or permanently closed as the renewable energy target puts pressure on the electricity market and slashes their revenues.

If this happens, retail electricity prices “can be expected to increase”, according to an economic analysis commissioned by the council which represents mining giants including BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto and Glencore Xstrata.

The analysis also hits back at fresh claims by the clean energy sector that the RET will create up to 18,400 jobs by 2020, declaring “the most immediate effects” from subsidising the renewable sector are job losses as cheaper forms of energy are crowded out.

“Additional job losses can be expected to arise from the drain on economic activity as a result of higher electricity prices,” it finds.

Former Queensland treasurer Keith De Lacy — now one of the nation’s best-known company directors — declared it was “plain crazy” to have schemes such as the RET, solar feed-in tariffs and carbon tax that were driving up power bills.

“The Australian public keep complaining about the increases in the costs of living and this has become even more so since the budget,” Mr De Lacy told The Australian yesterday.

“But one of the biggest increases in cost has been the price of electricity … It’s the most fundamental of services to the Australian public … These kind of things just make some people feel good but don’t achieve anything.

“They’ve got no place, I believe, in a modern economy.”

The comments add to pressure on the Coalition, given it is split over what to do about the RET.

According to the Principal Economics review commissioned by the Minerals Council, the RET scheme has an opportunity cost (money that could have been invested elsewhere) of more than $36bn by 2020-21.

The analysis finds that subsidies that are recovered through the sale of renewable energy certificates, which are directly passed on to consumers, could reach between $19.3bn and $21.6bn by 2020-21, covering part of the cost to build the infrastructure.

The miners are wielding the figures in a bid to convince the government-appointed RET review panel that the scheme is excessively costly for households and industry, and cannot continue the way it is.

“These are the additional costs paid by energy consumers: households, domestic firms and exporters such as the mining sector,” the council’s submission says.

The submission also warns that the RET will encumber business with “uncapped and high costs for subsidies”, particularly for the scheme for rooftop solar PV panels, “because of poor design and a series of inchoate policy shifts”.

In 2010, then federal minister Martin Ferguson said the RET was a “bonus to the renewable sector of the order of another $20bn to $30bn in commonwealth government support”.

The Australian Industry Group has called for the RET to be maintained, despite demands by some businesses that it be scrapped because it is expensive.

The AiGroup says that while the cost of building wind farms and solar panels is passed on to customers, extra energy from wind farms and solar panels has pushed down wholesale prices.

This has also been a key pillar of arguments by the Clean Energy Council, which is wielding its own research by ROAM Consulting that finds household energy prices would be $50 a year lower by 2020 with the RET, and that leaving it alone would create 18,400 jobs.

The Minerals Council has told the panel lower wholesale prices are not a “function of competitive forces but of government intervention”, are likely to be short-lived and undermine investments in coal and gas-fired power stations needed for reliable electricity supplies.

The analysis points to power station retirements including the permanent shutdown of the Munmorah black coal power station in NSW and temporary closure of South Australia’s Playford.

“Overall retail price rises have therefore been lower than they otherwise would have been,” the analysis says.

Wholesale electricity prices are “likely to increase” if power generators that become unprofitable close. Minerals Council chief executive Brendan Pearson said access to cheap, reliable energy had been a “source of economic strength” for Australia. “This is no longer the case,” he said.

The analysis draws on previous modelling. It quotes estimates by SKM MMA for the Climate Change Authority in December 2012 that put the cost for buying certificates for large-scale renewables at $15.9bn by 2020-21 and for small-scale renewables at $3.4bn — totalling $19.3bn.

Like most of the figures cited in the new analysis, these are based on an assumption of no carbon price — which the analysis says is appropriate as the Abbott government has announced its plans to repeal it.

To get to the $21.6bn figure, the analysis cites modelling by ACIL Tasman for TRUenergy (now EnergyAustralia) — which wants the RET scaled back — that puts the subsidy for the small-scale scheme at $5.7bn.
The Australian

The figure of $21.6 billion cited for the cost of the REC Tax up to 2020 is pretty close to the mark – matching the figures forecast by Liberal MP, Angus “the Enforcer” Taylor and privately confirmed by Origin.

However, we’re not sure why the Minerals Council stopped the clock at 2020?

The mandatory RET continues until 2031, such that – between 2020 and 2031 – a further $25-30 billion will be collected from power consumers: either by generators in the form of the REC Tax/Subsidy; or by the government in the form of the $65 per MWh fine (the “shortfall charge” – see our commentary above).

As you’d expect the Clean Energy Council trot out the same “Alice in Wonderland” twaddle that they’ve been peddling over the last month or so trying to protect their wind industry clients. No surprises there. Their claim about the RET creating 18,400 “green” jobs is patent nonsense; and gets treated with the contempt it deserves by the Minerals Council.

As to the comments from the Australian Industry Group, we’re not sure what planet they’ve been living on. These lightweights are either simply too lazy to have bothered to read the Renewable Energy legislation; or simply too dumb to understand it – sure, for the intellectually challenged it’s long-winded and tricky to follow (they could start with our post here). And they clearly haven’t paid a power bill lately.

Power consumers couldn’t care less about the wholesale price – they’re lumbered with the retail price – which DOES include the cost of the REC Tax; as well as the obscene returns guaranteed under the Power Purchase Agreements between wind power generators and retailers.

The REC Tax and PPAs are both the direct product of the mandatory RET and have resulted in Australians paying the among highest retail power prices in the world (see page 11 of this paper: FINAL-INTERNATIONAL-PRICE-COMPARISON-FOR-PUBLIC-RELEASE-19-MARCH-2012 – the figures are from 2011 and SA has seen prices jump since then).

The article refers to a “split” in the Coalition over the fate of the mandatory RET. The “split” is – on our reckoning – more like a “splinter”. The vast majority see the mandatory RET for what it is: “corporate welfare on steroids” which – given the Coalition’s unpopular budgetary attack on the “age of entitlement” – simply has to go.

If the Coalition can’t “sell” voters on the need for a measly $7 dollar Medicare co-payment for visits to the Doctor (in order to ensure Medicare is sustainable in the future), how on earth is it ever going to justify an entirely unnecessary $50-60 billion hit on power consumers if the mandatory RET is maintained?

To make the “sell” even harder, that’s $50-60 billion to be pocketed either as REC Tax/Subsidy – by foreign-owned outfits like Acciona, Union Fenosa and RATCH; or by the government in the form of the $65 per MWh fine, with no environmental benefit whatsoever.

It’s a “no-brainer”, Tony – kill the mandatory RET now, before it kills your chances of a second term.

abbottcover

 

How Could Anyone Vote for the Liberal Miscreants?

This Household Is Quite Unhappy With The Ontario Liberals (PHOTO)

The Huffington Post Canada  |  Posted: 05/21/2014 4:43 pm EDT  

 Embedded image permalink

Well, don’t sugarcoat it.

Matt Young, an Ontario PC candidate in Ottawa South, tweeted a photo of an angry letter he found taped to a door in his riding Wednesday.

The note tears a strip off Ontario Liberals over high electricity rates and the gas plant scandal. It also warns Grit MPP John Fraser and his “henchmen” that they will be hit with both HYDRO BILLS and OBSCENITIES if they dare knock.

Whoever posted the letter claims to have worked on five different Liberal campaigns but now regrets those efforts.

Ottawa South was previously represented by former Liberal premier Dalton McGuinty. Fraser won a byelection to replace him in August, besting Young by more than 1,000 votes.

The note may be representative of how some Ontarians feel about the estimated $1.1 billion lost after the cancellation of gas plants in Mississauga and Oakville.

But Mississauga Mayor Hazel McCallion, who endorsed Liberal leader Kathleen Wynne last week, believes there are more important issues to focus on. In fact, she called the scandal “water under the bridge.”

The best line of the angry letter?

“John Manley would be turning in his grave if he were dead.”

Manley, a former federal Liberal finance minister, was the MP for Ottawa South for about 16 years. He was replaced by another McGunity — Dalton’s younger brother, David.

Ontario voters head to the polls on June 12.

Tim Hudak can Legally get rid of Greed Energy Contractual Obligations!

Killing green energy contracts

Done the right way, a new PC government could indeed rip up green energy contracts with no liability. Should they?

Brent Lewin/BloombergDone the right way, a new PC government could indeed rip up green energy contracts with no liability. 

Hudak’s Ontario Conservatives can easily and legally negate the giveaways the Liberals had lavished on renewables developers

Tim Hudak says the Ontario Conservatives, if elected, will cancel lucrative wind and solar contracts put in place under the Liberals’ green energy program. Can he do so without racking up huge compensation costs?

The answer is yes – if he does it the right way.

The wrong way is to direct the Ontario Power Authority to simply terminate existing contracts, which have robust compensation clauses. The liabilities would dwarf the $1.1-billion paid out by the Liberals for cancelled gas plants.

The right way is to legislate: to enact a statute that declares green contracts to be null and void, and the province to be free from liability. The compensation clauses in the contract will be rendered inoperative if the statute says so.

Statutes can override iron-clad provisions in a contract because that is the nature of legislative supremacy: Legislatures can pass laws of any kind, as long as they are within their jurisdiction and do not offend the constitution. Legislating on electricity production is clearly a provincial power, as are “property and civil rights.”

Since the Canadian constitution does not guarantee property or contract rights, there are no obvious constitutional limitations on a provincial legislature’s ability to change any contract as it likes. Unlike the U.S. Constitution, in Canada there is no constitutional right to compensation for property expropriated by government.

Courts interpret ambiguous statutes as implicitly requiring compensation be paid to the owner of expropriated property. But if the statute is clear that no compensation shall be paid, the words of the statute govern. Where a statute and a contract are in conflict, the statute prevails. Although unilateral and retroactive changes to established contracts might seem to offend the rule of law, the Supreme Court of Canada has said that prospectivity is not a constitutional requirement for legislation.

AdvertisementWhat about NAFTA? Could a U.S. or Mexican firm with a cancelled green energy contract in Ontario seek compensation for discriminatory expropriation under Chapter 11? If government action singled out a specific party’s contract for termination, it could well be characterized as discriminatory. But if Hudak’s statute cancelled large numbers of contracts for a public policy objective and treated domestic and foreign firms similarly, then NAFTA protections are unlikely to apply.

So, done the right way, a new PC government could indeed rip up green energy contracts with no liability. Should they? While legislatures can cancel contracts, they rarely do so because it penalizes parties who have done business with government, and therefore creates a disincentive to do so in the future. It erodes economic confidence and credibility. For Conservatives and their supporters, cancelling energy contracts may depend on what they find more offensive: Rich subsidies for the production of solar and wind energy, or unilateral changes to valid contracts. No renewable energy contracts have been cancelled in Ontario yet, but in Europe this line has been crossed: Spain, France, Italy and Belgium have all stepped back from their original terms for the production and purchase of renewable power, to the detriment of their domestic renewable energy industries.

The McGuinty Liberals did not pass a statute to escape the bill for cancelled gas plants. It is difficult to know why without all the facts. Perhaps they thought $1.1-billion in costs and erased records would not come to light. Perhaps they feared that legislation would have required disclosure of facts they wanted hidden. Perhaps refusing to pay compensation would have crippled their ability to enter into future contracts with the same or similar companies. Perhaps there were foreign firms involved that could, in fact, have claimed under NAFTA for discriminatory expropriation. Perhaps they judged the political and economic costs to be too high – it is one thing to roll back a program created by a previous government, especially if you have campaigned on the issue, and quite another for a long-standing government to arbitrarily cancel its own contracts. Or perhaps they did not have an opportunity until after they lost their majority, which made it politically untenable.

Contracts are safe when both parties are bound in law to follow them. Contracting with government means that one party has the power to change the rules after the contract is made. Buyers and sellers beware: At the end of the day, the protection in a government contract is not legal but political.

Bruce Pardy is a law professor at Queen’s University.

Wind Turbine Owner Pays Resident $15,000.00, in “Hush” money.

North Kingstown R.I. Residents Paid 15K To Keep Quiet Over Turbines

North Kingstown, Rhode Island

Court records: Former NK residents paid $15K not to disparage wind turbine
Print

NORTH KINGSTOWN — A couple who previously lived next to the 413-foot wind turbine in a subdivision off Ten Rod Road – and staunchly opposed its construction – were paid $15,000 by the turbine’s owner in 2011 and agreed not to publicly or privately disparage the project.
The couple, Scott and Nicole Newcombe, also agreed not to return any inquiries from the media about the turbine, or provide written or spoken comments about the turbine to any local, state or federal regulatory body, according to a signed copy of the confidential settlement agreement submitted in court documents as part of a civil lawsuit filed by the Newcombes.

The couple, formerly of 52 Thornton Way, filed the lawsuit against North Kingstown Green, Wind Energy Development LLC and Mark DePasquale in Washington County Superior Court on May 10. They now live in North Carolina.
DePasquale is the developer who built the North Kingstown Green subdivision and the owner of Wind Energy Development, which built the controversial turbine. He also is a resident of North Kingstown Green; the turbine is located adjacent to his home at 42 Thornton Way.
Although the turbine was approved by North Kingstown’s Planning Commission in May 2011, residents of North Kingstown Green came out in opposition to the turbine’s construction after the fact – contacting local media and speaking out in opposition to the turbine at Town Council meetings. They said they were not aware of “the particulars” of the turbine proposal and, despite signing a document that said they would support its construction, they opposed it.
In February 2011, the Newcombes and neighbors Colleen Clare, Sean Coen, Kim and Todd Teixeira, Munmun Das, Subhransu Mohanty and Shelley Anderson all signed a letter submitted to the Independent that laid out their concerns with the turbine.
“We at first did not oppose this project, however, with the recent developments surrounding [another proposed turbine at Stamp Farm on South County Trail] and all the new information available to us, we have become more informed of the magnitude and impact this turbine will have on our families’ health and safety, as well as the effect it will have on the perceived value of North Kingstown Green in general and our homes in particular,” the letter noted.
The proposed Stamp Farm turbine was never built.
The North Kingstown Green residents went on to write, “But, our primary concern doesn’t reside with the aesthetic harm to the beauty of our neighborhood and North Kingstown; it is the health and safety issues of our families, especially the children, that most concern us.”
As part of the approved plans, portions of land adjacent to the turbine were to be exchanged between DePasquale and landowners in the development, and property deeds were supposed to be transferred. While all of the North Kingstown Green residents signed letters consenting to the turbine’s construction, the actual paperwork for the deed transfers wasn’t filed with the town.
When some of the neighbors balked at signing the deed transfers, DePasquale filed a $25 million lawsuit against the neighbors in May 2011. A month later, a confidential settlement was reached between DePasquale and the neighbors, but the terms were never disclosed.
The outcry from the neighbors ceased and after the dust settled, the 413-foot Chinese-made Goldwind Global GW87 was erected in October of last year.
Under the terms of the agreement with the Newcombes, DePasquale agreed to pay $15,000 to the couple and would purchase their home for $612,500 if they decided to move. The terms of the confidential settlement agreements with other neighbors was not included in the court record.
When asked if the settlement agreement with the Newcombes was similar to agreements signed with the other neighbors, Brian LaPlante, the couple’s lawyer, said he didn’t know.
DePasquale’s lawyer, Steven Boyajian, declined comment Friday on the case.
According to town property records, the Newcombes bought the house for $575,000 in 2009. The 2013 assessed value is $522,700.
In DePasquale’s deposition, which is included in court documents, he said the agreement to buy the house for more than the selling price was “obscene,” but agreed to the settlement in order to resolve the issue.
The settlement agreement stipulated that if the Newcombes did decide to move, he would buy the house only after receiving federal grant money related to the turbine project, or 180 days after the turbine became operational – which occurred March 1, 2013.
If the Newcombes were able to sell the house on their own for less than the $612,500 figure, DePasquale would pay the difference as long as it was less than $150,000.
That agreement is now at the center of the most recent lawsuit the Newcombes have filed for breach of contract.
According to court documents, a woman who was a friend of the Newcombes contacted Phillips Post Road Realty earlier this year and said her sister was interested in purchasing the Newcombes’ property. She mentioned the Newcombes spoke of their displeasure with the turbine and the legal battle that took place in 2011.
A Realtor contacted the listing agent for the property, who said DePasquale was supposed to be buying the parcel back from the Newcombes, although the listing agent called back the Realtor later and said he wasn’t supposed to have mentioned that fact.
All of the parties involved in those conversations have been issued subpoenas to be deposed.
In the lawsuit, LaPlante argued that the Newcombes “have suffered and will continue to suffer severe and substantial damages” and the settlement agreement was a “valid, binding and enforceable contract.” They asked for the court to issue a declatory judgment and award punitive damages.
Boyajian, however, argued the Newcombes broke the terms of the contract when they discussed the terms of the settlement, the turbine and their displeasure with it with a potential buyer. He said DePasquale has “suffered damages including the loss of a potential purchase of the property,” and asked Superior Court Judge Kristin Rodgers to dismiss the case and order the Newcombes to pay $30,000 in costs associated with defending the lawsuit.
LaPlante asked for Rodgers to issue a summary judgment in the case and argued that the alleged breach – which the Newcombes deny occurred – did not interfere with the construction and operation of the turbine and that the basis of the confidential settlement agreement was to move the project forward to completion. He also argued that DePasquale has not lost any money over the alleged breach.
DePasquale’s lawyers argue it is difficult to quantify any losses associated with “bad publicity” from the dispute with the neighbors. In his deposition, DePasquale said he has been appearing before the Westerly Town Council seeking permission to build two wind turbines in town and that the council continues to make reference to the North Kingstown turbine and the controversy that surrounded it.
Rodgers denied the requests from both lawyers for a ruling and, according to court records, the case was been assigned for trial but no date has been set.
Hundreds of residents attended more than a dozen meetings in 2011 on both the North Kingstown Green turbine proposal and the Stamp Farm proposal. The majority of those residents voiced their staunch opposition to both turbines. Among their fears, opponents said the turbine could fall on a home and kill or injure someone, that their property values would be diminished and the flicker of light off the blades and sound could affect the quality of their lives and their health.
Since that time, the Town Council placed a moratorium on the construction of all wind turbines in town.
church@neindependent.com

church@neindependent.com
http://www.independentri.com/independents/north_east/article_ae66d34a-a3fd-549d-a3a4-04d20788de49.html

Tales of Torture! Living with 3mw Industrial Wind Turbines – Annie Gardner

The Annie Gardner Story

Ep 475 Wind Turbine Wars

Annie Gardner joins us from Victoria to discuss her story regarding the incursion of the Wind Turbine Industry into their family farm. Together we discuss her story and what it is like to live beside 140 wind turbines 90 meters tall, and to feel the health effects from this assault.

We discuss the withholding of Freedom of Information documents pertaining to the comprehensive fraud being conducted against the people of the is country. We discuss the speech by John Madigan in the Senate declaring that Industry is colluding with Doctors and the Medical industry against We the People. Annie has been a tireless worker in the Resistance in an attempt to gain back power for We the People.

14.05.18 Annie Gardner.mp3

 

 http://fairdinkumradio.com/resources/14.05.18%20Annie%20Gardner.mp3

Wind Turbines Sufferer

21.3.13 Also we are joined by Annie Gardner a Farmer from SW Victoria as she shares her story of the effects of the MacArthur Wind Farm bordering her farm.

She discusses the effects on the community, personal health and the animals health. She shares how her business has been destroyed as a result of the Wind Farm operation.

The Liberals of Ontario are Destroying our Financial Future!

Ontario worse than California:

Province faces crisis due to 78% jump in spending

Toronto's Queen's Park, home of the Ontario Legislative Building.

Peter J. Thompson/National PostToronto’s Queen’s Park, home of the Ontario Legislativ

Ontario faces crisis due to 78% jump in spending

‘I do not want Ontario to become like California,” Ontario Finance Minister Dwight Duncan once proclaimed. And it’s not hard to understand why — California is a fiscal nightmare. It has the lowest bond rating in the United States and its own treasurer, Bill Lockyer, referred to the state budget as “a fiscal train wreck.”

Yet, despite all that is said about California’s finances in the media and financial markets, Ontario is in much worse shape.

Back in 2002-03, the fiscal year before the governing Liberals took office, Ontario’s net debt (assets minus liabilities) stood at $132.6-billion. In the ensuing decade, the province’s debt ballooned by almost 78% to $235.6-billion (2011-12). Most worrying, however, is that if Ontario continues on its current path (status quo in terms of spending and revenues), its debt will balloon to over $550-billion (66% of GDP) by the end of the decade (2019-20).

As the nearby table highlights, Ontario is decidedly worse than California on every measure of debt. For example, despite the fact that California’s population and economy are almost three times that of Ontario, Ontario’s total debt is 64.4% larger than ­California.

On a per-person basis, Ontario’s bonded debt (the concept of net debt is not used in U.S. public accounting) currently stands at nearly $18,000, over four-and-a-half times that of Californiaat $3,800. As a share of the economy, Ontario’s debt (38.6%) is more than five times that of the Golden State (7.7% of GDP). This is a stunning difference in the burden of debt, particularly given the attention and concern focused on California compared with Ontario.

While the two jurisdictions face similar average interest rates for their debt, the large difference in the stock of the debt means equally large differences in interest costs. Specifically, Ontario spends almost double what California does on interest costs in dollar terms and a little over three times what California spends as a share of the revenues collected, 8.9% compared to 2.8% of revenues. This is money that could have been spent on health care, education, public safety.

Thankfully, the Liberal government of Ontario, which just selected a new leader, Kathleen Wynne, has a real opportunity to break with past policies and fundamentally deal with its skyrocketing public debt.

There are two principal barriers holding back genuine efforts at tackling the province’s fiscal problems. The first is a basic misunderstanding of the province’s deficits and debt. More specifically, there is a view that Ontario’s deficits and mounting debt are a result of a lack of revenues. The data here tell a very different story.

In 2002-03, Ontario collected $74.9-billion in revenues and spent $65.1-billion on programs. Some $9.7-billion was spent on interest costs, which resulted in a balanced budget.

Revenues grew to $104.1-billion in 2007-08 (prior to the recession) before decreasing in 2008-09 and 2009-10. This year (2012-13), revenues are expected to be $112.2-billion, some $8-billion higher than the pre-recession high. All told, revenues have grown by 49.8% since 2002-03.

The problem is that provincial program spending has increased by 77.8% from 2002-03 to 2012-13. Simply put, Ontario has had a spending problem over the last decade, not a revenue problem.

The second barrier to dealing with the province’s deficits and debt is apathy. Ontarians are either unaware or uninterested in the province’s indebtedness. We should not be surprised by politicians and bureaucrats ignoring policy issues and the risks associated with them when the citizens of the province don’t seem concerned.

Take, for example, The Globe and Mail editorial the day after Wynne’s victory, which started with the headline “Premier-designate Kathleen Wynne must practise saying no.” If only it were that simple. “Saying no” would have been good advice back in 2002-03; now the new premier must boldly and quickly strike at the root of the problem: unsustainable increases in health care, education and most other government spending.

Or consider how the folks at the Business News Network reacted to our study by claiming: “The reality is once the economy starts growing strongly again in Ontario, revenues will rise and expenditures on things like welfare will fall. It’s not really about cutting spending; it’s about resuming economic growth.”

This indifference is buttressed by the near complete lack of any serious response by the Ontario government to the much-heralded report by the province’s own Commission on the Reform of Ontario’s Public Services, which became known as the Drummond commission. The commission’s report should have been a call to arms for the government to act on reform. Instead, inaction has ensued.

The reality is that Ontario’s indebtedness is significantly worse than the poster-child for bad public finances, California. The inaction to date only delays the inevitable and deepens the breadth and depth of changes needed later. The new premier has an opportunity to set the province on a new, sustainable path. Let us hope she both understands and embraces the need for change.

Financial Post

Jason Clemens and Niels Veldhuis are the editors of “State of Ontario’s Indebtedness: Warning Signs to Act,” recently released by the Fraser Institute.

Another Wind Turbine Manufacturer Takes a Dive!

Crime Doesn’t Pay – Crooked Chinese Wind Turbine Maker,

Sinovel, Hits the Wall!

sinovel

China is held up by eco-fascists as a paragon of “green” energy virtue. They point to the fact that China is home to some of the largest giant fan makers in the world – and that it pumps out millions of rooftop solar panels – which are both exported around the globe. But they conveniently ignore the fact that China produces a mere 0.23 percent of its energy from renewables and that that piddling proportion is unlikely to increase anytime soon.

The Chinese are no fools – if you’re looking to drag 1 billion or so people out of abject poverty and into the first world, you don’t lumber your economy with the most unreliable and expensive electricity known to man.

Instead – you do exactly what the Chinese have done – and build as many coal/thermal power generation plants as you can; as fast you can. Australia has made $billions shipping the coal that China uses in those plants to keep their homes brightly lit and their factories humming.

Now, whether it’s down to the fact that the Chinese would rather build a system of cheap, reliable power generation, rather than slinging up giant fans to please foreign ideologues; or, perhaps, the fact that its turbines just don’t come up to scratch, Chinese giant fan maker, Sinovel is in diabolical financial trouble.

Here’s Windpower Offshore on Sinovel’s imminent collapse.

Shanghai exchange confirms Sinovel suspension
Windpower Offshore
Jianxiang Yang
14 May 2014

CHINA: China’s Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE) has decided to maintain the suspension of Sinovel’s two bonds.

In a statement posted on the SSE website, Sinovel said it had received a formal letter from the stock exchange notifying it of the ruling.

The two bonds have had their designations altered, replaced by new names “Rui 01 Zanting” and “Rui 02 Zanting”. The Chinese “Zanting” literally means “suspended”. But their code numbers remain unchanged.

The two bonds were issued in December 2011, totalling CNY 2.8 billion in value. They were temporarily suspended on 30 April, seven working days before SSE’s final ruling landed.

The suspension came in accordance with China’s regulatory rules on stock listing. This stipulates that a listed company will have special treatment if it reports negative net profit in two consecutive years.

On 5 May “Huarui Fengdian”, the designation of the Sinovel stock, was also changed into “*ST Ruidian”. ST stands for “special treatment” and the asterisk mark warns investors of the highly risky nature of the stock. The share will surely be delisted if the company fails to make a profit in the following year, an SSE analyst said.

The Chinese manufacturer posted a loss of CNY 3.45 billion ($559 million) in 2013, more than twice the previous year’s loss of CNY 583 million.

It is not known how long the suspension period for the two bonds will last. In the above mentioned statement, Sinovel said it would continue to fulfill the legal obligations associated with the listed bonds.

Sinovel’s annual report said the firm had canvassed 303MW in new orders in 2013, including 30MW from the international market. Shipments of wind turbines was expected to reach 200MW this year, roughly double that of last year, Sinovel president Liu Zhengqi said earlier this month.

“The priority of the company is to turn deficit-running into profit-making this year. We have confidence that no debt default will occur,” Liu said.
Windpower Offshore

That Sinovel has been unable to make a buck out of the great wind power fraud isn’t for a want of trying.

These hucksters are “ways and means” kinda guys – ready to do whatever it takes to stiff the other guy, provided there’s an advantage to be won. Sounds like the wind industry all over, really.

Here’s The Boston Globe on some of Sinovel’s earlier shenanigans.

Files trace betrayal of a prized China-Mass. partnership: Software theft jolted Mass. firm
The Boston Globe
Erin Ailworth
10 July 2013

On a Thursday evening three Junes ago, Dejan Karabasevic desperately needed to contact his former wife. Karabasevic, a top engineer in American Superconductor Corp.’s offices in Klagenfurt, Austria, had been summoned to work, then confronted by police, who suspected him of selling his company’s proprietary software to a Chinese wind turbine maker.

The questioning lasted past midnight. When he finally reached his former wife, he instructed her to delete all the e-mails in his Google account. But authorities stopped her before she could.

The e-mails proved the basis for Karabasevic’s subsequent arrest and conviction in an Austrian court on charges of revealing trade secrets. His case marked what would be the opening round of a two-year fight by the Devens-based technology firm known as AMSC to defend its intellectual property rights — even as it lost millions of dollars and laid off hundreds of workers as the result of the software theft.

It would also open a window on the sometimes tawdry world of economic espionage between companies battling for preeminence in emerging energy markets.

The saga — pieced together with court records, financial filings, and interviews — took private and federal investigators from a wind farm in China to corporate offices in Austria and Middleton, Wis., and ultimately back to Massachusetts. Here, less than 40 miles from the headquarters of AMSC, FBI agents found a key piece of evidence that helped persuade a federal grand jury recently to indict Sinovel Wind Group Co. of Beijing, two of its employees, and Karabasevic on charges of conspiracy, wire fraud, and the theft of trade secrets.

The giveaway: a bit of pirated software found in a Sinovel-made turbine in Charlestown. Authorities believe the Chinese manufacturer stole the software from the Devens company, installed it in Sinovel turbines, and then sold the illegally equipped turbines in the United States at a profit.

A Sinovel lawyer, Matthew Jacobs, declined to comment.

The indictment underscores one of the most contentious issues in Sino-American relations, the protection of the intellectual property of companies doing business in China. How this criminal case — as well as four suits that AMSC filed against Sinovel in Chinese courts — plays out could influence relations between the two countries for years to come.

“It’s important because a lot of people lost their jobs all over the country,” said Timothy O’Shea, an assistant US attorney in the Western District of Wisconsin, where the indictment was filed. “It’s important to protect intellectual property so that people have an incentive to innovate and invest.”

Sinovel was founded less than a decade ago, initially financed by a Chinese government that has aggressively pursued alternative energy to satisfy the nation’s hunger for power and establish China’s leadership in an emerging technology. As with many businesses in strategic industries targeted by Chinese planners, Sinovel sought the know-how of a foreign partner.

Sinovel built the wind turbines, and AMSC supplied the software to control their operations. By 2009, Sinovel had become one of world’s leading wind turbine makers, and the partnership with AMSC was so successful that President Obama touted it as a model for other US companies to follow.

AMSC’s revenues soared, and by 2011 Sinovel accounted for nearly 80 percent of its sales. AMSC opened offices around the world, adding jobs and expanding its global workforce. The company’s stock price climbed, too, during this period, more than doubling to about $25 a share.

It appeared to be the perfect partnership, a true collaboration between the Massachusetts company and the Chinese manufacturer, and a boon to alternative energy. But Sinovel, court records show, would soon decide that it was time to cut AMSC out of the deal. Sometime around February 2011, it began wooing Karabasevic, a Serbian national working in AMSC’s Austrian office, ultimately promising him a six-year, $1.7 million contract with Sinovel and “all the human contact” he could want, “in particular, female co-workers.”

The engineer used his laptop and the Internet to access an AMSC computer in Middleton and download proprietary software code, court documents and other records show. Karabasevic then e-mailed that code and subsequent updates to Sinovel employees.

AMSC got its first hint that something was wrong in March 2011, when Sinovel abruptly refused contracted shipments from the Devens firm, complaining that the software did not meet new power grid requirements in China. With the loss of Sinovel’s business, the company’s stock plunged, and its $1.6 billion market value shrank to just $200 million. More than half of AMSC’s workforce — some 500 employees — was laid off.

By then, Karabasevic was e-mailing and instant messaging regularly with two Sinovel employees, disabling AMSC’s encryptions as the trio worked to adapt the software to turbines in China.

“If you succeed,” Karabasevic wrote in one chat, “Sinovel can separate from AMSC.”

But the scheme began to unravel a month later, when an AMSC field crew doing maintenance on turbines in China noticed blades spinning on a test-version of a Sinovel machine that was supposed to be out of commission. Inside, they found a modified version of software that AMSC had designed.

AMSC hired private investigators, who quickly narrowed the list of suspects to the handful of employees who had access to the stolen software code. By the end of June 2011, they had closed in on Karabasevic, who was arrested by Austrian police.

Ten days before the engineer’s trial in September 2011, AMSC issued a late press release saying that it would sue Sinovel over intellectual property theft. Coincidentally, just hours before AMSC’s announcement, the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority sent out its own release, highlighting its new 1.5 megawatt wind turbine delivered by Sinovel two days earlier.

Lumus Construction of Woburn was hired by the MWRA to assemble the turbine. When the company president, Sumul Shah, received a news alert about AMSC’s charges, he contacted Sinovel, hoping to verify that the machine would run on software made by the Devens company — and not a pirated version.

“Obviously, I was concerned, the MWRA was concerned,” said Shah, recalling that he received assurances from Sinovel. “They said, yep, they’re AMSC components.”

So the $4.7 million project, financed by stimulus money, went forward. Sinovel had one of its employees load the control system software into the 364-foot-tall machine that October, waiting to spin its blades outside the DeLauri Sewer Pump Station in Charlestown.

Five months later, agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation arrived at the site, search warrant in hand, and climbed the turbine to seize digital evidence of stolen technology. Shah would also lead agents to three more Sinovel turbines in Massachusetts, ordered before AMSC’s accusations became public, and each allegedly running with the pirated software.

“They reimported stolen goods into our home state,” said Daniel P. McGahn, AMSC chief executive. Despite what investigators say is strong evidence against Sinovel, there will be no easy end to AMSC’s drama. The legal case against Sinovel, its employees, and Karabasevic will be difficult to pursue. The United States has no extradition treaty with China, and Karabasevic, after serving a year in Austrian jail, has returned to Serbia, which also has no US extradition treaty.

AMSC has only begun to recover from its losses, and its stock — trading at roughly $2.50 — remains far below its peak during happier days as Sinovel’s partner. But McGahn remains positive that his company will rebound.

“It has been a crazy two years for us,” he said following Sinovel’s indictment. “But we have a criminal indictment, and that opens up a clear path for compensation.”
The Boston Globe

Why pay for someone else’s hard work, when you can just steal it?

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