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Thread: NDP about to cost us 2 billion over coal power

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    Default NDP about to cost us 2 billion over coal power

    The Alberta government is going to court to challenge a regulation it says will saddle consumers with billions of dollars in losses from coal-fired power agreements.

    The NDP says last-minute changes to a regulation passed secretly by the Progressive Conservatives in 2000 allows power companies to hand back agreements to buy electricity from coal-fired plants if actions by the government make them more unprofitable.


    Deputy premier Sarah Hoffman said the government estimates these power purchasing arrangements could end up costing consumers up to $2 billion by 2020.

    “Today our government is taking legal action to protect everyday Albertans from having to pay for the business losses of Alberta’s biggest and most profitable power companies,” Hoffman said Monday.

    “We think this is not only unfair to Albertans, it is also unlawful.”

    Hoffman said U.S.-based Enron lobbied the Alberta Tories for the change as part of the government’s plan to deregulate the province’s electricity market. Enron declared bankruptcy in 2001 following an accounting fraud scandal.

    Hoffman said the Tory government at the time told Albertans that the risks of a deregulated electricity system would be shared by power companies.

    She said the “Enron clause” did the opposite – it set up a system where consumers bear all the risk.

    “Our government believes that regular Albertans should not be on the hook for secret backroom deals between companies and the previous PC government.”

    Hoffman said the clause was not included in more than a year of public hearings and the government took steps to hide the clause by exempting it from standard public disclosure.

    Enmax Corporation has used the regulation to terminate its power purchasing arrangement. Earlier this year Enmax said the government’s decision to charge companies a higher tax on carbon dioxide emissions this year and in 2017 made the agreement unprofitable.

    The government contends the Tories had no legal right to create such a legal loophole and is seeking a court order declaring the regulation to be void.

    The NDP also wants a judge to quash a decision by a government agency called the Balancing Pool to accept Enmax’s decision to hand back its agreement.

    Other companies that have served notice they intend to terminate such arrangements include TransCanada Corp. (TSX:TRP), Capital Power PPA Management (TSX:CPX) and the ASTC Power Partnership.

    On Monday, Enmax issued a news release saying they have concerns with the accuracy of information in the filing.

    “These legal agreements with the government have been in place and relied upon for 16 years, and were intended to be respected for a 20-year period by an industry that has invested billions of dollars in Alberta during this time,” said the release.

    “We are very disappointed that the government is retroactively challenging fundamental aspects that have been in place in these agreements since their inception.”

    Capital Power Corp. also issued a statement Monday.

    “We will exercise every legal avenue at our disposal to ensure that the Government of Alberta honours the terms of the PPAs,” said Capital Power president and CEO Brian Vaasjo.

    “We believe the legal claim is without merit, and we will look to the courts to ensure that the Government of Alberta cannot retroactively amend an arrangement for which Albertan companies paid and upon which they have been relying in good faith for 16 years.”

    Capital Power also called into question some of the government’s assertions.

    “Today’s announcement by the Government of Alberta claims that the PPA terminations will result in consumers bearing up to $2 billion in costs between now and 2020. This claim is misleading because it is incomplete. Based on available public information, the Balancing Pool can reduce its liability to an estimated $950-million by terminating the PPAs that were recently turned back to them, or to an estimated $635-million by terminating some PPAs, and retaining and managing others.”

    Spokesman Mark Cooper said TransCanada has always operated in a fully open and transparent manner and will defend its right to terminate the arrangements.

    “We properly exercised our termination rights under provisions in the Power Purchase Arrangements that were clear 16 years ago and that remain clear today,” he said in a statement.

    “The Government of Alberta through its regulator the AUB clarified the intent of these provisions for all parties during a fully public process back in 2000. We relied on the termination provisions in the PPAs as fundamental to the commercial decision to participate in the PPA auction and would not have participated without them.”

    In March, TransCanada and Capital Power both cited the increasing costs of CO2 emissions when serving notice of their intention to terminate their agreements.

    Nigel Bankes, chairman of Natural Resources Law at the University of Calgary, said he is surprised by how the amendment was developed and handled by the then Tory government and regulators.

    He wondered how officials at the time decided it was in the public interest.

    “This amendment is not the sort of clause you would expect to see in any ordinary commercial arrangement because it really did provide an open-ended opportunity for companies to walk away from unprofitable arrangements having taking advantage for many years of very profitable arrangements,” he said.

    “The transfer of risk that was going on here was just remarkable and it was just done with a sleight of hand.”

    The Progressive Conservatives issued a statement Monday afternoon suggesting the NDP was trying to dodge accountability for its policy decisions.

    “This government has a habit of blaming others for the consequences of its own policy decisions – decisions that are costing Alberta taxpayers billions,” interim PC party leader Ric McIver said in a release. “The regulation in question has been a matter of public record and available via the Queen’s Printer for the past 15 years. The government failed to read the contract before triggering this clause with its poor policy decisions.”

    Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi also criticized the NDP government’s decision to take legal action Monday.

    “This suit is outrageous,” Nenshi told reporters Monday evening. “We have this spectacle of the provincial government suing itself because apparently it didn’t know its own policies that have been in place for 15 or 16 years, and that Enmax has been abiding by.”

    The Wildrose Opposition called the government’s court action “heavy-handed.”

    “Today’s announcement to take private companies to court over agreements signed at the turn of the century is extremely short-sighted and will keep billions of dollars of necessary investment away from our province,” Wildrose critic Don MacIntyre said in a news release.

    Hoffman said lower electricity prices are why power companies are losing money.

    The court action is to be heard in November.
    http://globalnews.ca/news/2846623/al...-enron-clause/

    1039 days to go.

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    The bigger issue is if they win the court challenge. If you do, they'll effectively scare investment away.
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    The more you read into this, the more nasty you see it become. This is going to be very interesting to see the outcome. I wonder how badly the consumer and/or taxpayer will be screwed on this one.

    It's like that saying on the Alien vs Predator movie...

    Whoever wins... we lose.

    (That could also be said about the US presidential race.) hahaha
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    I don't get how the NDP never looked at this agreement before making their decision.

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    ...
    Last edited by Sugarphreak; 08-15-2019 at 11:26 PM.

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    I agree it's very odd to see such a broad commercial concession. Anyone who has ever negotiated commercials can see that you can drive a bus thru the vagueness.

    That's where I'm a bit conflicted by this. On one hand, shitty contracts are written all the time and unfortunately you gotta live with what you have. On the other hand, the intent of a contract is sometimes not properly captured in the language and the parties need to determine what the parties had intended beyond what the words say.

    The part that bothers me the most tho is NOT the shitty language in the contract. Its the view that the government is trying to invalidate a section of the contract rather than negotiating a compromise on the intent.

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    Originally posted by Sugarphreak


    Simple to explain, they are socialist idiots that think they are above everybody else...
    well said sir.

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    How did this come as a surprise to anyone? I keep hearing the Deputy Minister using words like "Secret" "Enron" "Backroom" deal. This exact issue and situation was covered in two courses I took in the recent program I completed. Wow gee how clandestine

    Sounds to me like the NDP didn't do their due diligence when they opened their yap about phasing out coal and now it's a mad scramble to change the optics surrounding their incompetence.
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    So really the title of this thread should be that the conservatives are about to cost taxpayers 2 billion? (and actually 635 million)

    What a shady deal by the conservatives, taxpayers dollars should not be corporate welfare to guarantee profits.

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    Wind power is the way to go anyways, who needs dirty coal in today's world. It's not like we are in the early 1900's

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    Hahahah! Companies wanted to protect themselves and their investments from future governments? It is only government regulation that is making them unprofitable.

    https://www.enmax.com/about-us/ppa-101


    What impact do the SGER changes and future carbon levies announced by the government have on the PPAs that ENMAX returned to the Balancing Pool?

    The effect of the change to the SGER, combined with announced future carbon levies is that, if ENMAX had retained its PPAs, its costs would have increased from approximately $15 million in SGER levies per year in 2015 to $160 million in carbon levies per year by 2018. That's an increase of a factor of more than 10. To put this in perspective, ENMAX's 2015 net earnings from continuing operations was $154 million.
    To blame the deal or the conservatives is laughable
    Last edited by dirtsniffer; 07-26-2016 at 07:15 PM.

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    Originally posted by redblack
    Wind power is the way to go anyways, who needs dirty coal in today's world. It's not like we are in the early 1900's
    What happens when the wind isn't blowing?

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    I hate socialism.

    Except for when the private sector keeps the profits and saddles the public with the losses. 2008 was my favorite kind of socialism. Essentially US taxpayer insured MBS CDS instruments all day.

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    Originally posted by dirtsniffer


    What happens when the wind isn't blowing?
    That's like Lewis Black's joke on solar:
    We don't have solar energy because the sun goes away each day -- and doesn't tell us where it's going.

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    Originally posted by dirtsniffer


    What happens when the wind isn't blowing?
    Install battery banks and solar panels.

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    Originally posted by redblack


    Install battery banks and solar panels.
    Spoken like someone who has no clue about the power grid... Battery banks of the scale required for a power grid laughable. Solar and Wind are pie in the sky unrealistic dreams. Looks good on paper and makes people feel good but boy are they awful when it comes to practice. You want clean power? A system composed of Nuclear along side with Hydro/Gas is about as good as it gets.

    As for the current boondoggle with the power companies that is ALL on the NDP. They didn't read the contracts the previous government had signed and then legislated themselves into a corner with this stupidity.

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    Originally posted by redblack


    Install battery banks and solar panels.

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    You guys voted for change, so I don't see what the problem is

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    .
    Last edited by codetrap; 12-31-2016 at 12:52 PM.

    "We need a vaccination for stupidity, with booster shots against an unwillingness to learn."

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    Well the article says that the 'government thinks it's unfair and illegal.' But the article just talks about how it is unfair. So it's probably a bunch of shit.

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