Darlington Nuclear Plant Re-Build Will Raise Ontario Electricity Rates — Even Before The Cost Overruns Hit

A Citizen Group’s’ Response To News From Ontario Government On Refurbishing Nuclear Plants

From Angela Bischoff, Outreach Director, Ontario Clean Air Allanice

Posted January 11th, 2016 on Niagara At Large

Despite official hype that electricity from a re-built Darlington Nuclear Station will be a good deal, the truth is that the cost of power from Darlington is just going up and up while the cost of power from renewable and efficiency sources is going down, down, down.darlingtonprotest_jpeg_size_xxlarge_letterbox

Ontario Power Generation (OPG) claims that electricity from a re-built Darlington Nuclear Station will cost 7.2 to 8.1 cents per kWh (before inevitable cost overruns).  That means power from a re-built Darlington will cost anywhere from 30% to 45% more than OPG’s average sales price for nuclear electricity in 2014 (5.6 cents per kWh).

The Darlington deal also explicitly recognizes that once you open up 30-year-old reactors, costs can – and almost certainly will – skyrocket. 

The new Darlington deal includes a $1.7 billion contingency fund  – recognition of just what a high-risk project this truly is. No renewable power, efficiency or water power import deal signed by Ontario includes a giant contingency fund.

The rising cost and inflexibility of nuclear power is not going to help Ontario’s economic competitiveness. Underwriting increasingly costly nuclear power is going to be a tough pill to swallow for major manufacturers like our auto industry. GM’s Oshawa Plant is already on uncertain ground.  Will paying for giant nuclear bailouts push it over the edge?

OPG also expects the Ontario government to provide all the financing it needs for the Darlington project at below-market rates. That is $13-$32 billion of government borrowing tied up in one project instead of being used to develop crucially needed infrastructure like transit, roads, schools and hospitals.

Darlington is also no climate saviour. This giant plant has been offline for one in every six hours it has operated since starting up. Gas-fired generation has been used to fill the gap.

It all adds up to a very bad deal for Ontarians, who would be far better served by a long-term deal with Quebec to import low-cost water power. Our neighbour has the lowest cost power in North America. How long before our businesses start to turn their eyes eastward?

Please share this with your networks.

Thank you, Angela Bischoff Outreach Director

Find out more by clicking on the following links – Ontario Clean Air Alliance  Ontario’s Green Future       No Nukes News

NOW IT IS YOUR TURN. Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post. A reminder that we only post comments by individuals who share their first and last name with them.

Visit Niagara At Large at www.niagaraatlarge.com for more news and commentary for and from the greater bi-national Niagara region.

2 responses to “Darlington Nuclear Plant Re-Build Will Raise Ontario Electricity Rates — Even Before The Cost Overruns Hit

  1. If anyone believes these two Ontario Corporate Parties, one in government and the other the beginner of Privatization in this province, then you deserve what you get – “A conglomerate of Corporations “COMPLETELY” controlling your lives and the future of your children. What have they not sold to their corporate owners….The 407, Health Care, Ehealth, The doomed power plants, Hydro One, and will the next be the LCBO?

    Like

  2. And the taxpayers will once again be on the hook for “BILLIONS of DOLLARS” Perpetuated by Government indulgence to their Corporate owners.

    Like

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.