Ideas pitched for P.E.I. energy future
CBC News
Posted: Feb 23, 2012 9:12 AM AT
Last Updated: Feb 23, 2012 10:23 AM AT
P.E.I. will soon get 30 per cent of its energy from wind, and that's as far as it can go with current technology. (CBC)A Crown corporation and natural gas were amongst the ideas suggested in hearings held by the P.E.I. Energy Commission Wednesday on the future of electricity on the Island.
Wednesday was for stakeholders in the industry, and presenters included Maritime Electric, the province's main electrical utility; Cavendish Farms, the province's single largest user of electricity; and the Council of Canadians, representing citizens.
The provincial government created the commission to determine how to provide stable rates in the years ahead.
Prince Edward Islanders pay more for electricity than anyone in any other province in Canada. Electricity rates have been rising at about double the rate of inflation since 1998.
The Council of Canadians argued rates could be eased if Maritime Electric was made a Crown corporation.
"Eighty per cent of Canadian energy supply is in public hands at the moment," said spokesman Leo Broderick.
"Wherever there are public ownership of energy it is certainly cheaper and it is better for the community."
But Maritime Electric argued rates are high because the Island doesn't have any local resources such as oil or natural gas. CEO Fred O'Brien said that wouldn't change if his company was a Crown corporation.
"They'll still have to buy power from essentially the same sources we do," said O'Brien.
"If there was a cheaper way to build generation here on the Island we would be doing it."
The main local source of electricity on the Island is wind power. P.E.I. will soon be getting 30 per cent of its electricity from wind energy, but with current grid technology that's as high as the province can go.
Cavendish Farms has turned a potato waste liability into a biofuel asset, says Larry Flemming. (CBC)Last year Cavendish Farms began trucking in natural gas from the mainland to make electricity, and generating biofuel using the waste product from making french fries.
"[We] went from actually having to truck our potato waste and other waste away to actually generating energy from it," said Larry Flemming of Cavendish Farms.
"That offsets a fairly substantial portion of our energy costs."
Others at the hearing suggested natural gas should be considered for electricity generation, either with a pipeline to the Island, or a plant on the mainland that would generate electricity that would go to P.E.I.
There will be a similar session for stakeholders Thursday afternoon. A series of public forums begins next week.
The Energy Commission is supposed to deliver its recommendations to government in the fall.
Share Tools
Latest Prince Edward Island News Headlines
- New program aims at animal welfare education
- A new program is being developed on P.E.I. to inform people about their rights and responsibilities when it comes to animal welfare. more »
- Halifax forensic lab closure concerns P.E.I. police
- Some municipal police forces on P.E.I. are concerned about the impact of the recent RCMP decision to close its forensic crime lab in Halifax. more »
- Ottawa won't appeal veterans' court victory on pensions
- The federal government will not appeal a Federal Court of Canada ruling that rejected clawbacks from the pensions of disabled veterans. more »
- $4M VLT upgrade not up to taxpayers
- Almost $4 million will be spent over the next two years to replace most of P.E.I.'s video lottery terminals, but taxpayers won't be paying for the upgrades, says the province's finance minister. more »
Top News Headlines
- Air Canada jet with falling debris had previous mishaps
- The airplane that had its engine shut down and was forced into an emergency landing Monday in Toronto has had two previous documented cases of mechanical damage since it started flying five years ago, according to Transport Canada. more »
- Canada has higher proportion of seniors than ever before
- New census data shows Canada now has a higher proportion of seniors than ever before -- a development that has crept up on society with far-reaching implications for health, finance, policy and everyday family relationships. more »
- B.C. shipwreck survivor recalls 10 days lost at sea
- A Haida fisherman, one of three stranded on a B.C. island for 10 days in May, is now talking about the shipwreck and how he and his friends survived in a driftwood shelter eating little more than seaweed and sea urchins. more »
- Alberta couple, child found dead in Saskatchewan ditch
- A married couple and a two-year-old boy from Airdrie, Alta., have been found dead in a ditch near St. Walburg, Sask. more »
- $4M VLT upgrade not up to taxpayers
- Georgian businessman invests $8M in GMO salmon firm
- Province appointing English school board trustees
- Dry weather threatens some P.E.I. crops
- New food guidelines for early child care centres
- NDP votes against electing leader at convention
- P.E.I. players on cup-winning junior hockey team
- Frosty forecast worries P.E.I. strawberry farmers
- Acadian Lines geared up as customers return in droves

