Loading...
The Rural Voice, 2002-02, Page 16t 1 Ativ ►;jr IIApi tikPt,7i� tr.410 �t With the 4 tization of T • electrical utilities, what lies ahead for farmers? By Mark Nonkes there," said Paul Nairn, OFA member service representative for Huron -Perth. While Ontario is in the process of privatizing electricity, OFA representatives are warning people not to sign contracts. There are companies spreading absolute lies about hydro's privatization and are trying to get people to sign contracts, Nairn said. When telephones were deregulated, some of the new companies were short-lived while others charged unreasonable rates, Girty said. ,People have to wait and see which companies are offering the best value and which ones will last. "It's way too early. Not all the rules are in place," Girty said. "You don't know what is going to happen," Nairn added. Unlike the telephone deregulation, come May energy cost will most likely be higher, Girty said. "At the end of the day, the private sector is there, for one thing, to make money." The price of natural gas also plays a large role in electricity costs. According to Girty, if natural gas prices rise, so will electricity.. When people are choosing a company to buy energy from, they have to consider factors like distribution costs, if the contract can be cancelled by the company and what source is the energy coming from, Nairn said. Among those choices for some rural residents are renewable energy sources, such as wind or solar power. S. Ziggy Kleinau of Lion's Head area has found a way to avoid hydro bills altogether. The electricity supply for his organic farm comes from a wind turbine and solzr panel pad. He hasn't paid a hydro bill in eight years. Kleinau is the founder and co-ordinator for Citizens for Renewal Energy which has about 1,000 members who use, or are interested in, alternative forms of energy. He looks at the privatization of Ontario Hydro as a good thing. Users can choose from the pollution-generatingenergy companies which have been supplying Ontario with electricity or from environmentally friendly energy providers, Kleinau said. Currently, Canada lags behind the rest of the world in producing wind -powered electricity. There are only two provincially -owned windmills that are used for a mass source of electricity in Ontario: one in Kincardine at the Bruce Nuclear Plant, the other in Pickering. With the deregulation of electrical power generation, more wind turbines are expected to dot shorelines, where wind speeds are more powerful. In Port Albert, north of Goderich, a 290 -foot tower stands prominently on the shores of Lake Huron. The structure was erected in early November and is owned by a private company, Port Albert Wind Farms. The possibility for creating income from wind turbines and other forms of energy is something OFA is looking into. The OFA is in the early research stages of creating a wind research farm in a high wind area, Girty said. The OFA wind farm would pay private landowners for installing wind turbines on their farms. The wind farms could supply hundreds of homes with Alittle more thought might be put into turning on the nearest light bulb come May. With the privatization of Ontario's hydro distribution system, consumers could see a jump that could double current electricity bills, said Lynn Girty, chairman of hydro sub -committee for OFA. The hike in prices will leave farmers and electricity consumers reaching a little further into their pockets. The old Ontario Hydro system, which ran up a large debt, was poorly managed, maintenance was not kept up and equipment became worn, Girty said. The start-up costs for the new hydro services will likely be 25 to 50 per cent higher but could be as much as double to get rid of the initial debt, Girty said. After that point, prices will hopefully stabilize or go down, he said. OFA has been closely watching the process of privatizing Ontario's hydro. Representatives, such as Girty, have attended many of the hearings the regulatory bodies have held to draw guidelines for the new private sector hydro system. "At some of the hearings, OFA was the only group 12 THE RURAL VOICE