[...] I'm fine in general with paying more for green power, and having lived in Toronto for 15 years now, I appreciate no longer having to deal with the choking smoggy air during the summer. I'm not fine with having gone through the effort of cutting my power usage only to see my rates go up to compensate for the lost revenue. I understand why they did that, but to me it indicates bad planning. They need to find a way to reduce costs and power generation when demand goes down.
The bottom line for many people with the way electricity costs are calculated in Ontario, is that it *has no incentive* to be frugal with it. You can cut your usage by half, and barely see a difference on your bill. That is completely azz-backwards. Rather than Wynne supplementing the cost of electricity, leave that to market forces, and supplement the hidden costs, the sunk costs.
Users *must have an incentive* to be frugal. Ironically, the "Green Energy Program" has dissipated the opposite to what was intended.
I remember moving to Guelph some six years back, and being overwhelmed with 'Green Wash'. People lecturing me on how I was wasteful, which was absurd, as I've spent my whole life 'making do' as I'm from a very poor European family (wealth was destroyed in WWII). The whole concept of 'planting your own vegetables' was intrinsic in my background, only taking what you need also, never putting more on your plate than you can eat, recycling jars and clothes, and so on. I was also steeped in alternative energy (I have an electronic technology background)
But when I got a pamphlet from Bullfrog Power *bragging* about how 'we've got the price of electricity to go up', I knew right then that this whole "Greenwashing" was going to poison the well, especially for those barely scraping by. (Odd, isn't it, how those who lecture the most on this are well-off).
The nickname for a Prius isn't "Pious" for nothing...I cycle.
In the event, it's been *Market Forces* that have heralded the ascent of alternative energy, and the demise of dirty hydrocarbons. And how ironic that the Financial Times was at the forefront of heralding exactly that?
I used front page stories from the FT to re-assure friends with solar companies that they were winning. The Cdn press was still full of stories as to how important oil is to Canada (and by extension, the world).
Recent example, but the FT has been on this for over half a decade:
Renewable Energy Is Unstoppable, Declares Financial Times ...
https://cleantechnica.com/.../renewable-energy-unstoppable-declares-financial-times/
May 19, 2017 - With more
then 2.2 million readers a day, the
Financial Times is the ... The key to
renewable energy becoming dominant is storage ..... and do it for
cheaper total cost of ownership
than conventional has been around since the 1970s. ... Could you please point me to some
source for that 100 GWh number?
(To access the FT article, enter the headline
The Big Green Bang: How Renewable Energy Became Unstoppable into Google )
Wynne certainly gets no accolades from me on the electricity file. She (and her predecessors more) have to own the mess we're in, and her predecessors include the Tories, but it doesn't get Wynne off the hook by any means.