If Fabrene faces a five-fold increase
on part of its energy bill, the North Bay plant will close.
“The lights will be out here,” said
John Spencer, vice president of operations at PGI Fabrene Inc.
“That’s guaranteed. No ifs or buts.”
Since 2006, Spencer has been watching
the global adjustment charge on the plant’s electricity bill rise
from less than four per cent of his total costs, to more than 50 per
cent.
The charge, previously called the
provincial benefit, is paid by all customers.
The global adjustment is the difference
between the rates paid by Ontario governmental authorities to
regulated and contracted electricity generators and the spot market
prices for electricity consumed in the province.
That includes what the province pays
for green energy (solar and wind) through its Feed-in Tariff (FIT)
program, which is about 80 cents per kilowatt hour (kWh).
When the economic downturn occurred in
2008, many businesses and manufacturers closed for good. As a result,
the province’s electricity consumption decreased.
Spencer started doing research when the
global adjustment charge started getting higher.
“I started asking what it was and
quite frankly, the information was difficult to get,” he said.
He belongs to an energy and
manufacturing consortium made up of members from Ontario and some
from the Eastern provinces.
“I started contacting them and
actually held a webinar for our members on what I learned. I told
them they have to understand what is happening here. We have too much
power now in Ontario,” Spencer said.
Some recent statistics he found showed
that more than 50 per cent of the energy generated in the province
was sold, at prices less than the market rate.
“(The province) is dumping it so it
is selling it to my competitors (in Quebec and the U.S.) at less than
what they are charging me,” he said.
“In the meantime, I am paying global
adjustment charges to make even more energy we don’t need at even
higher costs. I am having difficulty understanding why anyone is
letting this go on.”
MPP Vic Fedeli (Nipissing – PC) said
the government is currently paying wind and solar producers to make
more power that is not needed.
“Every night we end up paying Quebec
and the U.S. to take our surplus power because you can’t store it
once it is made.”
He said wind accounts for three per
cent of the energy in Ontario, while water power went from 25 per
cent to 22 per cent.
“Water power is the greenest energy.
It is renewable and reliable and all the province did was replace one
green energy with another to call us green and bankrupted us in the
process.”
Fedeli said the province's auditor
general indicated that the global adjustment charge amounted to $700
million last year. In 2018, it will grow to $8.1 billion.
“We have 1,000-plus wind turbines out
there today but there are 44,000 FIT applications in today, for wind
and solar, that haven't been approved yet. It's a disaster getting
ready to happen,” he said.
Fabrene's case was brought up in the
provincial legislature in March by Fedeli, while Spencer attended
Question Period.
Since then, he has received calls from
a variety of businesses across the province.
“I am not alone, and, my numbers and
ratio are not alone. A five-fold increase will kill many, many
businesses in this province,” Spencer said.
“So do I believe that will happen? I
can't believe that. I have to believe that people like myself and the
public will realize this is off the track and we have to fix it.”
He is surprised at the lack of
awareness about the charge, even with other businesses, and feels
that consumers don't realize or are apathetic.
“The apathetic ones are the silent
majority and we have to get them to speak out. Businesses will either
leave the province, die a slow death or start to fight. But whoever
is left standing here, businesses and people, will be required to pay
a higher and higher share.”
www.fabrene.com