Sunday, January 1, 2012

New Year, Same Stories, Old Professions


 Goodbye 2011.
This blog was new as 2010 turned to 2011. My first post of 2011 noted huge exports in December of 2010, negative pricing records for January 1, 2011, and record wind production in hour 21 of January 1st. It took about a week before the first reporter picked up on the subsidized exports story, which generated some interest in the mainstream media (MSM). Remarkably, in hour 18 of January 1st, 2012, wind would again set a production record (1633MW).

Comparing the immediately available data for New Years' Day 2012 to the 2011 data, we see why the price disaster of 2011 was curtailed, to only intermittent periods of negative pricing, this year.
Nuclear was idled: one unit at Darlington just for this weekend (we'll see if they get it back up for tomorrow's deep freeze), and one at Pickering they seem to have decided not to bother with this season (a Bruce A unit is also offline for a fairly substantial project).

Net Imports are only up compared to last year: 1/1/2012 we were still a net exporter - of over 1000MW/hour


 It's important to note another small piece of data in this graph, which is that coal use was up somewhat, and natural gas down. It is increasingly clear, as has been claimed by many, including Donald Jones on my Cold Air Currents blog, and the Ontario Power Workers' Union, that coal units are frequently a better compliment to unpredictably intermittent generation, such as wind. That's unlikely to find a champion anywhere -I mention it out of a habit of attempting to be truthful.




 The difference between New Years' Day 2011, and New Years' Day 2012, is partly the killing off of nuclear; the goal of the architects of Ontario's Green Energy Act (I wrote about them here).

A look at annual production since 1990, inclusive of net imports (negatives showing net exports, as has become commonplace in the past half decade), shows Ontario's aging nuclear fleet continues to be the dominant reason for low greenhouse gas emissions in our electricity sector - and 2011 will be neck-and-neck with 2009 and 1994 for lowest annual emissions, and lowest emissions intensity (1994 is the record year for nuclear generation).

The other very notable difference in the two January 1st, is the falling exports.

Records do get the MSM's attention, but they are far less important than trends.  In July, 2011, Parker Gallant and I would share the writing credit on an article on the export situation, "Power Dumping", as part of Parker's ongoing "Ontario's Power Trip" series in the Financial Post.  The trends, and forecasts, noted there may have had an impact as, shortly thereafter, the 12-month moving average of net exports began dropping rapidly.  Perhaps our use of the term 'dumping' helped to discourage the practice of selling power at half the price Ontarians pay.



My few entries on politics were notable for providing relatively accurate data-driven predictions. The article corresponding to the start of our federal election noted the likelihood of a majority (not widely viewed as a likely possibility at the time), and the article mid-August on the provincial campaign, "Time for Hudak to Step Up, or ..." also wrote the road map for a McGuinty victory - which happened.

December 2011 started encouragingly, but a flood of reports later pointed to trouble ahead. Early on the Auditor General of Ontario Annual Report supported almost every criticism of the Green Energy Act, and this blog's early conclusions on the Debt Retirement Charge. But it became apparent reports were being buried in December under cover of the holiday.
The Environmental Commissioner of Ontario issued Volume 2 of his reporting on conservation issues in 2010, and he promises yet another volume. The Commissioner buries the lead late in volume 2, after spending a lot of time of the bureaucratic self examination that made me, earlier in the year, write on Parkinson's Law in connection with Volume 1. 56 pages into Volume 2 we get:


Natural gas and transportation fuels accounted for about 70 per cent of the total energy used. Meanwhile, electricity accounted for 20 per cent of Ontario’s overall energy demand. Propane, oil and other fuels accounted for almost 10 per cent of Ontario’s overall demand. This trend is almost identical to what was observed in 2007 ...
This informs us that the bulk of 3 volumes of bureaucratic navel gazing will be spent on electricity generation, where 20% of the production of electricity had a significant emissions component - that's 20% of the 20% of energy consumption that is electricity, or 4% of overall energy consumption.


 The Ontario Power Authority (OPA) would squeeze their reporting on their 2009 and 2010 Conservation efforts into the end of the year. Add in 2011's spending and that's about $1 billion (it's charged to Ontarians through the global adjustment mechanism), and the one snippet that should be of interest in this December report was that energy conservation targets weren't met due to demand being depressed.

Conservation targets weren't met because demand has dropped too low.

It's hard to question the wisdom of the report - as I'm not willing to wade through the hundreds of pages on the rules for measuring programs, but it's yet another example where the bureaucracy fails to see the obscenity of their waste of public funds. Just as the Environmental Commissioner spends the bulk of his time on the tiny piece of our emissions coming from our electricity generation, so the OPA, an entity that exists to provide the long-term planning it never has, is now stealing from Ontarians to fund conservation programs that are overwhelmingly aimed at having businesses focus on electricity consumption instead of concentrating on competitively producing something (Parker and I noted how reductions are overwhelmingly in the wholesale/manufacturing sector here).

By no means were the bureaucrats the only bodies to miss the point in efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and emissions of actual pollutants. Doctors and nurses appeared stupidly throughout the year - in some instances citing soaring rates of asthma and other respiratory ailments as if that was linked to the decreasing use of coal in electricity generation, and not our increasingly dysfunctional, traffic-clogged, cities.

Perhaps most disappointingly for many of the folks who believe in rational argument and good planning, was the issuance of a draft policy from the Ontario Society of Professional Engineers on Wind and the Electrical Grid. It's not every day I, holding only a B.A. in Political Science, can condescend on Professional Engineers - publicly - but this document is exemplary of the current state of personal responsibility and professionalism in Ontario today. Tasked with integrating ever more wind power, Ontario's shrinking base of working engineers dutifully relegate nuclear energy to the role of supporting technology, and an interim solution at that. In fairness to OSPE, the role of engineers as problem solvers is important. But it is wildly irresponsible to accept the creation of a problem in the hopes introducing inefficiency will return the jobs lost to being unable to compete with jurisdictions concentrating on efficiency/productivity.




 From the World Trade Organization to NAFTA we started to see the legal issues, internationally, with a centrally planned economy characterized by professional prostration before the ruling party. As 2011 closed, the annual average for the Hourly Ontario Energy Price (HOEP) would fall below even 2009's depressed pricing. The vast majority of the commodity charge in Ontario is now the cost of publicly guaranteed, secret, contracts gifted on no defensible basis. While the 'market' rate dropped about 17% as demand stagnated in 2011 (the fourth quarter of 2011 will have lower demand than not only 2010's fourth quarter, but 2009's too), the cost of the contracts, conservation, and assorted other element captured in the global adjustment, surged almost 50%.

2011: a year the market died; a year a recovery ceased; a year where Ontario became an outlaw; and a year Ontario's professionals chose to switch to the oldest profession.

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Figures for the comparison of January 1st, 2011, and January 1st, 2012, are here
All other graphs are based on data in this Google spreadsheet