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NSP gave $1m bonus to wind farm subsidiary 

Credit:  By JUDY MYRDEN, Business Reporter, The Chronicle Herald, thechronicleherald.ca 11 January 2011 ~~

Taxpayers shouldn’t be on hook for $1 million payout, consumer advocate says

The only bonus for wind projects handed out by Nova Scotia Pow­er was to a subsidiary company for $1 million.

The bonus was given to Emera Utility Services Inc . (EUS) , an affiliate company of Nova Scotia Power’s parent company, Emera Inc ., for completion of the utility­-owned Digby wind farm last year. It is one of six wind power projects that signed power pur­chase agreements with Nova Scotia Power in 2008.

EUS was also awarded an un­tendered contract for $25 million for part of the construction costs of the $82.7-million project, which started production of green energy late last year.

“I don’t see where the bonus was a justifiably needed expense to be paid by ratepayers,” said John Merrick, Nova Scotia’s consumer advocate, on Monday.

Merrick raised the issue during a hearing last week into Nova Scotia Power’s application before the Nova Scotia Utility and Re­view Board to pass along the costs of the Digby wind farm to its 470,000 elec­tricity customers.

Merrick said he doesn’t believe Nova Scotia Pow­er customers should be on the hook for the bo­nus.

“There was no need when setting up your deal to establish a bonus; all you needed was compliance with your deadlines.”

Merrick said it is “odd” to give an affiliate company a bonus when other wind developers have complained Nova Scotia Power operates on the basis of using the “stick rather than the carrot.”

“I wanted to know how unique it was that they would give a bonus because we have heard about all the penalty clauses that they have they put into their contracts and we’ve heard power producers complain (the penalty provisions are) pretty onerous and draconian,” he said.

For example, Shear Wind Inc ., a Bedford renewable energy company, had to pay $500,000 to Nova Scotia Power for not pro­ducing green electricity on time ast year at its project in Pictou County.

Under the contract signed in April 2008, Shear Wind prom­ised to deliver 20 megawatts of wind-generated energy to NSP by the end of November 2009.

Shear Wind met another dead­line for producing 20 megawatts by Dec. 31, 2010, and avoided paying an increased fine of $1.5 million to Nova Scotia Power.

Nova Scotia Power says bonus clauses do not exist with other wind power deals, but “if a pro­ject delivers energy in advance of the contractually established schedule . . . Nova Scotia Power purchases the energy as it be­comes available,” the company said in a response to Merrick’s question about bonuses filed Friday with government regu­lators.

The utility has ownership stakes in three of the six wind power projects with which it signed power purchase agree­ments.

The provincial government ordered Nova Scotia Power to have five per cent of its total electricity purchases generated by independent power producers from renewable energy sources by the end of 2011.

The review board can approve the costs proposal, approve it with conditions or reject the application.

Source:  By JUDY MYRDEN, Business Reporter, The Chronicle Herald, thechronicleherald.ca 11 January 2011

This article is the work of the source indicated. Any opinions expressed in it are not necessarily those of National Wind Watch.

The copyright of this article resides with the author or publisher indicated. As part of its noncommercial educational effort to present the environmental, social, scientific, and economic issues of large-scale wind power development to a global audience seeking such information, National Wind Watch endeavors to observe “fair use” as provided for in section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law and similar “fair dealing” provisions of the copyright laws of other nations. Send requests to excerpt, general inquiries, and comments via e-mail.

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