The province’s growing reliance on wind power has consequences. It is a recipe for chaos and blackouts
Imagine a Boxing Day sale where everything was free for everyone across every store at the same time, for several hours.
And imagine if, in the early morning hours of Dec. 26, Best Buy, Staples, Walmart, and indeed every single store in the entire economy got paid precisely zero dollars for their wares for several hours that morning.
Preposterous, you say!
But that’s what happened in Alberta’s free-wheeling, unregulated electrical market. The pool price, as recorded by the Alberta Electric System Operator (AESO), was $0.00 per megawatt from four to seven a.m. and from 11 a.m. until noon.
The pool price, unless there’s some other contract going on, is the price all generators get paid.
I might not have an MBA, but I’m fairly certain no business model can survive getting paid nothing at all for their product for terribly long. If Mcdonald’s, Burger King, and Tim Horton’s all gave away their breakfasts on Dec. 26 to all customers, they couldn’t do it for long before someone realized this was idiocy and shut the doors.
So what was happening during those wee hours in the morning, as the Boxing Day shoppers were in line for their flat-screen TVs? It was quite windy in Alberta.
X bot account @ReliableAB, which logs hourly reports of the AESO minute-by-minute reporting of the grid, showed that wind generation was just a hummin’. For several weeks, Alberta wind power has been frequently pumping out high numbers, often in excess of 70 per cent of its nameplate capacity. One would think this would be a great thing, right? It’s finally doing what it’s supposed to do.
At 4:38 a.m., @ReliableAB reported Alberta’s current 45 wind farms were putting out 3,508 megawatts of the installed capacity of 4,481 megawatts while the pool price was zero.
At that point, wind was generating a full 33 per cent of total generation, which, again, sounds like great news.
It was during one of the deadest periods of economic activity in the whole year, the night after Christmas. Demand in Alberta was low, with an internal load of 9,632 megawatts. The lack of demand coincided with lots of surplus power being dumped onto the grid. (As it was still dark, solar wasn’t a factor.)
What to do? How about selling as much as you can?
And that’s what happened. Alberta was pumping out 995 megawatts of power exports to its neighbours, 967 megawatts to BC, 26 to Saskatchewan, and two megawatts to Montana.
This situation is also the converse of what I’ve been reporting on over almost 24 months: the frequent collapse of wind power generation in Alberta. Nearly every time that has happened, the pool price shoots up, often hitting $700, $800, $900 or even the theoretical maximum of $999.99 per megawatt hour. If the maximum was $2,000, I’m willing to bet it would have hit those heights, too. And the integral under that graph – what consumers get on their bill – is horrendous.
So here we have renewable, “green” power in surplus, driving prices down for everyone, and so much so that it can benefit the neighbours, too.
But therein is the fundamental problem. No one, not Best Buy, Mcdonald’s or Capital Power, can produce products for nothing, and definitely not for extended periods. There is a cost to generating power, be it capital or fuel or operating costs. Nor can they sell their products, be it flat-screen TVs, hamburgers or electricity, for next to nothing, either. The entire economic model will collapse, and then what? Who will provide the power then?
On Dec. 28, 2021, Alberta had 2,269 megawatts of nameplate wind generation capacity. It’s now double that, at 4,481 megawatts, a level where big swings in wind power production have a huge impact. And Alberta’s last coal plant will switch to natural gas in a few months.
And there’s more wind coming. On Oct. 24, the Calgary Herald noted, “More than 3,500 megawatts of renewable power generation projects are now under construction in Alberta.
“By the end of August, the AESO received 74 wind and solar project applications after the moratorium was announced, (Premier Danielle) Smith noted.”
What will happen when all that solar and wind power comes online, when Alberta will have around 9,600 megawatts of wind and solar, almost equal to daily demand? Will the grid be flooded with power so cheap that reliable, dispatchable power generators can’t stay in business, only to see prices skyrocket when wind and solar inevitably fail, as they frequently do, and at the worst times?
Sounds like a recipe for utter chaos. And blackouts.
Brian Zinchuk is editor and owner of Pipeline Online and a contributor to the Frontier Centre for Public Policy.
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