Saskatchewan Environmental Society wants end to coal power - Action News
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Saskatoon

Saskatchewan Environmental Society wants end to coal power

Environmentalists have just released a 40-page submission to the crown-owned electrical utility, urging it to phase out all of three of its coal generating plants.

SES urges SaskPower to focus on hydro, wind, solar

The Boundary Dam power plant is the oldest and largest coal-fired power plant in Saskatchewan. ((CBC))
The Saskatchewan Environmental Society is calling for SaskPower to phase out its coal-fired generating stations.

The Environmental Societyreleased a 40-page submission this morning to the crown-owned electrical utilityasking that

You don't build a major power plant on a whim.- RobertHalliday, author ofYes They Can: A 20-20 Vision forSaskPower

it permanently close all of its coal plants.

Titled "Yes They Can: A 20-20 Vision for SaskPower", the document says Saskatchewan's Shand, Poplar River and Boundary Dam plants are agingand are ready to be retired within the next 10 to 12 years. It asksSaskPower to commit to more environmentally-friendly energy sources, rather than attempting to retrofit or replacethem.

Robert Halliday, a Saskatoon engineer and author of the report titled "Yes They Can: A 20-20 Vision for SaskPower." (Jordan Johnson/CBC)
"A lot of decisions have to be made within the next decade and within the next six to eight years even," said RobertHalliday, a Saskatoon engineer and author of the report."You don't build a major power plant on a whim. You have about twenty years of planning to go into that."

In September 2012, federal regulators relaxed emissions requirements, and promised SaskPower its older power plants would be allowed to stay open longer than expected.

Coal currently powershalf of Saskatchewan grid

Coal power has historically been considered a cheap and reliable source of electricity in Saskatchewan. The provincial government, Ottawa, and SaskPower have invested heavily in carbon capture and storage technology. To date, retrofitting one demonstration coal stack at Boundary Dam has cost $1.355 billion.

Hallidaynoted last year, roughly half the power generated in Saskatchewan came from coal-fired power plants.

The real issue forSaskPowerI think will turn out to be the cost of carbon capture and storage- Robert Halliday

"The real issue for SaskPower I think will turn out to be the cost of carbon capture and storage," Halliday told reporters in Saskatoon."Because it is very expensive and it's predicated on being able to find a market for CO2. If they cannot find a market for C02, for the anticipated lifetime of the project then that does become very expensive power."

He said the money spent to date on carbon capture and storage could have tripled Saskatchewan's hydroelectricity capacity, and led to a five-fold increase in wind power.

"My understanding is that their cost overruns have not been on the carbon capture side, they've been on the re-fitting an old power plant side," said Halliday.

"When you start opening up an old power plant and finding asbestos and finding all sorts of nasties in there to deal with, and materials that need to be replaced, it might well be that they decide the cost of doing carbon capture and storage phase two might be just more financial risk than they're willing to take," he said.

Reducing consumption 'cheapest' fix

Representatives from the Environmental Societynoted reducing electrical consumption would be the swiftest way to save money. Right now, 35 large industrial customers account for 45 per cent of the electricity used in Saskatchewan.

"The cheapest power we can produce is the power we save," said Halliday. "There are many, many ways of reducing power consumption in this province. And most of them remain untouched."

He saidSaskPower could cut demand for electricity by 450 megawatts over the coming decade through an electricity efficiency program. He also saidco-generation the simultaneous production of heat and electricity could be put in place at all of Saskatchewans potash mines."

Encourages coal alternatives

Halliday'sreport also encourages Saskatchewan to partner with Manitoba Hydro, to purchase low-emittinghydroelectricity from its eastern neighbour.

It points to Iowa and South Dakota, wind power already fuels more than 20 per cent of the states' respective power grids. It's askingSaskPower to raise its wind generating target to 20 per cent.

"South of the TransCanada highway in southern Saskatchewan we have the best solar resource in Canada," said Halliday.

SaskPower predicts the province's current demand for electricity will double by 2032.