Green Energy Act could create $4.5 billion in value
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TORONTO, Oct. 29 /PRNewswire/ - A detailed analysis of the business case for
power generators, transmitters and local distribution companies following the
introduction and enactment of Ontario's Green Energy Act, finds the act has
the potential to create significant value.
The report on the Green Energy Act's short and long-term impact is the outcome
of an independent study conducted over the last year, while the Act was
working its way through the legislature, say the study authors, Hatch
Management Consulting.
The study, using technically viable and conservative parameters, scenarios and
assumptions, simulates the returns, the value created, the productivity impact
and the financial cash-flow-at-risk flowing directly from the Act, and
subsequently, from the provincial government's active support of the Act's
objectives.
Some of the barriers identified and analysed included:
- environmental permit delays,
- uncertainty of technology choices,
- the unknowns of Ontario's manufacturing sector,
- significant grid integration challenges,
- construction challenges if several new renewable projects rush to
pools of specialists at the same time,
- locating appropriate project sites,
- ensuring adherence to codes and standards still under development,
and
- probable responses to the changing roles and mandates of government
agencies that regulate the electricity sector.
The study concludes that the Act can create tremendous value for renewable
generators and delivery entities, while reshaping the energy landscape in
Ontario, provided the uncertainties around the sustainability of the program,
and barriers to project development are addressed.
In addition to the above central conclusion, five observations will be
relevant to a provincial debate about how best to unlock the value from the
Act and sustain the momentum for Ontario to become a leader in renewable
generation. Specifically, an overarching strategy would need to consider:
- That renewables technologies under the proposed regulation can
generate significant value while the province concurrently develops
energy-efficiency strategies and messages to lower demand.
- That the $4.5 billion NPV-positive business case (2009 dollars)
remains a target for the province. Decisions taken by the provincial
government, energy regulators and energy participants should aim to
enhance this target.
- That the domestic content requirement regulations present an
opportunity, and risk, for Ontario. The regulation could turn Ontario
into a renewable technology centre with an ecosystem of businesses
operating across the energy value chain.
- That a provincial office should be created to invest in and research
an integrated portfolio of proven and emerging renewable technologies
and planning tools.
- That an integrated renewables implementation strategy would aim to
coordinate all stakeholders and their resources to ensure the value
identified is in fact captured.
Hatch Management Consulting is a global consulting firm with principal offices
in Beijing, Johannesburg, Santiago, Pittsburgh, Sao Paulo, New Delhi,
Mississauga, Brisbane and London (UK).
The first public presentation of the Hatch Study will be on January 19, 2010
at the University Of Toronto Rotman School Of Management's 'Business of Green'
Speaker Series.
Media welcome.
SOURCE Hatch
Please visit the Hatch website, http://www.hatch.ca/News/Oct29-09.htm for an
executive summary of the report or contact Hatch's Management Consulting
Practice: Mergen Reddy, Global Director, mreddy@hatch.ca, Direct phone: (905)
403-4413; Bob Griesbach, Director, bgriesbach@hatch.ca, Direct phone: (905)
403-4102; Tom Reid, Media Relations, Hatch, tomreid@hatch.ca, Direct phone:
(905) 403-3733
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