Premier Wynne: Thanks for saying 'no' to new reactors!
[
http://www.greenpeace.org/canada/en/cam ... saying-no/ ]
The Ontario government announced this week that it is abandoning plans to build expensive and risky new reactors at the Darlington nuclear station.
This is a courageous and laudable decision.
It shows Premier Kathleen Wynne puts the protection of the environment and consumers before the demands of the powerful nuclear lobby.
Greenpeace has fought the plans to build new reactors at Darlington for the past eight years.
Under Premier Wynne’s leadership the government has accepted what Greenpeace has been saying for years: new nuclear reactors are highly risky, expensive and a barrier to the development of a greener energy system.
Premier Wynne’s decision puts Ontario on the path to a greener energy future.
Please take a moment to thank Premier Wynne for her leadership.
= = = = = =
Wynne deserves credit for backing away from nuclear expansion, Greenpeace says
[
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/nat ... e14798129/ ]
TORONTO — The Canadian Press Published Thursday, Oct. 10 2013, 11:37 AM EDT Last updated Thursday, Oct. 10 2013, 11:41 AM EDT
Greenpeace Canada is applauding reports that Ontario’s Liberal government will back away from plans to spend up to $10-billion to build two new nuclear reactors.
Government sources confirm the Liberals have decided the province will not need the electricity from two new nuclear plants, but they will go ahead with the refurbishment of existing reactors.
Greenpeace spokesman Shawn-Patrick Stensil says if it’s true, Premier Kathleen Wynne “deserves credit for finally ending the charade that new reactors are needed and cost effective.”
Stensil says he hopes the government won’t take the nuclear industry’s cost claims for the Darlington refurbishment at face value, and require a full public review.
Energy Minister Bob Chiarelli’s office won’t confirm the decision, but says “nuclear is and will remain the backbone of our electricity system.”
Ontario currently gets about 50 per cent of its electricity from nuclear generation, but that could change when the government’s long-term energy plan is released later this year.
= = = = = =
Ontario backs away from plans to buy new nuclear reactors
[
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/pol ... e14793803/ ]
ADAM RADWANSKI The Globe and Mail
Published Thursday, Oct. 10 2013, 6:00 AM EDT
Last updated Thursday, Oct. 10 2013, 6:01 AM EDT
Ontario’s government will shelve plans for a major new investment in nuclear power, according to industry and government sources.
Kathleen Wynne’s Liberals have decided against spending upwards of $10-billion to buy two new nuclear reactors as had been planned when Dalton McGuinty was premier, and will commit only to refurbishing existing ones, the sources told The Globe and Mail.
The decision appears to be the latest blow to the nuclear industry, which is already facing a decline in international demand, safety concerns after 2011’s earthquake-induced meltdown at Japan’s Fukushima plant, and the emergence of comparatively cheap natural gas. As the most nuclear-reliant province in Canada and the only one with plans to acquire new reactors, Ontario had been held up as a source of hope for prospective builders, including Candu Energy Inc., the once-mighty division of Atomic Energy of Canada Limited that is now a subsidiary of SNC-Lavalin.
MORE:
[
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/pol ... e14793803/ ]
= = = = = = =
If not new nuclear plants, what’s Ontario plan?
[
http://www.thestar.com/news/queenspark/ ... plan.html# ]
News / Queen's Park
John Spears Business reporter, Published on Thu Oct 10 2013
What will power Ontario’s electricity system if the role of nuclear power shrinks?
If the Ontario government has ruled out building new nuclear plants and coal plants — and if natural gas-fired plants are political poison — what’s left for Ontario?
The Liberal government confirmed Thursday that it has scrapped the proposal to spend more than $10 billion to build two new nuclear reactors at the Darlington power station — a decision that knocks 2,000 planned megawatts out of the power supply.
Energy Minister Bob Chiarelli said the government is, however, committed to refurbishing the existing Darlington nuclear station, which supplies about 20 per cent of Ontario’s electricity.
The amount of power knocked out of the supply is significant: Ontario needed about 18,000 megawatts of power on Thursday, a day with moderate weather. On a very hot or cold day, it can need up to 25,000 megawatts.
In addition, the existing Pickering nuclear station, which generates about 3,000 megawatts of power, is due to close at the end of the decade.
Not building the new reactors, while shutting down Pickering, will be a real shrinkage in the role of nuclear energy, which now supplies about half the province’s power.
And it sharpens the question: What’s next?
MORE:
[
http://www.thestar.com/news/queenspark/ ... plan.html# ]
= = = = = =
New nuclear not needed in Ontario, green groups say
[
http://www.thestar.com/business/economy ... s_say.html ]
Declining power consumption in Ontario means that new nuclear reactors won’t be needed in the province, two environmental groups argue in a new report
By: John Spears Business reporter, Published on Tue Sep 10 2013
Declining power consumption in Ontario means that new nuclear reactors aren’t needed in the province, two environmental groups argue in a new report.
The Pembina Institute and Greenpeace say that conservation and renewable energy will answer the province’s energy needs for the foreseeable future, eliminating the need for proposed new nuclear reactors.
Ontario’s current long term energy plan – now under review – says that the province should continue to get about half its power from nuclear plants. The Pickering nuclear station is due to be retired in 2020.
The province is considering two new reactors at the Darlington nuclear station, each capable of generating about 1,000 megawatts of power.
But the province has also said it will give energy conservation priority over building new power plants.
“We’re talking about a commitment to investing in conservation before new generation, wherever that’s cost-effective,” energy minister Bob Chiarelli said in July.
The Pembina-Greenpeace report argues that committing to the new reactors – whose cost is still unknown – will skew the province’s energy policy away from conservation.
“In order to implement a conservation-first approach rather than a nuclear-first one, the government must clearly direct the Ontario Power Authority to make conservation and efficiency the first priority,” the report says.
The researchers analyzed data and projections from several energy agencies.
They concluded that demand for power in Ontario has dropped about 6 per cent since 2006, and will drop another 3 per cent by 2022.
If demand drops at that rate, they argue, the existing Darlington and Bruce nuclear stations alone could supply 50 per cent of the province’s power, without building any new units.
MORE:
[
http://www.thestar.com/business/economy ... s_say.html ]