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 Ontario power prices rival rates set in U.S.

 By MARTIN MITTELSTAEDT AND LUMA MUHTADIE, Globe and Mail

 SOURCE: NAVIGANT CONSULTING

 Wednesday, September 25, 2002 – Print Edition, Page A20

 High electricity bills landing in many Ontario homes this month show that the
 province's residents are facing some of North America's priciest power.

 Ontario, which had an electricity cost of 4.3 cents a kilowatt-hour before
 opening the market to competition on May 1, had lower prices in May and
 June, but has been near or above prices in most of the United States since
 July.

 So far in September, the Ontario price has averaged 8.2 cents a kwh,
 according to Navigant Consulting Ltd., a Toronto energy consulting firm,
 well above the rate in western New York state, New England, and the
 Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Maryland area, high-price areas of the U.S.

 Today's price forecast by the Independent Electricity Market Operator, the
 provincial agency that operates Ontario's wholesale power market, was
 expected to exceed even levels in California, where residents are bracing for
 high power demand because of a late-season heat wave.

 Toronto residents have not faced the higher prices because Toronto Hydro
 has kept charges at 4.3 cents per kwh. It will make periodic adjustments,
 and possibly levy one-time charges if prices stay high.

 In many other Ontario municipalities, residents have opened bills this month
 that are higher than ever before.

 In Wawa, the deregulation of prices on electricity provided by Great Lakes
 Power Limited has put the city "on the border of crashing," Chris Wray, the
 city's chief administrative officer, said.

 "We've got 3,600 people in this town, and a lot of them are on old-age
 pension or a fixed income. I just got a call from a woman whose pension
 comes to $1,000 a month and her hydro bill for 50 days was $500."

 Wawa resident Roger Guindon got a power bill of $537 that nearly matched
 his $575-a-month rent.

 "I'm on a disability pension," Mr. Guindon said. "What am I going to do to
 live, for rent? This makes no sense. The government's got to do something."

 Wawa resident Rodger White, 58, said he and his wife have had to make
 extra efforts to limit their electricity use.

 "We just sit here with one light on," Mr. White said. "We've never been
 extravagant, so there's really nothing more we can do."

 Before deregulation, Ontario had prices that were high by Canadian
 standards, but generally lower than those in the U.S. The provincial Ministry
 of Energy even issued a study just before the market was opened predicting
 that competition would save consumers $3-billion to $6-billion over the next
 eight years.

 But those savings don't seem to be on the horizon, at least not yet.

 Jonathan Dickman-Wilkes, a consultant with Navigant, cautioned that it is
 still too early to give an accurate prediction on the direction of Ontario's
 electricity rates and that a full year might be required to get an indication of
 the market price for power.

 He said rates have been high this summer because of hot-weather demand
 for air conditioning, at a time when electricity supplies have been curtailed
 because a drought has lowered water levels, cutting reserves of cheap
 hydroelectric power.

 He said delays in restarting idled nuclear reactors have also cut the amount of
 power available.

 New Democratic Party leader Howard Hampton says high electricity rates
 are a lightning rod for public concern. Mr. Hampton said he attended a farm
 fair in Southwestern Ontario last week, where many farmers told him the
 rates threaten their livelihoods.
 Comparing energy rates
 Average daily price for a kwh of energy by region in Canadian cents for May
 to September, 2002.

                       Western      New     Mid-Atlantic


             Ontario   New York   England      States


 MAY          2.9¢        3.0¢      5.3¢         3.4¢


 JUNE         3.5         3.6       4.3          4.6


 JULY         5.8         5.9       5.2          5.9


 AUGUST       6.4         5.3       7.2          5.9


 SEPTEMBER    8.1         5.5       6.4          4.6


 ALL MONTHS   5.0         4.6       5.6          4.9



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