B.C. has become increasingly dependent on electricity imports, and that鈥檚 a problem, according to Barry Penner, chair of the Energy Futures Institute (EFI) and former MLA.
鈥淔or the last two years we鈥檝e imported the equivalent of two Site C dams鈥 worth of electricity,鈥 Penner said, referring to the $16-billion hydroelectric project in northeastern B.C. 鈥淲e鈥檝e become dependent on the United States for electricity because of our own complacency.鈥
He noted that it cost , due in part to ongoing drought in many areas of the province.
鈥淎bout 95 per cent of B.C.鈥檚 electricity comes from hydro,鈥 Penner said. 鈥淲ithout precipitation, you don鈥檛 have hydroelectric. And this year鈥檚 snowpack isn鈥檛 looking any better.鈥
To make matters worse, Penner points out, B.C. is aggressively pushing for an electrified economy鈥攎ore electric vehicles, more heat pumps, and less reliance on natural gas. While B.C. is banning new natural gas power generation, it鈥檚 importing electricity from Alberta and the U.S. where power is largely generated by burning fossil fuels.
According to 2022 figures on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency website, fossil fuels were the most common fuel type for electricity production in the U.S. with natural gas accounting for about 40 per cent of total energy production. Coal was second at nearly 20 per cent and nuclear third at 18 per cent. The Alberta government website states that, since 2018, natural gas has accounted for the bulk of electricity generation in the province.
鈥淔rom the atmosphere鈥檚 perspective, it gives not a damn where the emissions are generated,鈥 Penner said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e just shifting our greenhouse gases (GHG) to Wyoming or Alberta and letting them take the hit on paper while we are trying to show that we鈥檙e reducing our emissions.鈥
But even at that we鈥檙e failing, he said. Penner pointed out that the . It got no media pickup, and nobody noticed it - that was intended, he said.
鈥淥ur emissions went up three per cent in the whole last year, exactly the year they said that our emissions would drop 16 per cent compared to 2007. So news flash, we're not meeting the legal requirement this year to be 16 per cent below 2007 levels, we are above and trending upwards.鈥
Penner also called out the province for blocking natural gas projects that could provide stable, local energy. In December 2023, the, which would have improved natural gas supply to the region.
Instead, , which will see LNG trucked over the Coquihalla Highway instead of delivering it through a pipeline.
鈥淵ou鈥檒l be passing those trucks on the highway,鈥 Penner pointed out. 鈥淎nd by the way, what are the greenhouse gas emissions of trucking LNG up and over the Coquihalla? A lot more than if it were in a pipeline.鈥
He also noted that BC Hydro鈥檚 finances aren鈥檛 looking great. 鈥淭heir debt was only supposed to go up $2.5 billion last year - it went up $3.3 billion.鈥
Penner said much of the increase is attributable to the additional purchases of 鈥榤arket power.鈥 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the euphemism in the budget documents for importing electricity from south of the border.鈥
Speaking to reporters at the Legislature on Thursday (Mar. 6), Premier David Eby said the province has 鈥渂een forced into contingency planning鈥 due to BC Hydro鈥檚 reliance on imported electricity.
Penner welcomed recognition of B.C.鈥檚 vulnerability. 鈥淗owever, the next step after acknowledging a problem is to do something about it,鈥 he said in a .
He added that there is a way out鈥攂ut it requires B.C. to rethink its energy policies.
鈥淟et us continue to use natural gas, with more efficiency, of course. But the idea that the Okanagan should be forced to not grow using natural gas is again another self-imposed straitjacket of your economy.鈥
Penner served four terms in the B.C. Legislature as the province's Attorney General, environment minister, and Aboriginal relations minister.
He made his comments as part of a on Mar. 5.