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Renewable energy developmentsin Alberta to face strict new rules

New rules will limit where developers can build wind turbines in Alberta and make it harderto installsolar panels on farmland.

Proponents say new limits will slam the brakes on industry's rapid growth in Alberta

Alberta renewables politics premier danielle smith
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith announced new rules governing the installation and cleanup of renewable energy projects in the province in Edmonton at the legislature on Feb. 28, 2024. Joining her was Affordability and Utilities Minister Nathan Neudorf, left, and parliamentary secretary for affordability and utilities, Chantelle de Jonge, right. (Manuel Carrillos/CBC)

New rules will limit where developers can build wind turbines in Alberta and make it harderto installsolar panels on farmland.

Premier Danielle Smith announced on Wednesdaya host of new restrictions on renewable power installations that drew praise from rural municipalities and frustration from green energy proponents.

With 92 per cent of Canada's new renewable energy generation and capacitybuilt in Alberta in 2023, the growing industry was moving too fast with too few restrictions, Smith said during anews conference in Edmonton.

"Renewables have a place in our energy mix, but the fact remains that they are intermittent and unreliable," Smith said."They are not the silver bullet for Alberta's electricity needs and they are not the silver bullet of electricity affordability."

As promised, the provincial governmenton Thursday will end a seven-month pause on the regulator approving proposed new renewable energy projects. There are 26 projects awaiting approval, Smith said.

During the pause, the Alberta Utilities Commission (AUC), which regulates the local utilities sector, held an inquiry studying land use, reclamation and grid reliability.

By Friday, the rules of the game will be substantially changed for an industry that invests billions of dollars in the province.

Drawing the most shock was the imposition of a new 35-kilometre buffer zone around protected areas and "pristine viewscapes" adescription Affordability and Utilities Minister Nathan Neudorf acknowledged Wednesday is subjective. New wind turbines will be forbidden in those zones and other projects will be subject to a visual impact assessment.

If that buffer zone is applied to all parks and protected areas in southern Alberta, three-quarters of the land would be off limits for turbines, saidJason Wang, senior analyst with the Pembina Institute's electricity program. The institute is a think-tank for clean energy transition policy.

"That's where most of Alberta's renewable advantage is," Wangsaid. "It's in the sunny south. It's in the windy parts of the province."

Wang said it's an unfair standard applied to one type of energy project.

Neudorf's press secretary Ashley M. Stevensonsaid the government has yet to establish the no-go windmill zones. They will be focused on western Alberta,nearerthe Rocky Mountains.

Alberta will no longer allow renewable power installations on its most versatile and productive farmland termed Class 1 and Class 2 soil unless the project's proponent can show how crops or livestock can use the land at the same time.

A government spokesperson said this applies to about 27 per cent of the province's agricultural land.

Heather MacKenzie, executive director of Solar Alberta, an industry advocate, said builders already avoid installing panels on good farmland.

Heather MacKenzie, solar alberta, renewables, edmonton
Heather MacKenzie, executive director of Solar Alberta, said new limits on renewable energy projects in Alberta place too many restrictions on wind installations and could drive up power prices. (Travis MacEwan/CBC)

A University of Calgary analysislast year found that installing enough solar panels, allowing Alberta to achieve anet zero power grid by 2035, would use 0.08 per cent of the province's agricultural land at most.

Smith said renewable energy project developers will also have to post a bond or a security to be held in trust to cover potential future clean-up costs. It's an approach the province should have taken from the outset with the oil and gas industry, shesaid.

The Alberta Energy Regulator says there are currently more than 170,000 wells across the province that are either inactive or abandoned.

"You don't correct that problem by compounding it," Smithsaid of the renewable requirements.

The provincial governmentdoes not yet have details on how a renewablesliability management program would work, nor how it would compare to the obligations byoil and gas companies.

The government also opened the door to renewable developments on Crown land on a case-by-case basis newswelcomed by industry players.

The AUC said 25 of the projects seeking approval are solar installations;one is wind. Some have adjoining storage, substationand connection facilities.Together, they would generate3,450 megawatts of power, if all approved.

New voices for municipalities

A new,automatic seat at the table for municipalities at AUCapproval hearingsis a win for the Rural Municipalities of Alberta (RMA), president Paul McLauchlintold CBC News Wednesday. The provincial governmentwill also help cover the costs of their participation in those hearings.

RMA, an advocacy organization,had also pushed for reassurance on land reclamation and protection of agricultural land.

Municipalities shouldn't have veto power, McLauchlin said, because county reeves and councillors could pay the political price for approval of a project that's in the province's best interest.

In Vulcan County, a sparsely populated part of southern Alberta that's home to Canada's largest wind and solar installations, residents felt the industry was moving too fast, Reeve Jason Schneider said Wednesday.

Although most companies worked collaboratively with the county, the lack of rules led to "hard feelings" and suspicion, he said.

A man stands in front of a banner.
Rural Municipalities of Alberta president Paul McLauchlin said he's pleased to see the Alberta Utilities Commission must take municipalities concerns into consideration when evaluating new renewable energy projects for approval. (Trevor Wilson/CBC)

"It is going to allow residents a little more assurance that the projects are being done properly, and we're not going to have a big mess on their hands in 20, 25 years when they come to the end of their life," he said.

However, the Canadian Renewable Energy Association said in a news release that banning projects from some areas means municipalities will lose out on tax revenues and lease payments.

Critics, including the Opposition NDP, see the new rules as hurdles to Alberta achieving net zero electricity generation by 2050 as promised, and risks limiting affordable and diversesources of power, which could further increaseelectricityprices.

The new policies also prompt more questions than answersand leave the industry in limbo, they say.

Dan Balaban, CEO of Calgary-based Greengate Power Corporation, says his company has stopped developing new projects in Albertauntil they know where the goalposts are.

"They're definitely not a flashing green light," Balabansaid of the new rules ongreen energy projects."At the very best, a yellow light, and possibly worse."

WATCH | Alberta pauses new renewable energy projects:

Alberta puts pause on new renewable energy projects

1 year ago
Duration 4:42
The provincial government will tell Alberta's utilities regulator to suspend approvals for new renewable electricity projects while they study gaps in the current development rules. For more context we've reached Evan Pivnick with Clean Energy Canada.

With files from Tiphanie Roquette, Madeline Smith and Travis McEwan