Ban electric baseboard heaters: commission - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 07:54 PM | Calgary | -11.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Ban electric baseboard heaters: commission

New Brunswick's Energy Commission released its first recommendations on Tuesday, including a proposed ban on electric baseboard heaters in all new homes in the province and a price hike for existing electric baseboard customers.
Bill Thompson and Jeannot Volp released their first energy policy recommendations on Tuesday. ((CBC))

New Brunswick's Energy Commission released its first recommendations on Tuesday, including a proposed ban on electric baseboard heaters in all new homes in the province and a price hike for existing electric baseboard customers.

The two-member energy commissionrecently completed a tour of the province and is in the process of building a 10-year energy strategy for New Brunswick.

Jeannot Volp, a former Tory Energy and Finance minister, and Bill Thompson, a former deputy minister of Energy in the Lord government, released their preliminary report on Tuesday and said the demand for electric heat is strangling NB Power.

'We actually had people tell us a lot of people told us that baseboard heating should go.' Bill Thompson, New Brunswick Energy Commission

They argued theprovincial utilityis being forced tomaintain and operateinefficient fossil fuel generators, such as Coleson Cove, tomeet the needs of New Brunswickers on a few bitterly cold days a year and it comes at an enormous cost.

Volp andThompsonrecommended the cost of electricity be increased for the 60 per cent of New Brunswick residents who use electric heat, andthat electric baseboard heaters be banned in all new construction.

"We actually had people tell us a lot of people told usthat baseboard heating should go," said Thompson.

Report too vague: Liberals

Other sources of heat are readily available, he said. "Our geography gives us an advantage for accessing clean and renewable power from Hydro-Qubec and new developments in Newfoundland and Labrador and connects us to the markets supplying New England, which is driven by natural gas."

The attack on electric heat is the most controversial of the 49 recommendations made by the commission.It also recommended government find a way to fix pricing problems with natural gas,and that thepowers of the Energy and Utilities Board be beefed up.

Interim LiberalLeader Victor Boudreaucriticizedthe vagueness of the recommendations.

"Like many other sectors I think we're going to have to wait for the final report to really get a clear picture, a clear vision of where this government wants to go in terms of energy," he said.

The commission said it wants public feedback on its proposed recommendationsbefore submitting a final reportin May,which the Alward government has promised will form the basis of sweeping new energy policies.