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New Brunswick

Saint John wind farm undercuts N.B. Power electricity prices by more than half

Electricity generated at the Burchill wind farm in Saint John and sold to Saint John Energy in 2023 undercut prices being charged to the municipal utility by N.B. Power by more than half, new figures suggest.

Provincial utility warns of trouble if too many customers choose self-generation of energy to save money

Burchill Wind Farm
The Burchill wind farm sits by the Bay of Fundy at the western edge of Saint John near the giant smokestacks of N.B. Power's Coleson Cove oil-burning generating station. (Roger Cosman/CBC)

Electricity generated at the Burchill wind farm in Saint John and sold to Saint John Energy in 2023 undercut prices being charged to the municipal utility by N.B. Power by more than half, new figures suggest.

It's a discount so deep it has N.B. Power concerned about others making a similar choice to bypass its system, and pricing,in a similar way.

"There is an electricity system that needs to be paid paid for," Brad Coady, the N.B. Power vice-president, said last month during an Energy and Utilities Board hearing into the utility'sproposed new rates.

"To the extent that customers have the wherewithal to escape N.B. Power being their supplier of choice, that causes cost-shifting onto other customers. That's the concern."

Saint John Energy will not directly say what it paid last year for electricity coming from the wind farm, claiming the amount to be confidential.

WATCH | How much did SJE save by buying from a wind farm?:

How Saint John saved millions on electricity in 2023

2 months ago
Duration 1:13
Saint John Energy has escaped complete dependence on N.B. Power by purchasing some of its electricity from a wind farm instead. The company's president says the financial benefits have been significant.

"The power purchase agreement with Burchill Wind is commercially and competitively sensitive so we will be unable to confirm the price," company spokesperson Jessica DeLongwrote in an email

However, the utility has disclosed enough information in bits and pieces over the last several weeks to suggest the price in 2023 was $41 per megawatthour.

Burchill, which is jointly owned by the Neqotkuk Maliseet Nation at Tobique and the Nova Scotia-based windenergy company Natural Forces,officially opened in June 2023.

Saint John Energy Sign
Saint John Energy is hoping to displace 15 per cent of the electricity it used to buy from N.B. Power with energy it buys from the Burchill wind farm, more than 135,000 megawatt hours a year. (Robert Jones/CBC News)

According to DeLong, it sold 76,900 megawatt hours of electricity to Saint John Energy by the end of December 2023.

In annual financial statements issued last month Saint John Energy reported that it paid the Burchill Wind partnership $3.15 million during 2023 for its output.Combining those two pieces of information appears to put the price of electricity from Burchill at $41 per megawatt hour.

That's less than half the $106 per megawatt hour thatN.B. Power charged Saint John Energy for supplying the bulk of electricity used in the city during 2023.

The savings from the wind facility were steep enough, even from a half-year of production, to allow Saint John Energy to post record net income of $5.1 million in 2023.

It also allowed the utility to implement a rate increase of 9.27 per cent for residential customers in Saint John in April, despite N.B. Power raising what it charges Saint John Energy and its own residential customers 9.8 per cent.

Those financial benefits come despite Saint John Energy having to spendmillions of dollars on new transmission and distribution infrastructure to handle the new Burchill wind supply after N.B. Power declined to allow the electricity onto its own wires, even for a fee.

Landscape view of the Burchill Energy Wind Project
Saint John Energy is one of N.B. Power's largest customers. Figures suggest it pays the Burchill Wind Project less than half what N.B. Power charges it. (Shane Fowler/CBC News)

At Saint John Energy's annual general meeting in June, company president Ryan Mitchell said the financial benefits of escaping complete dependence on N.B. Power and its prices have been significant.

"The long-term agreement we have in place to buy all of the electricity from the wind farm at a fixed price helps ensure price stability," Mitchell said.

Coady said Saint John Energy's wind project has been the largest loss of volume to an outside energy supplier experienced so far, but he noted the trend toward self-reliance has been growing "exponentially" among N.B. Power customers as rates climb.

A woman with a bindert in hard walks out of a meeting room.
N.B. Power president Lori Clark and chief financial officer Darren Murphy leave a rate hearing in June. Clark testified utility customers who bypass N.B. Power to buy electricity from third parties put a strain on the provincial system. (Pat Richard/CBC)

"It's not sustainable," he said about the possibility of significant numbers of large and small customers generating electricity on their own.

"Who would be left to pay for the system that we enjoy?"

N.B. Power president Lori Clark echoed that point and hinted that more thought has to be put into how to treat customers who, like Saint John Energy, have found a way to access N.B. Power services while avoiding some of its charges.

"When they want to use N.B. Power as a backup, when the wind isn't blowing or the sun isn't shining, then there's a cost for us to continue to maintain that infrastructure in the event that a customer wants to use it," Clark said.

"When a customer leaves then it leaves those costs for the infrastructure to be recovered by other customers on the system."