Below please find an excerpt from a recent Globe and Mail article: Should we continue to ignore this?
This “over my dead body” attitude from a former engineer and
environmentalist made Natural Resource Minister is emblematic of what
former Parti Québécois premier Bouchard refers to as the “new religion”
of Quebec. In a province where the gas industry’s first and often
tactless developments have divided the population, gas wells – and even
hydroelectric dams – have come to symbolize man’s self-destructive
appetite for energy, at the expense of land, water and air.
It is a
fine debate. Yet for all its sociological, environmental and economic
considerations, it is somewhat vain. The valve on Quebec’s gas industry
is shut for a foreseeable future that extends well beyond the current
ban on gas exploration – which will last until environmental studies are
completed, by 2014. Blame it on the shale gas boom in the United
States. Blame it on the low gas prices that have ensued.
And the
consequences of these depressed prices are felt not only by the
province’s nascent gas industry, which had already drilled before the
ban some 30 wells in Quebec in the hopes of creating a 5,000- to
19,000-job industry.
They also hurt the venerable Hydro-Québec,
the state-owned electricity producer that has seen its export revenues
since 2008 melt even as it is pumping more electricity into the
northeastern U.S., its main export market. Gas-powered thermal
electricity plants are heating up Hydro-Québec’s competition.
The
price of natural gas has rebounded in recent months after it cratered in
April under $2 (U.S.) per million British thermal units (BTU). As gas
prices rise while the mercury falls on the eve of the winter heating
season, it now trades close to $3.50 per million BTU in New York.
However, Quebec’s gas industry estimated in earlier public hearings that
the price of gas needs to trade between $5 and $6 for it to cover its
production and delivery costs.
Even if gas-powered plants replace
coal plants, even if diesel trucks are converted to gas, it will likely
take a decade before the increased demand allows the price of natural
gas to rebound significantly – it spiked at close to $9 in 2008.
Quebec’s main gas distributor, Gaz Métro, expects prices to hover around
$5 for the next 10 years. Jean-Thomas Bernard, guest lecturer at the
University of Ottawa’s faculty of economics and an energy expert, thinks
the depressed prices could even last 15 years.
This presents a
headache for Hydro-Québec, which is already swarming with electricity
surpluses as the recession weighs on industrial demand, especially from
the pulp and paper mills that are in the midst of a structural downturn.
And the problem will only be made worse as the state-owned electricity
producer brings new capacity into service.
The complex project
Eastmain-1-A-Sarcelle-Rupert, which includes the construction of two
plants, four dams and the diversion of the Rupert River in the James Bay
region, will add 8.7 terawatt-hours of electricity production. The
Romaine hydroelectric complex in the Côte-Nord region will add another
eight TWh on average a year.
Hydro-Québec‘s electricity exports
have steadily gone up since 2007 to 26.8 TWh from 19.6 TWh. Yet as
electricity prices have fallen while the Canadian dollar has shot up,
the revenues the state producer collects from these out-of-province
sales have gone down – although they slightly rebounded in 2011. The
trend has continued in the first quarter of 2012: The year-over-year
exports shortfall accounts for Hydro-Québec’s 28 per cent drop in
revenue and 18 per cent reduction in profit.
And with any fall in
Hydro-Québec’s profits comes a reduction to the dividend it pays the
government, as 75 per cent of its profit are funnelled to Quebec.
To
paraphrase the title of an acclaimed Louis Bélanger film, Quebec is
suffering a severe case of “Gaz Bar Blues.”
So as Western Canadian
energy producers are lamenting the surge in U.S. shale gas and oil
production, which are threatening their exports south of the border,
this time around, they will find a sympathetic ear in Quebec.
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