Talk:Electricity policy of Alberta
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Content from 2013
[edit]To be integrated in section on AESO with more recent RS:"Keith Provost, former senior vice-president of Alberta Power Ltd. (now ATCO Power), with decades of experience in the electrical utility business, argued that instead of marketing electricity contracts for future deliveries in a regulated market, AESO has its own system that is open to manipulation and is not a free-market system. According to AESO, "The pool price is the arithmetic average of the 60 one-minute system marginal prices. Only those offers accepted generate power and receive the AESO pool price. All offers accepted to receive the same price, the pool price, not the price offered."[1] It is this deregulated system that causes volatility in the price of electricity, keeps consumer prices high while maximizing profits to generating companies.[1]
Improving structure of this article by comparing similar articles
[edit]The structure of this article could be improved. The article Ontario electricity policy includes the following sections and subsections which might be a useful guide.Oceanflynn (talk) 04:39, 27 February 2022 (UTC)
Contents
- 1 History of electricity demand planning in Ontario
- 1.1 Early history
- 1.2 Electricity demand planning 1970s–1990s
- 1.2.1 Porter Commission
- 1.2.2 Demand/Supply Plan (DSP) Report
- 1.3 Ontario's short experiment with competitive retail markets
- 1.3.2 Electricity Conservation and Supply Task Force
- 1.3.3 Creation of Ontario Power Authority
- 1.4 Green Energy Act
- 2 Integrated Power System Plan (IPSP)
- 2.1 IPSP evaluation and development process
- 2.2 Existing environmental policy process
- 3 Central planning and traditional regulation versus competitive markets
- 3.1 Central planning and traditional regulation
- 3.2 Deregulation and competitive markets
- 4 Conservation and demand management
- 4.1 Current and expected future electricity demand
- 4.2 Conservation and demand-side management initiatives in Ontario
- 4.3 Government actors involved in conservation and demand management
- 5 Supply options
- 5.1 Coal
- 5.2 Natural gas
- 5.3 Cogeneration
- 5.4 Nuclear
- 5.5 Renewables
- 5.5.1 Hydroelectricity
- 5.5.2 Wind
- 5.5.3 Biomass
- 5.5.4 Solar and geothermal
- 5.6 Imports
Inaccurate document
[edit]False: The first coal-fired steam turbine in Alberta was the Genesee generation unit, Genesee 2, which was built in 1989 with a capacity of 410 megawatts. 2604:3D09:6B86:C100:C9DE:6788:5CA5:7C64 (talk) 17:26, 18 August 2023 (UTC)
- ^ a b Provost 2013.