What Manitoba Hydro's gamble means for your rates - Action News
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Manitoba

What Manitoba Hydro's gamble means for your rates

The ugly truth for Manitobans is rate increases are the most stable revenue tool at Hydro's disposal and the next decade might not look too pretty.

'We are going to have to raise rates faster,' says CEO

The PUB has Hydro pocketing current rate increases to prevent them skyrocketing with Bipole III comes online. (Manitoba Hydro)

Facing increasing debt and an unstable energy market, Manitoba Hydro has onesure route to increase revenue.

The ugly truth forManitobansis rate increases are the moststable revenue toolthe Crown corporation can use and the next decade might not look too pretty.

"The biggest thing we can do to ensure that Manitoba Hydro continues to be sound financially is to manage our costs and look for reasonable rate increases that support the investments we have to make," Hydro CEO and president Kelvin Shepherd told CBC News.

"I can't control what the PUB (Public Utilities Board) will approve, but what I can control is what we ask for, and we are going [to] ask for a reasonable ask that is going to address Manitoba Hydro's requirements to keep us self-sustaining."

Another lever at Shepherd's disposal is the corporation's operating costs. Hydro made headlines earlier this month when it announced over 900 positions, or almost 15 per cent of its workforce, would be eliminated in a sweeping move to cut down on costs. The measure will save $65 million, but Shepherdadmits isn't enough to cover the billions of debt carried by the province.

Built into the Crown corporation's 20-year plan from 2015 is 13 years of 3.95 per cent increases, followed by two per cent increases in the subsequent years.
Sanford Riley, chair of the Manitoba Hydro-Electric Board, says Hydro's operations are going to require a significant restructuring that will not be pleasant for staff. (CBC)

SanfordRiley, the chair of Hydro's board, has warned even higher rates into the double digits would be needed to get a handle on Hydro's burgeoning $13-billion debt-burden and increasingly low debt-to-equity ratio.

Shepherd isn't ready to tiphis hand and say what increases Hydro will apply for this fiscal year, but said all signs point to a change in direction and asking for a hikehigher than 3.95 per cent.

"We are going to have to raise rates faster," he said. "I think we are going to look at something different than 3.95 per cent."

One credit analyst says the Crown corporation's abilityto raise rates has been used by credit agencies to justify the idea that Hydro can remain a self-supporting utility. Plus,Manitobansenjoy some of the cheapest rates in the country.

"There is a lot more room for (Manitoba) to increase rates, unlike a province such as Ontario," said Tom Li, a utility credit analyst withDBRS, which released its outlook on Hydro in September.

"It shows how much flexibility there is for a utility to be able to increase its rates to recover costs."

Echoes of the 1970s

Historical data provided by Manitoba Hydro show acorrelation between increased rates and massive capital investments by the public utility. The utility stands in a similar position today as it was in the 1970swhenHydro was at various stages of building the $226-million Churchill Diversion, along with several other massive projects.

During this period,Manitobanssaw the greatest rate increases in the public utility's history. Shepherd describes that era as a "different world" when interest rates had skyrocketed and the corporation's capital investments, by scale, were more massive than recent projects.

Six years of double-digit rate increases followed, beginning with a 20.6 per cent increase in 1974 the highest increase in Manitoba Hydro's history. In the subsequent years, double-digit increases between 19.8 and 14.4 per cent continued until 1979.

The chair of Manitoba Hydro is calling the utility's financial state a 'ticking time bomb'

8 years ago
Duration 2:17
The chair of Manitoba Hydro's board didn't mince words in describing the financial problems facing the utility, in the wake of a workforce reduction of 900 staff and potential double-digit rate increases.

Currently, the 695-megawattKeeyaskhydroelectric generating station, which is being built on the Nelson River in northern Manitoba, is estimated to cost roughly $7.2 billion.

BipoleIII a 1,341-kilometre,2,300-megawatt transmission line, running down the west side of Lake Winnipeg is estimated to costbetween $4.65 billion and $5.2 billion to build.

"My responsibility is to try and bring forward a plan that addresses what we think is reasonable for customers at the same time while addressing the real requirement. We think we have to address the fact we have costs and increase investments we have in the system," Shepherd said.

The Public Utilities Board ultimately decides onrate increases requested by Hydro, but balked at Hydro's recent 2016-17 increaserequest of 3.95 per cent, arguing Hydro's finances have shown it could reach its debt-to-equity targets at a lower rate increase.

In its most recent decision the PUB allowed a rate increase of 3.36 per cent and dictated the interim rate increase must go into a deferral account to reduce the expected rate shock when Bipole III andKeeyaskcome into service. By 2018, when the Bipole is scheduled to become operational, nearly $360 million will be in the account to be used to help keep rate increases low, explained a spokesperson for Hydro.

The PUB hasn't ruled out accepting a 2017-18 rate increase of 3.95 per cent or higherif the financial situation of Hydro deteriorates to providea "financial cushion."

Shepherd told CBC News Hydro's 2017-18 rate application won't be filed until the spring, after its 2016 financial forecast is complete.

Export stability

For last decade more than 30 per cent of Manitoba Hydro's revenue has come from exports, bringing in $5.2 billion over 10 years. BringingKeeyaskonline is expectedto increase those export revenues dramatically, explained Shepherd.

Manitoba Hydro is partially hedging its multibillion-dollar capital programon $4.5 billion in exportcontracts made possible by Keeyask's capacity.

Shepherd admits, in hindsight, Hydro should have delayed the construction ofKeeyask. While he arguesBipolewill protectManitobansfroman "economy-devastating" blackout event,Keeyaskwas built to increase export capacity and changing markets have decreased its viability. Export prices are on the decline and alternative energy pushes in the United States have decreased demand,he said.

"I think it is fair to say that the economics have deteriorated," Shepherd said. "20/20 hindsight, I would have said, 'Yes, I would have waited.' But I am not faced with that today, I am faced with a project many years in the making and $3 billion already invested."

Four long-term export deals with Minnesota, Wisconsin and Saskatchewan have been signedthat are dependent onKeeyask. The utility has soldoff all the additional capacity and dependable energy brought on byKeeyaskuntil 2025.
The Keeyask generating station's capacity is pre-sold until 2025. (Keeyask Hydropower Limited Partnership.)

How much Hydro will make off each individual contracts with Xcel Energy, Minnesota Power, Wisconsin Public Service and SaskPower is confidential. The contracts begin around 2020, with some ending as late as 2040.

Economist BradyYauchdescribed the decision to buildKeeyaskas amultibillion-dollar gamblethat might not pay off,given the current energy market.

"Building big megaprojects and dams are always inherently risky. Manitoba Hydro thought they could get them done on time and on budget," he said, noting the projected delays and cost increases that have recently been announced.

"Industrial demand is flat so the money they thought they'd get from being a major energy powerhouse in North America didn't materialize."

DaveMcMillan,MinnesotaPower's executive vice-president, says Hydro is the only utility in the area that has the resources and capacity to supply its needs. The private utility is embarking on a plan to rely more heavily on wind energy to supply power to its over 145,000 residential and commercial customers.Keeyaskwill give Minnesota Power the ability to store power on their system to use when wind levels are low.

The contract with Minnesota Power expires in 2035.
The Google logo is spelled out in heliostats at the Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System in the Mojave Desert. Solar power is making inroads in the U.S., but Hydro could be seen as a dependable backup. (REUTERS/Steve Marcus)

"The renewable aspect is huge, as is the battery (power) For that reason we are willing to pay somewhat of a premium for it," he said. "And 15 to 20 years from now, it will be a resource forManitobansin the long-haul."

Selling off excess energy, outside of contracts, to the United States a.k.a "spot pricing" has become increasingly challenging, argued Yauch.

Shepherd agreed, saying utility companies are being offered subsidies to use wind or solar energy which is hard to compete with. While volume of export has increased, prices are declining, he said.

A report released in February byGreentech Media, a U.S.-based clean energy research group, reported solar energy accounted for 39 percent of new capacity additions across all fuel types in 2016.

With excess power up for sale from neighbouring states, the price has been driven down, explained Yauch of the Toronto-based Consumer Policy Institute.

"They'll take your power, but if they do it on a market-based price, they are going to do it at a cheap deal," he said."No one has seen an increase in power prices."

With files from Sean Kavanaugh