Power company says it's halting energy storage plan after backlash, death threat - Action News
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Ottawa

Power company says it's halting energy storage plan after backlash, death threat

A Toronto-based power corporation says it's halting its proposalfor an energy storage facility south of Ottawa after facing intense local pushback including someone uttering a death threat during an open house.

'If you scream the loudest, then you get to make the decisions,' says president

A rendering of a battery energy storage system with a misty forest in the background and fresh grassland in the foreground.
Baseload Power provided this concept rendering on a website about the battery project. Its president said it ultimately pulled out after vocal opposition from Elizabethtown-Kitley residents, while its councillors ultimately voted to ban battery energy storage systems for their term. (Submitted by Baseload Power)

A Toronto-based power corporationsays it's halting its proposalfor an eastern Ontario energy storage facilityafter facing intense local pushback including someone uttering a death threat during an open house.

The mayor ofElizabethtown-Kitley saidwhile police werecalled to the meeting and he regrets how it wentdown Baseload Power ultimately failed to gain traction because it didnot consult widely or early enough.

"Don't leave it until the last minute," said Mayor Brant Burrow of how the company handled its pitch.

In recent weeks, several Ontario communitieshave been asked tolend their support to renewable energy projects.

It comes as the Independent Electricity Systems Operator (IESO), which manages the province's energy needs, is soliciting pitches from companieson howto help shoulderOntario's growing power demands.

These kinds of systemsboost capacity of the hydro network, storingenergy generated at off-peak times to be used when demand is higher.

Baseload Power proposed tobuild an eight to 10 hectarelithium-ion battery energy storage system with a maximum generating capacity of300 megawatts in a rural northern part of Elizabethtown-Kitley, a township bordering Brockvillewhose southern boundary is more than100 kilometres south of Ottawa's core.

The IESO is seeking to add atotal of 4,000 megawatts to the grid.

The mayor said thefacility would have been close to some multigenerational farms. According to Burrow, locals had safety concerns, felt the process was rushed and that Baseload Power wasn't providing adequate information.

Things came to a head during a Nov. 2 public meeting hosted by the company.

'We don't want you in our township'

Jonathan Sandler, the company's president,told CBC that as soon as he opened his mouth at that meeting, someone interrupted and "basically said, 'Get the eff out of here. We don't want youin our township.'"

The company never got through itsfull presentation due to screaming, cursing and other behaviour that was "way beyond reasonable," Sandler said.

A power company president on a video call.
Jonathan Sandler, Baseload Power's president, says that he couldn't get through a presentation of his company's energy plans on Nov. 2 because township residents were behaving in a way that was 'way beyond reasonable.' (CBC)

Early in the meeting, Burrow said he heard one disruptive person utter, "Someone better call the feds 'cause someone is going to die here."

Out of caution, Burrow and the township phoned the OPP. While the meeting continued to be "rambunctious" prompting Burrow to address the crowd himself thingscalmed down by the time officers arrived, he said.

The company left pre-stamped feedback forms at the open house. To date, Sandler said, it has only received two back.

"One said to 'f--k off.' And the other was received after we decided to not proceed with the project," Sandler said.

Pulled out of 'this whole mess'

Baseload Power was then asked to speak during a Nov. 28 council meeting.

The company did not go, saying in a letter to councillors on Nov. 23it needed more time to "go through the sharing of information and education process that is very much necessary."

The project's development would continue, the letter said,while community engagement including providing reports from experts in the battery energy storage industry would resume early in 2024.

Sandler told CBC, however, that the company had by then already decided to put the brakes on the project.

"We came to the decision that, given the results of the open house we were pulling ourselves out of this whole mess," Sandler said.

"The fact that supporters of the project were afraid to come forward to voice their position left us with very little to no hope that council would have the ability to provide their support for the project," he later told CBC via email.

A map of a proposed battery storage facility in a rural area.
Baseload Power's site map for the proposed facility. (Submitted by Baseload Power)

No one spoke in favour of the project during the council meeting. Out of more than two dozen resident letters appendedto the agenda, only one expressedsupport.

"It makes sense that a site should be located in our area to[ensure]a steady supply of energy going into the future," the approving couple wrote.

Councillorsultimately voted to ban battery energy storage systems for the duration of their term. Sandler said they did that without hearing from experts.

'Late-in-the-game approach' a factor, mayor says

Burrow said Baseload Power's "late-in-the-game" consultation process did not leave the community and council enough time to fully consider the project and retainexperts of their own.

The company was working under a Dec. 12 deadline to file with theIESO.While Burrow and Sandler agree Baseload Power first reached out to the township in September, Burrow said the company should have gotten the ball rolling earlier.

He added that beyond increased taxation and a community development fund, the company provided few other specifics about the project's economic benefits.

A mayor poses for an official photo.
Mayor Brant Burrow says while he regrets the tenor of the heated public meeting Baseload Power held in early November, he believes the company failed to gain traction because it didnot consult widely or early enough. (Elenora Luberto/J E M M A N Photography)

SandlersaidBaseload Power shared information and notices with the township and councillors well in advance of the Nov. 2 open house, where it did not get a chance to talk in detail about the project's benefits.

Not every councillor was at the open house, he added.

The company also notified all residents living within onekilometrefrom the proposed site about the open house and launched a website.

The concerns about safety incidents referred to outdated technology that Sandler saidthe company did not plan to use.

Sandler said Baseload Power was never given a fair shot and that council's decision set a bad precedent.

"If you scream the loudest, then you get to make the decisions."