Alberta electricity rule changes may add $100M to Medicine Hat solar park project, firm says
An energy consulting firm says recent changes to Alberta’s electricity market regulations could cost the City of Medicine Hat an extra $100 million if it builds a proposed solar project due to a provincial fee targeting electricity congestion.
The city is applying to purchase the rights to a 325-megawatt, 1,600-acre Saamis Solar Park project from privately owned DP Energy.
The province currently charges a generator unit owner contribution charge to secure transmission capacity. That bill was capped and is refundable over 10 years.
According to the consultants, Alberta revealed earlier this week that the unit owner fee would be replaced with a non-refundable and uncapped “transmission reinforcement payment” by 2025.