Thank you, Mr. Chairman and committee members, for the opportunity to be here today.
I expect you have a copy of the presentation I'll be giving. It's a little long, so I'm going to be going through some slides rather quickly, but I'll cover all the topics within.
My key messages for you today are that, first, wind energy has moved from the margin to the mainstream. Second, while Canada is currently far behind other countries in terms of deployment of wind energy, we have tremendous opportunities in this country. Third, we have made some good progress and we've started to create a policy framework that can help Canada, over time, become a leader in this sector, but that requires a stable policy framework. Right now the current uncertainty that exists over wind energy policy at the federal level can potentially have some very serious implications for the wind energy industry going forward.
Here is the first slide. I want to talk a little bit first about moving from the margin to the mainstream. Wind energy worldwide now provides enough power to meet the needs of 17 million homes. That's 59,000 megawatts of capacity. Wind energy meets 20% of electricity demand in Denmark, 5% in Germany, and 8% in Spain, starting from very low numbers at the start of this decade.
In 2005, the total value of installed wind energy capacity in the world was $14 billion U.S. in that year. There were 100,000 people employed in Spain, Denmark, and Germany alone. The growth is expected to continue, moving from today's 59,000 megawatts to 149,000 megawatts by 2010. That's an estimate from the World Energy Council.
The industry is increasingly characterized by major energy players. In the last five years we've seen General Electric and Siemens become leading wind turbine manufacturers. Within Canada, when we look at who are developing wind energy projects, it's a lot of the cream of the crop of Canada's energy industry. It's Suncor, it's Nexen, it's TransCanada, it's Enbridge, it's TransAlta, and it's EPCOR, all wanting to get involved in this industry.
Now why is that? There are a number of reasons. Some are economic. Technological evolution has led to declines in the cost of wind energy, and it's becoming increasingly cost-competitive with conventional power. If you look forward, you can have a high degree of certainty that wind energy's costs are going to continue to go down. You have less certainty of that with other technologies. The gap will continue to close.
Wind energy provides significant economic benefits in terms of investment and job creation, but I also want to highlight that it particularly provides benefits to rural communities. Canada's best wind resource is in rural areas. These areas have often been hard hit by declines in other sectors, such as agriculture, forestry, or mining. Wind energy provides land-lease payments to farmers of several thousand dollars a year per turbine and contributes significantly to the rural tax base.
In fact, in the United States, John Deere, the farm tractor and farm equipment manufacturer, has actually set up a program to provide funding to farmers to support the deployment of wind energy on their properties, because they see wind energy as a way to keep the family farm going in the U.S.
On the environmental side, wind energy provides a broad range of environmental benefits. I won't go over them here; they're fairly well understood.
I do want to spend a second talking about Canada's wind energy opportunity. We have probably the best wind resource in the world. We have the world's longest coastline and the world's second-largest land mass. Our wind resource is well distributed in all regions of the country; every jurisdiction has some opportunities with respect to wind energy development. Because our country on a national scale gets most of its electricity from hydroelectricity, we have opportunities that other countries do not have to integrate wind energy into our system, because hydroelectricity is a very good partner for wind energy in terms of helping to manage the variability of wind when it's integrated into the system.
Here is the current status of wind energy: we have an installed capacity today of 944 megawatts. This provides enough electricity for a little over 300,000 homes. It's only 0.4% of total electricity demand in this country, but it's growing rapidly.
If you look a little further in the presentation, you'll see that between 2002 and 2005, installed capacity of wind energy in Canada has increased by 38% a year. Last year it increased by 54%. This year we started with 683 megawatts; we're going to be at close to 1,200 megawatts by the end of the year.
Currently, either under construction or with signed power purchase agreements--so with contractual agreements that will lead to construction going forward--we have almost 3,000 additional megawatts of wind energy, moving forward, in Canada. So the growth is real and significant.
That growth has been stimulated by an emerging policy framework in Canada. This isn't really unusual. I mean, Canada's federal and provincial governments have traditionally played a role in creating policy frameworks to facilitate the development of new energy sources, be they the oil sands, nuclear technology, or offshore petroleum technology, and this is now beginning to emerge for wind energy.
At the federal level, the key initiative has been the wind power production incentive. This program was created in 2001 as an industrial development measure with a goal of having 1,000 megawatts of wind energy in place by the year 2007. We will pass 1,000 megawatts this year. The funding for this program was fully committed in the summer of 2005.
In the 2005 budget, an expansion of the program to a new target of 4,000 megawatts by 2010 was announced. That expansion has not yet been implemented. The funds are frozen.
What the wind power production incentive does is provide an incentive payment to producers of wind energy of 1¢ per kilowatt hour for a 10-year period. Again, this is not unusual if you look at what other countries are doing. The United States has a similar program, the production tax credit, which provides 1.9¢ U.S. per kilowatt hour for a 10-year period for wind energy production.
We also have, as Tom Wallace mentioned, a supportive tax policy initiative, the Canadian renewable conservation expense in class 43.1.
The wind power production incentive, as I said earlier, has been critical in kick-starting the industry in Canada. The fact that the funds associated with that program are frozen at this time is problematic for the industry. This uncertainty has real-world implications.
First, it sends a signal to the investment community that maybe Canada's wind energy market is going to be characterized by boom and bust. Maybe it isn't going to be stable. Maybe it isn't going to be sustainable or constant. That is something that has plagued U.S. wind energy policy going forward. In the U.S., we've seen years when you have 1,600 megawatts of wind energy installed and then years when you have 200 megawatts of wind energy installed because of the vagaries associated with the production tax credit.
The result is that investors decide not to invest. Given the size of the U.S. market for wind energy, it's woefully under-invested in terms of manufacturing capacity, because manufacturers have said that they don't want to invest there if they can't have any certainty that they're going to have a market for five years that's fairly constant. If they are going to have a good year and then a bad year, they're going to go somewhere else where they will have five good years. We're worried that the current status of WPPI is sending that signal to investors who are looking at Canada.
The second problem arising from the freezing of WPPI funds at this time is that we have a number of projects in Canada that participated in provincial procurement processes for wind energy after the 2005 budget, and participated in those processes with the expectation that the expansion of the wind power production incentive would be going forward. Therefore, when they bid into those processes and said they would like to compete in those processes and provide you with wind power, they assumed that they would be able to draw on those funds from the wind power production incentive.
There are eight projects in Ontario, representing about $2 billion of investment, that are in this situation right now. Under the contractual terms of those agreements, those projects are now in a position where they have to start building. They have to start delivering power in 2007, or at the latest by early 2008, or they will be penalized under the terms of the contracts.
It's a very difficult decision to go ahead with this investment when a source of revenue for the project, like the wind power production incentive, which for many of these projects would amount to about 10% of the revenue for the project for the first 10 years, is uncertain. It completely changes the project economics. It makes them much more marginal, and it has really put these companies in a very difficult position. Timing matters.
Frozen funds also means that there are limited resources within government to actually continue to process wind power production incentive projects.
We have about 40 projects right now that are in the process of undergoing a federal environmental assessment in the hopes of being able to secure the wind power production incentive. To secure WPPI funds, you have to have a federal environmental assessment. Those environmental assessment processes have slowed down enormously because of the uncertainty associated with WPPI, delaying future projects in terms of when they may be able to go forward.
Finally, the uncertain status of WPPI sends a signal to provincial governments that maybe the federal government isn't willing to be a partner going forward, as it has been to this point. That's problematic, because provincial governments have gone forward setting increasingly aggressive targets for wind energy, expecting the federal government to be there as well.
If you go to the next slide, you'll see a sense of what some of those targets are. Quebec recently announced in its energy strategy that it's going to seek 4,000 megawatts of wind energy by 2015; Ontario wants 2,700 megawatts of renewables by 2010; Manitoba, 1,000 megawatts of wind energy by 2014. I won't go through the whole list, but if you add all of those things together, provincial aspirations at this time total a little over 9,000 megawatts of wind energy by 2015. Remember that we're at 944 right now, so that's a minimum going-forward objective of 8,000 megawatts of new capacity over the next decade.
What would that mean for Canada if we actually proceeded with it? Well, by 2015, it would mean that wind energy was providing a little over 3% of Canada's total electricity demand. Now, 3% still sounds pretty small, but recognize that natural gas today provides only about 4% of Canada's electricity. Recognize as well that between 2005 and 2015, of all the new electricity generation currently planned to be built in this country, wind energy would be responsible for about 17% of that electricity.
It's clear that governments and utilities at the provincial level are looking for wind energy to play an important role in their future supply and they're looking for the federal government to be a partner in it.
I will note that even the level of growth we're talking about won't make Canada a world leader; it will move us to the middle of the pack. Already we have countries such as Denmark, Germany, and Spain that are using much more wind energy than we are. But if you also look at some of the objectives countries have set, the United States is putting in 10,000 megawatts of wind energy in the next three years; China wants 30,000 megawatts of wind energy by 2020.
Spain is an interesting example. Spain in the year 2000 was essentially where Canada is today. Spain had about 1,000 megawatts of wind energy capacity. In the year 2000, Spain adopted a target of 13,000 megawatts of wind energy by 2010. It seemed extremely ambitious at the time. Last year, Spain dropped that target and replaced it with a new target of 20,000 megawatts by 2010, and they're on track to meet that target.
Looking forward, our first priority is to proceed with the 2005 budget commitment to expand the wind power production incentive, and looking further forward, we'd like to see the development of a comprehensive wind energy strategy to support the deployment of wind energy in Canada.
Let's make efforts to attract domestic manufacturing capability. Let's do things with respect to streamlining environmental assessment processes. Let's focus on human resource development. This is a rapidly growing sector, and we have at this time little in the way of training for potential employees in this sector.
I've added a couple of slides at the end that I won't touch on now but would be happy to touch on in questions concerning what I call non-barriers to future wind energy development, some of the common myths related to wind energy involving sound, birds, and land use. I've also talked about some of the issues that are real issues for wind energy--for example, visual impacts, decisions about future transmission, and how far we can go in terms of ensuring a stable and sustainable policy framework.
The last point I'll mention, Mr. Chairman, is just to say that while we're poised right now for significant growth in Canada's wind energy sector of large, grid-scale electricity, Canada also has an emerging opportunity with respect to small wind energy systems, systems a farmer might use on his property, systems someone at a cottage might use, or someone at a home or a school or a small business or facility.
Canada actually has some of the leading manufacturers of some of these technologies in the world, but right now those manufacturers export essentially all their product. They survive by exporting their material to other countries because we don't have a policy and framework in place with respect to smaller wind energy systems. We have a couple of proposals in that regard that we'd be happy to forward to the committee and have further discussions about it at some point in the future.
Thank you very much for your time.