Thank you, Mr. Chair.
The Canadian Electricity Association is the voice of Canada's electricity industry. Its members represent the entire electricity value chain, from producers and distributors to residential and industrial customers across the country.
The electricity grid is the largest and most complex and interconnected machine in North America. It's safe, solid, and well maintained, but it is starting to show its age. Much of Canada's power generation and transmission infrastructure was built more than 50 years ago, when Canada's population stood at 20 million. Today, with more than 34 million Canadians, per-household energy consumption is often double, or triple, what it was in the 1960s.
A recent Conference Board of Canada study entitled, “Shedding Light on the Economic Impact of Investing in Electricity Infrastructure”, projects that an investment of $347.5 billion from 2011 to 2030 is required to meet electricity demand and to power Canada's future.
Increasing the grid's capacity by renewing and expanding infrastructure to meet our customers' power needs is a tremendous challenge. But there is more. Despite the fact that aggressive energy-efficiency programs exist all over the country, a fundamental renewal of infrastructure is needed.
Compounding the challenge, but also providing a great opportunity, is the need to improve both environmental performance and operational efficiency by replacing analog equipment with new cutting-edge technologies. In short, our existing electricity infrastructure must not only be renewed, but the system itself must be transformed. This is where innovation comes in.
We recognize that innovation in the electricity sector is essential for developing a safe, reliable, and sustainable energy future for Canadians. As we turn over our aging infrastructure, innovation provides an opportunity for us to replace assets with newer and better versions.
The electricity sector is stepping up the pace of its innovative process. Innovation is defined in a number of ways, but for us, it means, quite simply, creating and putting to use smarter or more efficient products, processes, services, technologies or ideas that yield environmental, societal and financial benefits.
Some Canadian electric utilities are implementing innovation directly related to operations on the ground, such as SaskPower's demonstration project near Estevan, Saskatchewan, that will capture and store a million tonnes of carbon dioxide a year. That's the equivalent of taking more than 250,000 cars off the roads.
Others are innovating through the development of processes and services, such as electric vehicle charging stations, infrastructure, or new conservation programs that require collaboration behind the meter.
Innovation is not limited to technological advancements. For an electric company, innovation can mean introducing an internal program for employees to dramatically reduce health and safety risks, or identifying new ways to reach customers and communicate with them. From an electric company's perspective, what matters is being able to either directly or indirectly use innovation to meet new challenges posed by environmental, social and economic sustainability.
In 2012, CEA's sustainable electricity awards recognized several companies that were working on innovative approaches to project financing, effective engagement of stakeholders, and the optimization of wind generation.
Let me elaborate a bit more on the wind power optimization project, given it's unique approach and the amount of cooperation shown by governments and industry alike.
The wind power optimization project, PowerShift Atlantic, is a four-year clean energy fund project funded through Natural Resources Canada. It's a collaborative research project by New Brunswick Power, in partnership with Saint John Energy, Maritime Electric, Nova Scotia Power, New Brunswick System Operator, the University of New Brunswick, and the governments of New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island.
The program will run until 2014, piloting technology that allows utilities to remotely shift energy usage to specific appliances in homes and commercial buildings in order to optimize wind generation. While current research is focused on wind energy, the learnings may be relevant for optimizing other sources of renewable energy generation in the future.
Innovation is always a work in progress, and we must continue to find new and better ways of delivering our products to the customers.
As far as the main thrust of your study goes, over the past few years, only innovations involving our sector have led to major changes, not only in how we use electricity, but also in how we think about it.
Not very long ago, fixed to the side of your house was an electric meter with moving dials and mechanical parts. While it's possible, depending upon your home province, that some of you may still have electromechanical meters, odds are that for most of us those old meters reside in the same part of our memories now occupied by rotary-dial telephones and eight-track tapes.
Customers can now access the data they need to actively manage their electricity consumption. They have gone from passive consumers to active participants in the market. They understand the value of every kilowatt-hour of electricity used in their home.
For example, time-of-use rate pricing introduces market signals that shift electricity usage to off-peak hours, which can lower customer bills while alleviating system constraints. Also, smart meters have enabled the two-way flow of both electricity and information between electricity producers and customers. This is a fundamental shift from that one-way grid, a shift that allows the integration of both distributed power generation and advanced energy management tools.
Real-time system operating information results in distribution networks that are used and expanded more efficiently. Smarter distribution networks and dispersed energy storage devices allow utilities to reduce and respond more quickly to outages. Automated switching devices also make this system more responsive to outages, and limit the impacts to fewer customers.
The net result is significant improvements in the frequency and duration of outages. Modernized customer service systems allow customers to interact with their electric utilities in a way that best suits their lifestyles in real time using customers' preferred means of communication.
While utilities are pushing the innovation agenda across the country, significant barriers to integrating innovative technologies and innovative approaches to customer service remain. The most prominent barriers experienced in our sector are higher costs for new technologies relative to the incumbent technologies and the high standards for technology reliability and certainty.
Reliability, of course, is essential for the electricity sector. In fact, it is a regulatory requirement. This requires that new technology be grid ready.
Transforming Canada's electricity sector and achieving our social, environmental and economic targets hinges on a lot more than just the industry's plans and actions.
Governments, regulators, civil society, and the broader public must be involved in the conversation if we're to be successful in transforming Canada's electricity system. Our industry has made significant progress in implementing innovative technologies and approaches across the electricity production and delivery system, but significant challenges remain, particularly in regard to large-scale renewal of infrastructure across this country.
Because of infrastructure investment requirements—this is actually a global trend, not strictly a Canadian phenomenon—there is upward pressure on electricity prices across the country. While innovation cannot fully alleviate that pressure, because there's simply no avoiding the fact that our infrastructure is aging, it's doing three things that are very important.
First, innovation is ensuring that tomorrow's technologies are considered when building today. Over time this will lower operating costs, improve asset management, and reduce societal impacts from power interruptions.
Second, innovation is making the grid more dynamic and more flexible in terms of its capacity to adapt to change. That change could last a few minutes, as with outage situations, or a few years, as with the integration of electric vehicles or distributed power generation.
Innovation by power companies is bounded by time, as little as a few nanoseconds to as much as a few generations. And as far as the amount of investment goes, time considerations must weigh heavily in determining what customers are charged.
Fortunately however, innovation is providing a third benefit, and I have tried to give you a sense of that today.
The relationship between the utility and the customer is changing. Communicating by mail six times a year when the bill comes in is no longer sufficient. The reliable and efficient production, delivery, and use of electricity is too important to be left to a passive utility-customer relationship. Therefore, innovation for our industry goes beyond technology and speaks directly to the need to engage customers in the discussion, understand their preferences, and assure alignment across the entire value chain.
Both industry and customers are already seeing value from this innovation.
Thank you. I would be happy to answer your questions.