I'll be brief.
In Canada today every jurisdiction has moved to a competitive tendering process, which requires intense competition. Alberta is looking to procure 400 megawatts of wind and has 29 companies bidding projects into that. You can be very sure you're going to get very competitive prices coming out of that. The 13.5¢ you talk about is the old feed-in tariff in Ontario, which was put in place several years ago. As I said, the most recent wind in Ontario was procured for 8¢.
I think you will find that wind energy is extremely cost-competitive today versus any new generation. The nuclear generation you spoke to is existing generation, not new generation. I guarantee you new wind is cheaper than new nuclear.