New Brunswick

N.B. Power disputes Irving claim industrial power rates are uncompetitive

J.D. Irving Ltd.'s claim that "uncompetitive" electricity prices charged by N.B. Power are exclusively responsible for forcing it to close a production line at its east side Saint John paper mill has pushed the provincial utility and its rates into the spotlight.

Utility answers criticism that it's to blame for job losses in Saint John

Man wearing glasses looking at a reporter
Irving Pulp and Paper vice-president Mark Mosher blamed 'skyrocketing' N.B. Power electricity prices for a decision to cut production and workers Monday. (Graham Thompson/CBC)

J.D. Irving Ltd.'s claim that "uncompetitive" electricity prices charged by N.B. Power is exclusively responsible for forcing it to close a production line at its east side Saint John paper mill has pushed the provincial utility and its rates into the spotlight.

And N.B. Power is not taking the criticism quietly.

"N.B. Power offers a competitive large industrial rate," spokesperson Dominique Couture said Tuesday in an email directly contradicting the company's claim.

"N.B. Power large industrial rates are lower than Nova Scotia, P.E.I., HydroOne (in Ontario), Alberta and are on par with Saskatchewan."

On Monday, J.D. Irving announced it was permanently closing down half of its production at Irving Paper and eliminating 140 positions.  

In a statement company vice-president Mark Mosher blamed "the impact of soaring electricity costs" for the decision. 

N.B. Power did raise industrial and residential rates 13 per cent in the past year and has plans to raise them more than nine per cent again this year, beginning on April 1.

WATCH | Why N.B. Power and JDI can't agree on whether industrial electricity prices are a good deal:

N.B. Power vs. J.D. Irving: Are those electricity rates really not competitive?

7 hours ago
Duration 3:37
New Brunswick's electric utility and its largest forestry company are in a dispute over whether industrial power rates in the province are competitive. Who is right? The answer is complicated.

Still N.B. Power disputes that has made electricity pricing uncompetitive in New Brunswick.

To bolster its claim, it has been circulating an annual publication by Hydro Quebec showing New Brunswick's large industrial electricity rates, even after this year's increase, still rank well below North American averages.

That publication, which compared rates for different customer groups in 22 Canadian and U.S. cities as of April 1, 2024, places N.B. Power industrial rates eighth overall, with prices 18 per cent below the average of the group.

But the utility notes that comparison involves the standard large industrial rate offered by N.B. Power.  

Aerial view of a dam
Industrial rates in Quebec are 28 per cent below what is available in New Brunswick thanks to cheap power produced in the province's hydroelectric generating stations. (Ryan Remiorz / Canadian Press)

It does not include the application of an additional 22 per cent discount N.B. Power is compelled to provide to provincial pulp and paper mills, including the Irving Paper mill.    

That rate discount, estimated to be worth  $12.6 million this year, is mandated by provincial regulation.  

This year the program had N.B. Power buying renewable energy generated by the six mills at 12.2 cents per kilowatt hour and instantly selling it back to them at 9.3 cents.   

The utility is required to engage in those transactions until it loses enough money to the mills to achieve the targeted discount amount.

Named the Large Industrial Renewable Energy Purchase Program, the scheme has cost N.B. Power more than $138 million since its inception in 2012.  

Applied to the six mills, it moves their large industrial rate to fifth lowest among the 22 jurisdictions in the Hydro-Quebec study, better than seven of 12 Canadian cities in the survey and all 10 American locations.

Outside view of NB Power office building in Fredericton
N.B. Power is pushing back against claims its industrial rates are uncompetitive. The utility charges less than most North American jurisdictions, according to some comparisons. (Michael Heenan / CBC)

Couture said the program helps the "competitiveness" of New Brunswick pulp and paper mills by providing them rates that are lower than most in North America. 

The Hydro-Quebec survey mirrors information published by the Energy Information Administration in the United States. It shows that in November, only Louisiana out of 50 states was charging a standard industrial power rate below what N.B. Power charges New Brunswick pulp and paper mills. 

However, J.D. Irving Ltd. is less concerned with those averages, than it is with rates charged by jurisdictions with significant pulp and paper operations.   

More than 60 per cent of pulp and paper production in Canada is based in Quebec and British Columbia. Both provinces have substantial hydroelectric production and offer industrial power rates to mills between 10 and 28 per cent below N.B. Power's subsidized rate.

The company did not respond Tuesday to a request for information on what power rates it believes are required to keep Irving Paper competitive.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Robert Jones

Reporter

Robert Jones has been a reporter and producer with CBC New Brunswick since 1990. His investigative reports on petroleum pricing in New Brunswick won several regional and national awards and led to the adoption of price regulation in 2006.

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