Renewable Power Is The Future
Renewable power is the future
BY RYAN MEILI,
THE STAR PHOENIX
APRIL 9, 2009
Following is the opinion of the writer, a leadership candidate for the Saskatchewan NDP.
In the editorial Anti-nukes dragging NDP back to past, (SP, April 2), you characterize NDP leadership candidates who expressed concerns about the Saskatchewan Party's urgency to develop a nuclear reactor as dragging this party into the past.
The day before the editorial was published I was on a campaign tour in northwest Saskatchewan, where I visited Annette Niultcho. She is an elder in the community of Buffalo River Dene Nation and a great friend.
She asked me "why are they talking about building a reactor? We fought against that in the '70s."
Her story brought it home for me. Building a nuclear reactor in Saskatchewan didn't make sense then. It doesn't make sense now. Not when we have so many other options. Nuclear power is expensive. Estimates peg the cost of nuclear generation to be at least 50 per cent higher than from renewable sources -- assuming the plant won't experience the kind of cost overruns that have bedeviled nuclear plants around the world, it will cost 18 cents per kilowatt hour compared with 11 cents for wind. Like Ontario residents, we stand to be paying capital surcharges on our power bills for generations to come.
Nuclear power is slow. Based on the typical timelines of nuclear plants built elsewhere in Canada, it is doubtful that a Saskatchewan nuclear plant would generate a single kilowatt before 2020. And it won't last -- the most optimistic assessments show Saskatchewan will run out of uranium before the end of this century.
Saskatchewan has the greatest potential for wind and solar energy production in the country. We can obtain all of our energy needs from renewable sources such as wind, solar and small-scale hydro rather than non-renewable technologies such as coal, fossil fuels and nuclear power. These can come online much more quickly and less expensively than nuclear power.
By taking leadership and becoming early adopters of alternative energy technology we can establish an environmentally and economically sustainable energy industry in the province. We can build an industry that will bring development and jobs that will exceed and outlast any that may come from nuclear development.
We have a limited number of dollars to spend in developing our energy industry. Why waste it on a bridge to nowhere when we can establish a long-term plan? A renewable energy future is more affordable, more efficient and more prudent.
Like the iconic elevators of our prairie landscape, I imagine a future where the small towns, reserves and farms of Saskatchewan boast wind turbines as a testament to their foresight and energy independence. Providing power for the local community and selling it back to the provincial grid for a profit will help to recharge rural Saskatchewan. Most importantly, we won't run out of wind or sun. This means that rather than our traditional boom-and-bust resource-based economy, we can have a stable base for further development of local economies.
Opposing old and tired solutions and proposing bold inspired solutions will not drag the NDP or the province into the past. It will lead us into the future.





