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Report urges sale of transmission resources

DCN News Service
Report urges sale of transmission resources

TORONTO — Cities across Canada should sell their electricity distribution companies and invest the proceeds in critical municipal infrastructure, suggests a new C.D. Howe Institute report.

In Surge Capacity: Selling City-owned Electricity Distributors to Meet Broader Municipal Infrastructure Needs report author Steven Robins argues there is no compelling public policy rationale for municipalities to hold these assets.

"There’s huge potential in Ontario and Alberta for cites to hold equity sales in electricity distribution to jumpstart other infrastructure investments," commented Robins in a media statement released April 19. "Additionally, both provinces have regulators that have demonstrated their ability to protect consumer interests, by setting the rates for both municipally and privately owned electricity distribution."

The author points out that many of Canada’s cities — particularly in Alberta and Ontario — own local electricity distribution companies. Alberta and Ontario have 57 municipally owned utilities, which deliver electricity to 27 per cent of Canadian electricity customers

Municipalities in Ontario, along with Edmonton and Calgary, could sell all or part of their equity stakes in electricity companies — worth between $15 billion and $20 billion — and invest the proceeds in more critical municipal infrastructure needs, argues Robins.

Ontario should eliminate or rebate to cities punitive taxes on electricity company sales, Robins says. He also argues the federal government should remit back to provinces any corporate income tax they receive from newly taxable electricity companies, provided the selling government reinvests the proceeds in new infrastructure.

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