LATEST NEWS
September 7, 2010
Electrical industry welcomes Ontario’s creation of standalone energy ministry
The demands from provincial government activity in Ontario’s energy sector are expected to increase and having a standalone energy ministry makes sense, industry stakeholders say.
Following an August Queen’s Park shuffle by Premier Dalton McGuinty the former “super-ministry” of energy and infrastructure was split into two individual ministries.
Brad Duguid, former minister of the combined ministries, was handed the minister reins of the new energy ministry. Newcomer to cabinet, Bob Chiarelli, became the infrastructure minister.
Numerous construction industry officials had lobbied the province recently calling for a sole ministry responsible for infrastructure. There was a need for focused attention on the province’s infrastructure from funding deficits to long-term planning, they argued, and the energy portfolio’s demands were quite heavy.
“Even for the most skilled politician it probably was too much work,” said Alex Lolua, director of government and public relations at International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW).
“It is not that people were doing a bad job on the file. It’s that there is so much to do on both energy and infrastructure — it was a prudent move to separate them.”
One Queen’s Park insider said the separation of the two ministries was reflective of the province’s focus on infrastructure and renewable energy initiatives it had launched in recent months. Also, with consultations underway concerning Ontario’s Ten Year Infrastructure Plan, the ministry split points to an infrastructure-heavy pre-election budget in March 2011, with infrastructure and energy benefitting.
“Hopefully some more attention can be directed to the energy file,” said Lolua.
“Brad Duguid has been good on the energy file and we are glad he kept that.”
The provincial energy sector will remain an active portfolio with the continued implementation of the Green Energy Act, pending decisions on nuclear procurement and the Ontario feed-in-tariff program still driving activity in the renewable energy sector. Also, Ontario’s $7-billion renewable power generation deal with a Korean consortium has been heralded as a way to create 7,800 construction jobs and position the province as a major green energy player. Analysts said the province will want a focused minister over a file with all these variables in the mix.
Building Ontario’s green economy is a task “not for the faint of heart and it will take bold steps,” said McGuinty when the $7-billion deal with Samsung C&T Corporation and the Korea Electric Power Corporation was announced in January.
Recently, Canadian Solar Inc. said Guelph will be the site of its wind turbine blade manufacturing plant and a new solar module manufacturing facility expected to create up to 1,400 jobs. This announcement followed one by Siemens and Samsung to build a wind turbine blade plant in Ontario that will create up to 900 direct and indirect jobs.
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- How to suspend a 13-storey tower over a century-old four-storey structure
- Toronto Maple Leaf Gardens time capsule included construction details of arena
- Caterpillar dispute a factor in CAW-CEP union merger talks
- Harley Davidson to roar into Quebec, with $15-million franchise headquarters under construction
- Future unclear for price of iron ore, scrap steel, rebar
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| TODAY’S TOP CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS |
These projects have been selected from 333 projects with a total value of $7,273,203,495 that Reed Construction Data Building Reports reported on Thursday.
STADIUM, BERMS, PARKING GARAGE, SITE WORKS
$129,300,000 Ottawa ON Tenders
$80,000,000 North York ON Tenders
CONDOMINIUM APARTMENT BUILDING, RETAIL
$75,000,000 Toronto ON Prebid
| CURRENT STORIES |
- Ontario Road Builders’ Association focused on partnerships at convention
- Construction continues on the Regent Park Aquatic Centre in Toronto
- BML Multi Trades president Jim DiNovo takes helm of Hamilton-Halton Construction Association
- Seeing the sustainable forest for the trees
- Steel hurdles for Aga Khan Museum build
- Milton, Ontario council approves velodrome for 2015 Pan Am games
- ASHRAE, International Association of Plumbing and Mechanical Officials plan to cooperate on codes, standards
- MOD Developments 60-storey Massey Tower to include restoration of 1905 Toronto bank
- ERA Architects to conduct study for possible heritage district in Picton, Ontario
- Burlington, Ontario announces preferred hospital redevelopment site
- Bing Thom Architects to design Surrey Performing Arts Centre
- Wind farm contract awarded
- Opposition grows after deal collapses
- $1.8 billion in improvements planned for Vancouver airport
- When low bidders sue over contracts
- North Vancouver condos take shape
- U.S. firms expect fewer layoffs in 2012
- Maple Leaf Gardens time capsule discovered
- A look at Canada's historic concrete ship
- Partnership announced between File Hills Qu'Appelle Tribal Council and Graham Business Trust
- Mike Holmes-designed community in Alberta gets go ahead
- Province of British Columbia contributes cash to green energy projects
- Program for upcoming apprenticeship forum released
- New VRCA chair elected
- Construction union wage index remains the same
- Alberta government orders immediate site remediation
| ALEX’S ECONOMICS BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Canada’s Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in the North American economic environment with emphasis on the construction industry.
- Canada’s leading indicator series continued to charge ahead in December (January 23, 2012)
- 2012 holds promise but there’s no denying the uncertainty (part 2) (January 12, 2012)
- 2012 holds promise but there’s no denying the uncertainty (part 1) (January 11, 2012)
- More








