Critics say Alberta renewables report contradicts government proposals for industry

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Solar panels pictured at the Michichi Solar project near Drumheller, Alta., Tuesday, July 11, 2023.

Critics are asking why the Alberta government's proposed regulations on renewable power seem to have ignored the conclusions of its own utilities regulator.Solar panels pictured at the Michichi Solar project near Drumheller, Alta. The Alberta Utilities Commission released a report this week showing renewables pose little threat to agriculture or the environment.

The proposals rule out wind and solar on Alberta's best farmland, impose a 35-kilometre buffer zone around protected areas and so-called "pristine viewscapes," and would require developers to post some kind of financial security for reclamation. Renewables are rarely sited on top-quality farmland, it says. Even if they were, says the report, they would use up less than one per cent of that land by 2041.

She said the United Kingdom, the U.S. and Australia all have some kind of "parameters" around the siting of renewable projects.

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