
Ontario's Independent Electricity System Operator (IESO) is, in my opinion, the exemplary government organization in making data available. As each day progresses, reports are available for hourly generation, by generator (only if they are a certain scale), and for each intertie connecting markets. I've written on daily records based on these two files, because Ontario Demand should be all generation, plus imports, less exports.
But it isn't.
There are reasons these files don't yield 100% accuracy compared to the reporting the IESO puts out on a weekly basis, including not all generation being included - but there is a patterned variance most weeks.
For instance, the Intertie Schedule and Flow Report for October 7th, 2011 shows, for the first 4 hours, exports of 1969, 2431, 2369 and 2425MW. The cumulative Import/Export Schedule shows, for the same times, shows 1533, 1995, 1933, and 1989. The difference, of over 430MW throughout many off-peak hours, is patterned. This difference is the historical figures reported, as having been exported, less the actual movement of electrons out of the province.

There are reasons these files don't yield 100% accuracy compared to the reporting the IESO puts out on a weekly basis, including not all generation being included - but there is a patterned variance most weeks.
For instance, the Intertie Schedule and Flow Report for October 7th, 2011 shows, for the first 4 hours, exports of 1969, 2431, 2369 and 2425MW. The cumulative Import/Export Schedule shows, for the same times, shows 1533, 1995, 1933, and 1989. The difference, of over 430MW throughout many off-peak hours, is patterned. This difference is the historical figures reported, as having been exported, less the actual movement of electrons out of the province.


Graphing the output of Saunders, as shown in the hourly output and capability report, stacked with the variance between the hourly intertie figure, and the export figures later reported, it is apparent that Saunders is actually generating at a fairly constant rate, but much of the output is diverted to, presumably, Quebec. This particular week saw over 40000MW of production that was not reported as production, and 40000MW of exports not be reported as exports. That is the highest I have seen since tracking the hourly intertie data in April 2011, but it is not unique.
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Weekly Totals since April 2011 |
"So far in 2011, nuclear units have been maneuvered 113 times for a total of 364 hours. Compared to 2010 which had nuclear units maneuvered 14 times for a total duration of 64 hours, this represents a significant increase. This rise in manual action is a result of a lower minimum demands as well as a growing portfolio of inflexible generation."The secrecy shrouding the existence of agreements between Ontario and Quebec is somewhat bizarre considering strong support, within Ontario, for clean energy imports from Quebec. Aside from Quebec having the exceptionally valuable asset of reservoir storage/generation, Quebec is also a winter peaking jurisdiction where Ontario is a summer peaking jurisdiction. It makes perfect sense that Ontario's excess, largely in the shoulder seasons (although even this morning nuclear production was curtailed for a few hours), would be sent to Quebec. What doesn't make sense is for Ontario's publicly owned OPG have a secret relationship with Quebec's publicly owned Hydro-Quebec.
Friday, Ontario's Ministry of Energy released their latest press release to mislead citizens about exports benefiting Ontario - as they have taken to doing every month. These monthly creative writing assignments cite an IESO page listing monthly imports and exports. The IESO page is a true accounting of their import/export methodology, but exports are 0.55TWh higher, since April 1st, than they indicate - the difference seemingly comprised of switching the flow of some of Saunders' turbines to Quebec's grid. Not that it makes any difference to the Ministry of Energy, who stupidly cite revenues without any reference to costs - but the people paying about $73.47/MWh in Ontario, for November (estimates of $28.76 HOEP plus $44.71 GA), might like to know the net export revenues their government notes ($16.1 million) are attached to an admitted 584,496MWh net export ($27.55/MWh), and a hidden 132,490MWh. For November, net exports are under-reported by over 20%!
The hidden exports may not be such a bad deal. Capacity payments are increasingly a feature of electricity systems, and this may give Ontario preferential access to over 2000 MW of clean supply during summer peak periods. But Ontarians deserve to know the deals that exist, and they deserve to know how much generation is being spilled, curtailed, exported, and simply shuttered, while the building spree, of additional generation, continues unabated.