Alberta announces six-month pause on renewable energy, citing rural concerns
EDMONTON — Alberta’s United Conservative government is pausing all approvals in the province’s booming renewable energy industry in response to what it says are rural and environmental concerns.
In a statement Thursday, the government said the Alberta Utilities Commission is to institute a six-month moratorium on approving wind and solar power projects greater than one megawatt. The commission will initiate an inquiry into issues of development on agricultural land, effect on scenery, reclamation security, the role of municipalities and system reliability.
“There is a little bit of inconvenience now for the next few months,” said Nathan Neudorf, minister of affordability and utilities. “But if we can set that right for the next 20 years, I think that’s trade-off most people are willing to make.”
However, industry spokespeople said that not only were they blindsided by the decision, it’s a bad call that could cost the Alberta economy.


