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We look forward to seeing you there on the 27th and 28th of November, 2001.
Page
2 Tuesday,
November 27, 2001
Daybreak coffee 8:00
a.m. The Ontario Context Safouh
Soufi, SMS Energy Engineering, Conference Chairman 8:30
a.m.
Opening Keynote: Ontario Minister of Energy, Hon. Jim Wilson
Jim Wilson
is Ontario s longest serving energy minister having shepherded the government s
competition initiative since the release of the White Paper through more than
three years of turbulence and rapidly changing circumstances. He is uniquely
able to set a perspective on where the government sees itself going in terms
of implementing and setting up an effective market for electricity in Ontario. 9:00
a.m. Official Opening of the Trade Show 9:00
a.m. Prospects for new project development: What s needed to really get Ontario s
market moving? After all
we ve learned about the market rules, decontrol and encouraging investment,
what are the major issues that now face a developer of a new project? Interconnection
with transmission and the IMO, access to capital, markets, expertise, and siting
approvals will be examined. Have strategies changed in the wake of California
and Alberta s wake-up calls? What lessons can be picked up from successful jurisdictions
such as Pennsylvania and Michigan? What measures are appropriate for assessing
the attractiveness of a market? Linda Bertoldi,
Borden Ladner Gervais LLP, moderator Keynote:
Ken Laughlin, Vice President of Market Services, PJM Interconnection,
LLC Questions
and discussion 9:45
a.m. Coffee Break in the Trade Show 10:30
a.m. The Regulators roles in facilitating competition and investment
The IMO
has a range of systems for encouraging competition: managing the bidding process,
initiation of new markets such as the capacity reserve market, implementation
of the market power mitigation agreement, surveillance against market power
abuse, disseminating information, etc. Similarly, the OEB has the mandate and
powerful tools to facilitate competition. - How should
regulators and the public judge whether these tools are sufficient or excessive?
Keynote:
Jim Baillie, Chair, Ontario Independent Electricity Market
Operator Keynote:
George Dominy, Vice Chair, Ontario Energy Board
Questions
and discussion 12 noon
Lunch in the Trade Show 1:00
p.m. Keynote: Robin Jeffrey, Chair of Bruce Power
Page
3 1:50
p.m. The Status of major capacity and the prognosis for decontrol Jacques
Huot, SuperBuild Corporation (invited) Brief review
or update on the status of existing major capacity such as Bruce, Pickering,
Sarnia and Sithe. 3:00
p.m. Coffee Break in the Trade Show 3:15
p.m. Tax Reforms proposed by the CEA and IPPSO to encourage investment
3:30
p.m. Achieving Healthy Competition: What s needed
to really get the electricity market moving in Ontario? Successfulcompetitive
markets require a balanced mix of precision rule-making and judicious regulation,
yielding predictability for investment and lower costs for consumers. Each participant
will explain what his or her own sector needs to see to implement an effective
forward market in Ontario. Hal Chappelle,
Mirant: 4:30
p.m. Break to Trade Show 4:35
p.m. IPPSO Annual General Meeting 5:00
p.m. Reception in the Trade Show 6:00
p.m. Banquet Dinner Featured
Keynote: Jim Flaherty, Minister of Finance and Deputy Premier
of Ontario After-dinner
keynote speaker: Courtney Pratt, CEO of Toronto Hydro
Electricity
Competition Award Hedley
Palmer Award Page
4
Wednesday, November 28, 2001
7:30 a.m. Daybreak Coffee
8:30
a.m.
Keynote: Hon. Elizabeth Witmer, Ontario Minister of
Environment 9:00
a.m. Addressing market behaviour Harry
Chandler, IMO, Market Surveillance Panel 10:00
a.m. Coffee Break in the Trade Show
10:45
a.m. Power Purchasers Panel: Ontario s
new market allows for major power purchasers to source their electricity in
four ways: through bilateral contracts, from the IMO as a dispatchable load,
under Standard Supply Service, and self-generation. - How do
major purchasers expect to navigate these choices, and what will be the rationale?
Ed Houghton,
Collingwood Utility Services Corp. and IMO Board, moderator 12 noon
Lunch in the Trade Show Stream
1: 1:30
p.m. Transmission within Ontario and at its borders Transmission
can the means of competition or a barrier to it. Not just rate design, but the
allocation of rights, the functioning of the FTR market and the interties in
the contexts of congestion and market power, and the regulatory process, will
bear heavily on the ability for new entrants to contribute to Ontario s electricity
market. Players will want to hear proposals on how best to resolve the seams
issuesı - where there are differences in the inter-tie rules used by interconnected
control areas. Paul
Murphy, Chief Operating Officer, IMO, moderator Page
5 Stream
2: 1:45
p.m. Ensuring environmental performance Speakers:
2:45
p.m. Coffee Break 3:00
p.m. The shape of the future:
Maximizing on promise and opportunity How technological
change will introduce new options for generation development; Speakers
will make reference to the major themes identified at the beginning of the program.
Bryne
Purchase, Deputy Minister, Ministry of Energy, Science and Technology Mark
Rodger, Borden Ladner Rob McLeese,
President, IPPSO and President of Access Capital 4:45
p.m. Concluding remarks by Conference Chairman All program
details subject to change without notice. For the latest program or registration
information visit: www.newenergy.org/conference.html The
Thirteenth Annual Canadian Independent Power
Conference and Trade Show
Sponsored by Toromont Energy Ltd.
Keynote: Steve Snyder, President and CEO, TransAlta Energy
Corporation
Sponsored by Access Capital Corp. and Navigant Consulting Ltd.
- How should the IMO balance its responsibility for reliability with its responsibility
for facilitating competition?
- How much turbulence in the market can be tolerated before intervention becomes
acceptable?
Sponsored by Stikeman Elliott
Bruce Power s view of how to set up a competitive market.
Pat McNeil, Vice President, Corporate Development, OPG
Al Barnstaple, Past President, IPPSO
- What is the prognosis for decontrol?
- Where does it seem to be going?
- Does it need adjustment?
- What are the measures of a healthy market and how can one assess capacity
signals in Ontario s context of a few dominant generation owners?
Dan Goldberger, Canadian Electricity Association
Implementing forward markets and other competition-enhancing mechanisms
- What s necessary to jump-start a forward market in long-term contracts?
- What other conditions and mechanisms need to be put in place?
- Where has Ontario succeeded in these areas, and where are the weaknesses that
can still be addressed?
- What has contributed to the success of markets such as Pennsylvania and Michigan
that can be applied here?
What marketers need to see.
Rob Cary, IPPSO Director and member of the IMO Technical Panel:
Generators view of risk issues (Is there enough information available? Will
I be able to sell out of Ontario?)
James McMahon, Executive Vice President, ECNG:
Purchaser risk management
Speaker T.B.A.:
Reasonable limits on MEU long-term contracting
Sponsored by Borden Ladner Gervais LLP
As Minister of Finance, Jim Flaherty is responsible for the Ontario Electricity
Financial Corporation. The OEFC is an agency of the Province of Ontario and
is responsible for servicing and retiring the former Ontario Hydro's provincially
guaranteed debt and managing certain other legacy liabilities. 
Sponsored by Jacques Whitford
The
IPP industry s role in achieving government environmental objectives
- Compliance and enforcement
How compliance and enforcement is expected to work in Ontario. California has
found strategic bidding despite a market with many more participants than Ontario
has. Regulators are using a multitude of models to recognize market abuse. Many
of the practices in question are not contrary to the rules, so people will want
to know how far regulators expect to go in drawing the line between exercize
of market power and abuse of market power.
Joe Bowring, Manager of Market Monitoring Unit, PJM Interconnection
John Dalton, Navigant
Jan Smutny-Jones, President of IEP of California and former Chair of Cal-ISO
Sponsored by Vestas American Wind Technology, Inc.
What do buyers need to see?
How should portfolios be designed?
- What would they like to see in terms of how producers and marketers make competing
offers to them?
- What products would they entertain?
- Without revealing proprietary information, what is their strategy for assuring
supply for dispatchable loads over 5 MW, and how can producers fit into that?
- What role is seen for distributed generation or managing internal energy use?
The major categories are: Embedded industrial; direct connected industrial;
industrial with self-generation; industrial committed to bilateral purchasing.
Tom Brett, Smith Lyons, Standard wholesale bilateral contracts
Gerry
Hilhorst, Assistant General Manager, Waterloo North Hydro, Re: embedded
generation
TBA (Dispatchable load)
TBA (Self-generator)
Sponsored by Power Budd LLP
Rod Taylor, Hydro One, on policies for use of regional interconnections
Charles Keizer, Power Budd
Laurent Cusson, MacLaren Energy, perspective of transmission user (invited)
Stephen Probyn,
Probyn & Company, moderator
Recent updates on status and points of view on the key environmental questions
facing new power generation developers: - Emission trading
- Green power standards
- Mechanisms to enhance of green power market
- Environmental Assessment
With participation of Environment Canada
Stephen Probyn, Probyn & Company, moderator
Christine Cinnamon-Langille, TransCanada Power
Timothy Egan, Canadian Electricity Association
Mike Butters, Clean Air Canada Inc. / PERT
- How will the changes in sources of finance affect the prospects?
- How will people s views of the how the market is changing affect their plans
for project development?
- What does the future of new generation development look like, given the growth
of new technologies, such as fuel cells,clean coal, and other new technologies
on business development strategies that players choose to stress in the new
market?
- What are the constraints on development of new projects?
- What commercial strategies can we expect to see coming forward from the major
players?
How the ministry views the future for Ontario and plans for near-term policy
initiatives
How the changing status of existing capacity will affect prospects for Ontario s
future, and on transfer and redevelopment of existing projects
How IPPSO views the projections for the future, as well as touching on NUG contract
status, exclusivity, lessons learned from California, and prospects for further
market development 

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Fees
(incl. GST):
Members, by October 11 ......... $895 ($957.65)
October 12 or later................... $995 ($1064.65)
Non-members by October 11 .... $995 ($1064.65)
October 12 or later ................... $1095 ($1171.65)
- Package pricing is available for those attending the conference and one or more workshops. Contact IPPSO at 416-322-6549 for more information. -
Payment must be received by September 1 for the early discounts. Refunds will not necessarily be issued for cancellations after October 15. Cancellation fee may apply.
Conference fees, trade show fees and IPPSO membership fees are all subject to G.S.T., (Refundable to non-Canadians) GST# 125298802
Accommodation is limited -- attendees are advised to reserve space at the Sheraton Hotel by September 30. Special IPPSO rates are available. Call 905-881-2121 or 1-800-325-3535.
To submit your completed form, or for further information, please contact: IPPSO
Independent Power Producers' Society of Ontario (IPPSO)For "instant registration," just click on this link, which will generate an e-mail to us (Please include in this message your contact details: name, company, address, phone, fax, e-mail address and preferred form of payment.)
For information on the Green Power Trade Show, which is being co-presented along with the IPPSO conference, visit the following link: http://www.sierraclub.ca/national/green-power/index.html