Michael Smyth
Photograph by: Ginger Sedlarova, The Province

It’s amazing how the amount of electricity stolen by marijuana growers in B.C. is increasing faster than a hippie’s appetite after a double bong hit.

A new report cited by B.C. Hydro pegs the annual amount of power stolen by marijuana grow ops at an astonishing $109 million.

The report adds some new categories: “illegitimate” power use by marijuana growers who actually pay their bills, and the amount of money B.C. Hydro must spend on upgraded infrastructure to deliver all that power to thousands of grow ops.

Total damage to B.C. Hydro and its customers from marijuana grow ops: $154 million a year, the equivalent of a five-per-cent surcharge on your electricity bill.

B.C. Hydro’s answer to the problem: spend $1 billion on smart meters to stop pot-producing power poachers.

It’s hard to know where to begin explaining how screwed up and illogical this is.

But first, let’s review Hydro’s recent history of estimating marijuana-related power theft.

Grow ops need a lot of electricity to power high-wattage lamps, water pumps, dehumidifiers, security systems and other equipment. Growers often steal electricity, by tampering with Hydro’s existing “dumb meters,” or diverting power from the main supply line.

In 2004, Hydro estimated marijuana power theft at $12 million a year. Then Hydro rolled out its plan to install smart meters.

Hydro estimated power theft at $30 million last August, then $100 million in the spring, and now $154 million from theft and illegitimate use.

A cynic might suspect Hydro was exaggerating grow-op thefts to gain support for its smart meters from suspicious customers.

After all, the original purpose of smart meters is to jack up your electricity bill through “time of use” billing, where you pay more for consuming power at peak periods, such as around dinner time.

Hydro denies the smart meters will be used for time-of-use billing. Instead, the smart meters will be used for things such as catching all those illegal grow ops, it says.

Really?

If Hydro wanted to catch power-stealing pot growers, it could hire a few dozen retired cops to inspect power lines for signs of tampering or jerry-rigging. That would cost a lot less than $1 billion.

Ironically, many marijuana growers like the idea of smart meters, because it means Hydro won’t be sending snoopy meter readers around their houses any more.

“It’s actually better to have the smart meter,” writes an anonymous poster on rollitup.org, a marijuana chat room.

“The guys that check meters won’t have to go in your yard any more, eliminating any chance of seeing or smelling something.”

Other large-scale growers are switching to diesel-powered generators to conceal electricity use. Just last week, Mounties busted a huge grow-op near Hope powered by a dozen gas generators.

And do you really think clever growers won’t figure out a way to bypass the smart meters, just like they bypass the dumb meters now? Google “hack your smart meter” for the answer.

The bottom line: B.C. Hydro is stoking reefer madness. It loves pushing this stamp-out-grow-ops line because that’s its best argument for selling the public on smart meters.

My prediction: Marijuana production in B.C. will continue to soar, while you get gouged on your electricity bill with time-of-use billing.

Premier’s position on senate reform tough to figure out

Abolish the senate? Expand it? Shrink it for other ?provinces?

It’s hard to tell Premier ?Christy Clark’s exact position on senate reform these days after her ?latest confusing performance on the issue.

In Ottawa to promote B.C. shipbuilding last week, Clark began her day saying she would accept Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s vision of an elected senate if B.C. received “seven or 10” new senators.

Later, she said Harper should limit the number of new senators in Ontario and Quebec so B.C. would become “more equal” in the upper chamber.

It’s just the latest ?positional gymnastics by Clark on the senate.

She earlier said Canada should abolish the senate. Then she said she liked ?Harper’s idea of an elected senate, where British Columbia is already grossly under-represented.

What’s the point of giving the senate more clout and legitimacy if it’s already unfair to B.C.?

Time for Clark to brush up on the issue — and figure out where she stands.

Showdown in Abbotsford

Abbotsford’s John van Dongen is bracing for the fight of his political life, after a local city councillor announced he’ll challenge him for the Liberal nomination in the riding.

Veteran councillor Moe Gill said he’s been encouraged by supporters for more than a year to “give it a shot” and try to replace van Dongen in the Liberal stronghold.

As Rodney Dangerfield would say: “No respect!” Van Dongen is a former cabinet minister and 16-year MLA.

Van Dongen told the Abbotsford Times he reached out to Gill and asked to meet with him to discuss the issue. He said Gill responded by sending two representatives to the meeting.

Guess it’s on, huh? It’s the first sign some Liberals will face fresh challenges for their jobs, as rumours of a fall election swirl.

msmyth@theprovince.com

Views: 169

Replies to This Discussion

Oh, this is too funny! Is this the start of a new anti-marijuana campaign ("...because growers steal electricity")? But really funny is the following (which kills the this logic):

“illegitimate” power use by marijuana growers who actually pay their bills,

Er, how is that bad? Oh, they tell us:

the amount of money B.C. Hydro must spend on upgraded infrastructure to deliver all that power to thousands of grow ops.

Total damage to B.C. Hydro and its customers from marijuana grow ops: $154 million a year, the equivalent of a five-per-cent surcharge on your electricity bill.

WTF? Of course that figure of $154 million is pulled out of you-know-where but what is interesting is the a seller complaining clients are buying his service -- something that is the purpose of his existance -- with enthusiasm.

 

I also see an admission by B.C. Hydro that it is over-charging majority of it's customers (for electricity they do not cnsume). Maybe they out to sue B.C. Hydro....

RSS

"Destroying the New World Order"

TOP CONTENT THIS WEEK

THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING THE SITE!

mobile page

12160.info/m

12160 Administrators

 

Latest Activity

Doc Vega posted blog posts
2 hours ago
tjdavis posted videos
18 hours ago
tjdavis posted a blog post
yesterday
cheeki kea commented on cheeki kea's photo
yesterday
cheeki kea posted a photo
yesterday
cheeki kea commented on cheeki kea's photo
Thumbnail

First World Order

"Ah ha Truth hidden in plane sight. Notice the map depicted on this 'world order' book…"
yesterday
cheeki kea commented on cheeki kea's video
yesterday
cheeki kea posted a video

Iyah May Karmageddon Lyric Music Video

While ‘Karmageddon’ has sparked significantconversation and controversy, Iyah has stood her ground. She refused to compromise her vision when asked to change...
yesterday
tjdavis posted a video

Steven Wilson - PERSONAL SHOPPER (Official Video)

"The song PERSONAL SHOPPER sits somewhere between being a love-letter to shopping (which I love to do!) and the uneasiness I feel about the more insidious si...
Wednesday
Doc Vega posted blog posts
Monday
rlionhearted_3 posted photos
Monday
Burbia posted a photo
Monday
tjdavis posted a video

propaganda: DIVIDE & CONQUER (1942) - Warner Bros. vs Hitler

Not to be confused with the much drier Frank Capra film from 1943.A "Broadway Brevity", released August 1, 1942. Vitaphone #1022-1023A.Transferred from 16mm.
Sunday
Doc Vega posted blog posts
Dec 20
cheeki kea commented on cheeki kea's photo
Thumbnail

Thumbs down - ship gone.

" So this sort of stupidity has occurred before. Norway or NZ - Who did it better? Cast your…"
Dec 20
cheeki kea favorited Doc Vega's blog post The Last Meal
Dec 20
tjdavis favorited Sandy's photo
Dec 17
tjdavis favorited cheeki kea's photo
Dec 17
tjdavis favorited tjdavis's video
Dec 17
tjdavis posted photos
Dec 17

© 2024   Created by truth.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service

content and site copyright 12160.info 2007-2019 - all rights reserved. unless otherwise noted