VICTORIA 鈥 Despite efforts to keep the smart meter 鈥渃ontroversy鈥 alive by repeating imaginary health claims, the end is near.
Energy Minister Bill Bennett has made what sounds like a final offer to holdouts. You want to keep your old mechanical meter, fill your boots. It鈥檒l cost you an extra $35 a month, starting in December. If you insist on a 鈥渞adio off鈥 wireless meter, there will be a setup fee of $100 and a monthly fee of $20 to have someone collect the readings.
These charges are to be reviewed by the B.C. Utilities Commission, the independent panel that smart meter opponents want to review BC Hydro鈥檚 whole smart grid project.
As it happens, for an application by FortisBC to install wireless meters for its Okanagan and Kootenay customers. The meters were approved, and the findings are instructive.
The BCUC report notes that it received 鈥渕any鈥 complaints about smart meter signals being added to existing radio frequency (RF) sources. Some used familiar scare rhetoric about 鈥渢oxic microwave radiation鈥 that鈥檚 promoted by people trying to make money by exploiting fear.
One of the experts retained by FortisBC was Dr. Yakov Shkolnikov, an electrical engineer with advanced degrees from Princeton and Cornell Universities. His testimony was not challenged by any of the lineup of opponents. A sample of his findings illustrates the absurdity of this whole discussion.
Shkolnikov calculated that a cell phone in use generates radio signals that reach 10 per cent of the international safety code limit. A microwave oven generates 2.3 per cent of the safe limit. A cordless phone: 1.25 per cent. A wi-fi signal: 0.0045 per cent.
(See chart below)
A bank of smart meters, not separated by a wall, registers 0.0019 per cent. The natural background RF level is 0.013 per cent. Note the decimal place. The level in the middle of a wilderness is nearly 10 times that received from a bank of meters.
BCUC staff added, for comparison, the radio signal level emitted by a human body. It鈥檚 0.018 per cent. What this means is your spouse snoring beside you is a stronger source of RF than a whole wall of smart meters.
Experts put up by opponents didn鈥檛 fare so well. One was Jerry Flynn, a retired Canadian Forces officer from Kelowna who travels around taking readings, talking to elderly people about alleged hazards of meters, and making claims to the media about what he has called the single biggest threat to human health today.
The BCUC found his military experience not 鈥渞elevant,鈥 and his evidence frequently 鈥渋ncorrect, exaggerated and/or unsubstantiated.鈥
Then there was Curtis Bennett, who described himself as 鈥渃hief science officer鈥 for a company called Thermoguy. He spoke on behalf of West Kootenay Concerned Citizens. In a 2012 letter to the B.C. energy ministry, Bennett warned of the danger of smart meters triggering 鈥渕olecular earthquakes.鈥
The BCUC panel wrote: 鈥淲hile Mr. Bennett has an electrician鈥檚 knowledge of electrical systems, it is clear that he is unqualified to give expert opinion evidence on the health effects of RF, exposure standards for RF, engineering, physics or geological phenomena such as earthquakes.鈥
Citizens for Safe Technology put up one Dr. Donald Maisch, who claimed to have experience with this issue in Australia.
The panel noted that Maisch runs EMFacts Consultancy, and agreed with FortisBC鈥檚 argument that 鈥淒r. Maisch鈥檚 consulting livelihood depends upon public fears and concerns about RF exposure.鈥
Would you like this circus of quackery to be restaged over BC Hydro鈥檚 program, at your expense?
Tom Fletcher is legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press and