Posts Tagged ‘feed-in-tariff’

New Plant Will Bring Green Energy, Jobs to Ontario’s Green Economy

Tuesday, December 7th, 2010

Eclipsall Energy Corporation (Eclipsall) has announced plans to invest $10 million into Ontario’s green economy with a new solar panel manufacturing plant in the Greater Toronto area.  The plant will initially produce 64 MW worth of solar panels per year, and the company hopes to expand operations in the future.

Eclipsall is an Ontario-based corporation founded in 2009 to coincide with the provincial government’s signing of the Green Energy and Green Economy Act (the Act).  The Act allowed the Ontario Power Authority (OPA) to institute the province’s feed-in tariff (FIT) program, the first of its kind in North America.  Eclipsall has recruited the Netherlands’ Rimas BV to outfit the new plant with its state-of-the-art equipment.  Rimas BV produces assembly line, solar production, and test equipment for the international market, including for parts of Europe, Asia, Africa, and the US.  Switzerland’s 3S Modultec, a member of the Meyer Burger Group, will also provide its expertise throughout the project’s construction.  The facility is scheduled to begin operations early in 2011 and will initially create as many as ninety green jobs.

Company to Provide Ontario-made Materials for Workers with Solar Job Training

The plant’s Ontario location will allow Eclipsall to help the province’s solar projects take part in the FIT, which pays producers of green energy high prices to feed environmentally friendly electricity into the grid.  The program requires participating projects to use up to 50% Ontario-made materials – 60% as of 2011.  This provision helps to keep jobs in the province and gives a boost to solar job training programs such as Ontario Solar Academy’s five-day PV design and installation course.

The Ontario solar industry is flourishing thanks to the FIT and companies like Eclipsall who call the province home.  According to a study by ClearSky Advisors, if the FIT continues to approve applications at the current rate, Ontario will have 3 GW of energy capacity from solar, wind, and biomass online by 2015.  This could create employment for thousands of workers with solar job training and other forms of green energy education, and a head-start toward a greener future.

Photowatt Ontario Offers Product Development and Solar Installation

Friday, December 3rd, 2010

The Photowatt Ontario Green Wing Production Facility has now officially opened in Cambridge, Ontario.  The facility, owned and operated by custom manufacturing firm, Automation Tooling Systems (“ATS”), represents a huge step forward for Ontario’s solar energy industry.

Photowatt Ontario is the site of ATS’s solar product manufacturing, project development, and installation services.  Its first undertaking in the new facility is the production of a new line of 100MW photovoltaic modules.  The Cambridge plant created around 150 new jobs with this project, and the company hopes to meet residential and commercial demand for solar capabilities throughout Ontario.  As demand grows, ATS expects to hire more employees.  The company hopes to expand its facilities and resources beyond its initial capacity to reach a broader market.  This optimistic forecast means that solar job preparation could be an ideal way for Ontario’s workers to access new career opportunities.

Feed-In Tariff Program Is Part of Facility’s Success

The products that ATS will produce at its Photowatt Ontario facility meet the growing demand for solar technology in Ontario, as more businesses decide to take advantage of the feed-in-tariff program.  Anthony Caputo, President and CEO of ATS Automation, praises the feed-in tariff program as evidence of Ontario’s leadership in the green energy sector.  “We commend Ontario for taking meaningful steps in addressing our aging electrical transmission system[…] and manufacturing jobs lost in the economic downturn of 2008,” says Caputo.  “The Green Energy Act is very progressive, and the feed-in tariff program accomplishes many of these multifaceted objectives.”

Cambridge Plant Highlights Importance of Solar Job Preparation

“This is an important new facility for Ontario and Waterloo Region,” says John Milroy, MPP for Kitchener Centre and Minister of Training, Colleges, and Universities.  He adds that the investment in clean energy will bring “highly-skilled jobs to our province that will help fuel the knowledge economy of the future.”  ATS is optimistic that Ontario’s solar job creation rate will mimic that of Europe, where the International Energy Agency analysis estimates that about 40 jobs have been created for every megawatt of installed solar power capacity.  Solar job preparation programs and PV training courses allow concerned stakeholders to capitalize on this growing industry sector.

From Solar Calculators to Renewable Energy Careers

Thursday, December 2nd, 2010

When I was a kid, solar panels powered calculators, and that was about it.  Renewable energy was a hobby, not a career path, let alone an industry.  There was the odd off-grid system, but besides these, a few calculators, and some aerospace applications, solar power was a dream.  In fact, according to Steven Aftergood of the Federation of American Scientists (FAS), as far back as 1971, solar systems “were subject to review and possible restriction” by the US patent office if they were more than 20% efficient.  The potential power of solar was so great it was an official secret.

Fast forward to today.  There are backpacks that, in only a few hours, can charge laptop computers many times more powerful than the processors that the lunar modules used to take man to the moon.  Photovoltaic (PV) panels adorn parking meters and road signs, and solar farms glisten in fields and on rooftops across the province.  Solar technology has come a long way.  In Ontario, which has a solar industry powered by a feed-in tariff (FIT) program that pays high prices for electricity fed into the grid from a variety of “green” sources, a lot of interesting new developments are in the works, and renewable energy career development starts early.

Elementary, Post-Secondary Students Bring PV to Class

Some schools expose students to the possibilities of solar and other renewable energy technologies at young ages.  Students at Bear Creek High School in Barrie, for example, receive hands-on training with what is currently a 2 kW PV installation on the school’s roof.  When complete, the school expects the project to generate 10 kW per hour.

The province’s post-secondary schools have also taken part in the solar bonanza.  St. Lawrence College campuses in Kingston and Brockville currently have the record for the most rooftop PV capacity of any post-secondary institution in Canada.  Students attending Energy Systems Engineering classes at the college study the project while they work towards new renewable energy careers.  Ottawa University students continue work that leads to breakthroughs in PV efficiency with the SUNRISE solar project, headed by the National Research Council (NRC).  Ottawa’s Cyrium Technologies, Inc. (Cyrium) contributes its expertise in concentrating PV technology to the project – technology which, until recently, was only used in space-based applications.  Cyrium’s tests of its CPV modules have shown them to be capable of 38-40% efficiency, nearly twice that which was considered a danger to American national security in the 1970’s.

Who knows what technological feats the future has in store – feats that in several years could have us looking back nostalgically at the comparably limited technologies of today?  Whatever the future holds, we can be sure that for the solar industry, it seems to only get brighter.

The Green Economy Is Here to Stay

Thursday, December 2nd, 2010

A recent article in the Financial Post describes growing confusion over Ontario’s green economy.  While many workers in the province upgrade their training to make the switch to careers in solar and other renewable forms of energy production, the media have sent mixed messages regarding the industry’s stability.

The main concerns that I typically read about can be summed up as follows:

  • Hydro rates are rising, and we are told that this is largely due to the Ontario government’s feed-in tariff (FIT) for green energy and the high rates the program pays to its participants.
  • A government-initiated tariff is only as stable as the initiating party’s seats in the Legislature – and an Ontario election is less than a year away.
  • The FIT’s domestic content requirements (DCRs) strangle foreign and violate international trade agreements.

The bulk of concerns regarding Ontario’s FIT, which pays producers of energy from sources like solar, wind, and biomass, center around the program’s high prices.  At its most generous, the FIT pays rates of up to 80.2 cents/kW-hour for solar power, which is many times higher than the current market price for electricity.  These general incentives have opened up new opportunities within the province, including solar energy career training for PV installers.  Opponents of the FIT ague that these sky-high prices are primarily responsible for a projected increase in residential energy costs, increases that Ontarians have already begun to notice on their bills in the last couple of months.

High Price for Solar a Small Price for Clean Energy, Careers

However, an interesting study recently prepared by ClearSky Advisors (ClearSky) suggests that the program will only increase the price that the average Ontarian sees on his or her hydro bill by about the cost of one donut per month.  That’s right, a donut.  This is after the researchers crunched numbers related to the social costs of nuclear and coal-fired energy.  The study goes on to say that if the current rate of FIT-application approvals continues for the next five years, the province will enjoy more than 70,000 extra “person years” of employment by 2015.

Of course, the FIT is a political creation, and as such, any party, including the program’s creators, could stop accepting applications at any time, but all currently-approved projects are locked into a twenty-year contract.  We can be sure that players in Ontario’s green economy would be quick to litigate any attempts to change that.  As Adam Webb, President of Ontario’s Sentinel Solar Corp., puts it, “The Ontario government and the OPA would find themselves in a class-action lawsuit brought by every manufacturer that has spent the money to come to the province and open up a manufacturing facility.”

Either way, if the ClearSky study’s findings are sound, politicians who try to rally behind contemptuous attitudes toward the FIT as part of their election platforms may have a tougher sell than they expect.  Even the most ardent capitalist is likely open to the idea that a dollar a month, more or less, is a small enough sacrifice for clean air and jobs.

Certification Criteria Fuels International Ire

Now the DCRs, they do add an unwelcome level of complexity to the issue of whether or not the FIT, and the green economy it tries to create, are “worth it.”  In order to receive FIT certification, projects must contain a certain percentage of materials and use a minimum amount of labour from within Ontario.  For PV projects, this number will top out at 60% as of 2011.

Much like the “Buy American” sloganeering in the US, DCRs make the Ontario PV, wind, and biomass industries difficult for outsiders to penetrate.  Solar panels and parts from overseas are often much less expensive than just about anything made in North America, so the criteria provide a competitive edge in the province’s rapid transition to a self-sustaining renewable energy industry.

The most glaring downside to the FIT’s DCRs is international opposition.  Japan has filed an official complaint with the World Trade Organization (WTO) alleging that the requirements basically amount to subsidies, which violate trade rules.  The complaint is backed by members of the European Union and the United States and has fuelled political debate back home.  One group, led by Mitsubishi Electric Corp. (Mitsubishi), alleges that the DCRs will actually rob 9,000 jobs from the Ontario economy and cost the province $2 billion in potential investment capital.  On the other hand, the ClearSky report found that solar power generation produces twelve to fifteen times the number of jobs per kilowatt-hour as nuclear or coal projects.

Of course, tomorrow could always bring a contradictory report, and the next day another.  The truth is that the solar industry, like every other renewable energy industry, is new by historical standards, and as such, it is inherently confused and confusing.  Politicking and editorial bluster only make a clear analysis of the situation more elusive.  But, if I squint my eyes and peek through the fog, I think I can see a light.  The future is bright and we just have to press ahead.  The green economy may as well be called “the economy,” because it is just tomorrow’s way of doing business.

Solar Energy Industry Flourishes in FIT’s First Year

Tuesday, November 30th, 2010

Ontario’s solar energy industry has made great progress.  Just over a year into the province’s feed-in tariff (FIT) program, the Green Energy Act Alliance (the Alliance) has released a report on the Green Energy and Green Economy Act’s successes.  The Act was signed into law in May of 2009 and opened the door for the creation of the FIT later the same year.  The FIT pays above-market rates to owners of projects that feed solar, wind, and biofuel energy into the power grid.  In only a year, the program and the industry have succeeded in creating thousands of renewable energy jobs and have opened the door to new educational opportunities, such as photovoltaic (PV) installation courses.

In its first year, the FIT approved more solar and wind capacity than a similar program in France did in its first year and more PV energy than Spain’s industry, the second biggest solar market in the world.  “The response to the Green Energy Act is overwhelming,” says Dr. Rick Smith, Executive Director of Canada’s Environmental Defence.  “To be in the same league as France and Spain,” he adds, “is beyond our wildest dreams.”

Program Creates Renewable Energy Jobs for PV Course Graduates

The Alliance’s report also shares good news about energy independence.  The FIT has helped spur a long-awaited democratization of the energy supply.  Ontario already has the most community ownership of renewable energy on the continent; more than 22,000 people have applied to receive the government’s incentives for “green” projects.

The FIT program’s domestic content requirements (DCRs) add an extra element of empowerment.  By 2011, up to 60% of the parts and labour used in participating projects must come from within the province.  This provides added incentive for workers to upgrade their skills with PV design and installation courses like the ones offered by Canada’s only ISPQ-accredited solar training school, Ontario Solar Academy (OSA).  According to a recent report by ClearSky Advisors (ClearSky), if approvals for FIT applications continue at the current pace for another four years, Ontario will add the equivalent of 70,000 new jobs to its renewable energy sector.

It is clear that renewable energy, in one form or another, is here to stay.  Solar power continues to make great strides in efficiency and cost.  Moreover, it spreads the wealth, offers greater energy security, and helps Ontarians become more involved in processes that shape their futures.  “Renewable energy isn’t left versus right,” says Dr. Smith, “it’s about choosing the future over the past… Ontario isn’t just shutting (down) polluting coal plants.  We’re transforming as a province and spreading the benefits that clean energy brings.”

Ontario Solar Energy Company Receives CSA Certification

Sunday, November 28th, 2010

Solar energy company, Lumin Solar, Inc. (Lumin), has announced that it has received certification from CSA International (CSA) for its LS-240 PV panels, which also meet standards set out by Underwriters Laboratories.  The CSA certification assures regulators and customers that Lumin’s new state-of-the-art panels comply with national and international standards for safety and performance.

The Lumin team brings more than thirty years of manufacturing experience to its business.  According to a press release, the Thornhill, Ontario-based solar energy company’s goal is to be “the best in its class, emphasizing quality and customer service while helping to bring a greener vision to Ontario.”  Lumin’s 240W panels are designed for household use in both on- and off-grid applications.  The company’s modules use a layout of sixty high-efficiency monocrystalline cells and are made using premium components that ensure a high energy output.  Lumin guarantees that its modules are free from harmful materials such as cadmium telluride and gallium arsenide and that they are made in Ontario, which qualifies them as domestic content under the province’s feed-in tariff (FIT) program.

Green Energy and Green Economy Act Boosts Industry, Creates Careers

The FIT is a product of 2009’s Green Energy and Green Economy Act (Green Energy Act).  One of its stated purposes is to “help Ontario phase out coal-fired electricity generation by 2014.”  The FIT works to achieve this by providing financial incentives to energy producers who feed into the electrical grid from “green” sources, and the many spin-off benefits of the program include new green careers for an economy devastated by the decline in manufacturing.

Lumin is enthusiastic about the opportunity to become part of the toolkits that the next wave of solar designers and installers will use in their new green careers.  “We are very excited to have achieved this important milestone,” says Mr. Brian Read, the company’s CEO.  “I am very grateful and appreciative of our dedicated staff and their commitment to making Lumin Solar an Ontario success.  We are now poised to provide the residential and commercial industry with our Ontario-made solar panels that meet the FIT and microFIT requirements.”  To help boost awareness of its products, the company will participate in this year’s Solar Canada exhibition, which takes place in Toronto from December 6-7.

Non-Profit Provides Food, Job Training, Green PV Energy

Friday, November 26th, 2010

Gleaners Food Bank (Gleaners) in Belleville, Ontario, announced on November 8 that it will now sell green energy to the province.  In the last two years, Gleaners, the Quinte area’s destination for individuals and families in need of food, information, job training, drug addiction prevention, and affordable housing, has made an effort to help the environment as well.  The organization’s latest green initiative is the seventy-two 15 kW solar panels recently installed on the food bank’s rooftop.  This installation will generate revenue from the more than 20,000 kW-hours of green electricity it will add to the province’s power grid each year.  The installation will also create temporary and long-term employment for Ontario’s certified solar workers.

The solar installation is one of several green retrofits Gleaners has made to the food bank building.  Over a year ago, the organization took part in the Veridian Energy Lighting Retrofit program, which helped Gleaners replace old lighting, heating, and cooling equipment with more energy efficient technology.  Later, the Ontario Trillium Foundation helped Gleaners install a better-insulated roof, and the non-profit added a rain harvesting conservation and solar energy organic system to the garden near the food bank’s warehouse.  The rooftop installation joins several other solar projects in the Quinte-Belleville region, along with hundreds of new projects creating green energy and jobs for certified PV workers across Ontario.

FIT, MicroFIT Help Create Green Jobs, PV Training Certification Opportunities

Ontario is home to North America’s first full-scale feed-in tariff (FIT) program.  The FIT and its companion program for projects under 10 kW, the microFIT, pay producers of renewable energy to tie into the grid.  The programs’ goals are to diversify the power supply and help phase out coal-fired power in the province by 2014.  In addition to clean electricity, it has also created a wide array of green jobs and educational opportunities like solar PV training courses.  The microFIT encourages homeowners to be part of the solution by paying them some of the highest rates for green energy – up to 80.2 cents/kW-hour for residential-scale rooftop PV installations.  The programs’ high rates allow projects like the Gleaners solar set-up to profit from progress.

“Hunger has no season and solar energy is the future of Gleaners sustainability,” says Susanne Quinlan, Gleaners’ Director of Operations.  “We decided to pursue solar energy to create a healthy and sustainable environment for residents and families we serve, and to help greatly offset power costs.”  Gleaners Food Bank will help both the environment and Ontarians for years to come, all under, and over, the same roof.

Green Energy Act Benefits Ontario Hospital

Thursday, November 25th, 2010

Kingston General Hospital (Kingston General) has announced that it will install 95 kW worth of solar panels on the rooftop of its Kidd Wing.  The project is one of several measures the hospital will take between now and 2012 to make its operations more energy efficient and incorporate alternative sources of power.  Kingston General will work to ensure that the new solar installation complies with the eligibility criteria under Ontario’s feed-in tariff (FIT) program, which pays high prices for green energy and helps create new career opportunities in the energy sector.  The hospital will also receive $118,000 from Utilities Kingston to help pay for the renovations.

Ontario passed its Green Energy Act in May of 2009, paving the way for the province to establish the continent’s first FIT program.  The FIT pays producers of green energy to tie into the electrical grid, provided that they meet certain requirements.  Among them, owners of participating projects must certify that a certain percentage of parts and labour were sourced in Ontario.  The Act and the program’s financial incentives encourage people to switch to alternative sources of energy and create opportunities for manufacturing and career training, such as certification courses for solar installers.

Alternative Energy Part of Greater, Greener Objective

The Kidd Wing solar installation is part of an agreement between Kingston General and New Jersey-based Honeywell for a $10.5 million upgrade to the hospital’s medical research and career training infrastructure.  In addition to the solar PV panels, the company will also help the hospital install a high-efficiency hot water condensing boiler plant, replace 250 windows in its heritage Watkins building, update fixtures to include more energy efficient models, and install low-flow toilets and sinks.

Kingston General expects to prevent the release of 2,200 tonnes of greenhouse gases annually with the new upgrades and save more than 70,000 cubic metres of water per year.  The hospital overhaul reflects a province-wide move toward greater energy efficiency and an overall commitment on the part of Ontarians to act as stewards of the environment, protecting it for future generations.