Posts Tagged ‘green economy’

London Church Set to Switch on Solar Cross, Participate in MicroFIT

Thursday, January 6th, 2011

On Wednesday, January 6, Richards Memorial United Church (Richards Memorial), in London, Ontario will begin operating its new microFIT rooftop solar installation.  The project is the city’s first photovoltaic (PV) system on a church building.

“We’ve seen cars stop in the street and (drivers) roll down their windows to look up,” says the church’s pastor, Rev. Janet Fradette.  Her congregation chose to focus on the environment in 2010, and she says the twenty-year contract is a reminder that a commitment to sustainability must be long-term.

“It’s one of those projects that has appeal from whatever viewpoint you look at it,” says the Reverend.  The installation will create renewable energy, draw revenue, and provide work for Ontarians who have chosen to pursue green careers.  Its fifty panels, installed in the shape of a cross, will produce 14 MW-hours of solar power and prevent the release of 11 tonnes of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere each year.

Programs Create Renewable Energy, Careers for Workers with Solar Training

The church secured an $87,000 loan from the Middlesex Presbytery of the United Church of Canada to finance its PV project.  It expects to pay off the loan within eight years and then generate income by participating in Ontario’s microFIT program.  The program creates renewable energy and careers for graduates of “green” educational streams, like solar training courses, by paying high prices for electricity produced by grid-tied solar or wind projects under 10 kW of capacity.  The microFIT and its companion program for larger projects, simply referred to as the feed-in tariff (FIT), both lock prices into twenty-year contracts.

Richards Memorial expects the solar project to generate up to $216,000 over the course of its participation in the microFIT program.  The church hired Direct Current Renewable Energy (Direct Current) to install the cross-shaped solar array.  Direct Current is a Brantford-based company whose management brings to the table more than a decade and a half worth of training and experience in commercial and residential electrical systems.  The company had already installed one system on a church in Hamilton prior to constructing the London project.

The church chose the last day of Epiphany to hold its dedication ceremony for the new solar system.  The date, fittingly, commemorates the time when the Wise Men of the Bible followed the light in the sky in their search for Jesus.

Ontario to Add Two New Alternative Energy Projects to Green Economy

Thursday, December 16th, 2010

Canadian Solar Solutions, Inc. (Canadian Solar Solutions), has signed an agreement with Sky Power, Ltd. (Sky Power), to add 18.5 MW of solar capacity to Ontario’s green economy.  The partners will build two new solar farms in Napanee and Thunder Bay that will collectively produce enough electricity to power nearly 33,000 homes and create potential careers for graduates of the province’s photovoltaic (PV) training courses.

Kitchener-based Canadian Solar Solutions is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Canadian Solar, Inc. (Canadian Solar), headquartered in the same city.  The parent company operates globally, while Canadian Solar Solutions handles the domestic market.  The companies specialize in “turnkey solar solutions for residential, commercial, and solar farm markets in Canada.”  Toronto’s Sky Power owns alternative energy projects in Canada and across the globe.  The company develops, manages, and finances projects “from the initial discovery stages through to commercial operation.”  Sky Power has agreed to engineer and construct the two new projects and has arranged financing through Germany’s Deutsche Bank.

Canadian Solar Solutions and Sky Power expect to complete the two new installations by mid-2011.  When finished, the Napanee and Thunder Bay projects will produce 10 MW and 8.5 MW of solar energy, respectively, per hour.

Alternative Energy Creates Industry, Careers in Ontario

Ontario has a vibrant and growing green economy that is energized by a feed-in tariff (FIT) program that pays producers of alternative energy premium rates for electricity they generate from sources such as solar, wind, and biomass.  The program creates clean energy, careers, and inspires training opportunities such as Ontario Solar Academy’s ISPQ-accredited solar PV courses.  Participating projects must meet minimum targets for domestic content for both materials and labour.  This provision keeps FIT money in the province and helps to build a stable foundation for the industry so that it survives the eventual conclusion of the program.

Canadian Solar plans to open a solar module manufacturing facility in Guelph that will help the company and other solar PV businesses in Ontario stay on course and meet the FIT’s domestic content requirements.  The company expects to complete the plant, which it estimates will employ about 500 people, by the middle of next year.

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.

MicroFIT Changes Leave Farmers in the Dust

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

Proposed changes to Ontario’s feed-in tariff (FIT) program could leave some of the province’s farmers in the dust.  On July 2, Ontario’s Minister of Energy and Infrastructure, Brad Duguid, announced that the lucrative prices the program offers for electricity generated by small, ground-mounted solar installations may be reduced from 80.2 cents per kilowatt hour to 58.8 cents.

The FIT program began accepting applications for green energy projects in May of 2009.  The response was overwhelming, with the Ontario Power Authority (OPA) receiving more than 15,000 applications in less than a year and a half.  Most applications were for ground-mounted solar systems less than 10 kW, which fall into the microFIT category.  According to Duguid, the province has to scale back its pricing scheme in order to avoid footing the $1 billion required to cover the projects’ 25% rate of return over the next twenty years.

Rural Residents Lose Trust in the System

Agricultural land is prime real estate for green energy installations, and many farmers have installed or planned to install ground-mounted systems on their property.  One such farmer is Ed Kloosterman, who, with his wife, Alma, had applied for microFIT contracts to build 10kW of solar installations on four rural properties near Peterborough.    While the Kloostermans understand the province’s rationale for the price changes, Ed asserts that a lot of trouble could have been avoided if the government had more carefully worked out the economics of the arrangement beforehand.

Mark Banner, president of Diverse Green Solutions, Ltd., and vendor for solar company Omniwatt, says that while the price changes are a setback, they do not spell the end of Ontario’s solar industry.  At 58.8 cents per kilowatt hour, there is still a profit to be made from the technology and the microFIT.  What remains a problem, as Wendy Omvlee of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture points out, is loss of trust in the program.  While Ontario’s FIT continues to offer high prices for green energy, the province will have to work to restore the faith of businesses, homeowners, and rural land owners, and to assure potential applicants that in the future, they can rely on the OPA to stand behind its offers.

Ontario Solar Incentive Program Faces First Major Hurdle

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

In early July, the Ontario Power Authority (OPA) dropped a bomb on the burgeoning solar generation community by reducing the rates it will pay to some microFIT solar projects by 27% – from 80.2 cents to 58.8 cents per kWh.  With more than 16,000 Ontario microFIT applicants currently awaiting approval, the move could make solar installations for many would-be rural power producers much more difficult.  In addition, decreased demand for microFIT projects could also place greater strain on solar panel manufacturers, suppliers, and training organizations.

It did not take long for the rate drop to make big waves in the industry.  Petitions and other criticisms sprang up within hours of the release.  The OPA and McGuinty government quickly felt the heat and moved to appease the dissenters, stating the rates would have been too profitable for microFIT participants and too costly for the Ontario taxpayer.  In essence, ground-mounted solar installations should not receive the same incentives as costlier rooftop PV installations.

Energy Sector Was Just Starting to Feel Solar Installation Boom

Since the launch of the microFIT program, countless businesses, households, and farms have gravitated to solar, hoping to generate profits from their PV investments.  A change to the tariff incentive could mean disaster for many of these businesses and start-ups.  One such company, Fritz Construction, reported losing 80% of its business within several days as a result of the microFIT change.  Sudden changes like these, especially at the dawn of a relatively new industry, make it very difficult for solar installers, suppliers, trainers, and power producers to budget and plan accordingly.

Solar Panel Ground-Systems Still Have Hope

Luckily, the rate cut will not take effect immediately.  The OPA has suspended finalization of the decision until August 3 so it can consult its stakeholders and solicit feedback from the field.  This provides time for the industry to regroup and lobby the provincial government.  Furthermore, the new rate proposed by the OPA of 58.8 cents per kWh may still provide sustainable margins to some solar power producers, as long as those installing systems can streamline training, installation, and other capital costs.