The Prince George Citizen

YOUR LETTERS Site C a step towards a greener future

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In the next four weeks the NDP will decide the fate of the largest public infrastruc­ture project in B.C. history, the Site C Dam. I say build it. Here’s why:

You may recall, before the last federal election, a very large, farleft environmen­tal faction within the NDP were pushing for the party to endorse the Leap Manifesto, calling for Canada to get 100 per cent of its energy from renewable sources by 2050. How this can be achieved is described in a background document “Providing all global energy with wind, water, and solar power...” authored by faculty of the University of California and Stanford.

I agree that society should be moving towards renewable energy sources, as quickly as possible, in a manner that maintains our standard of living, economy, and fiscal well-being.

The authors estimate the combined number of wind turbines, solar plants, geothermal plants, hydroelect­ric power plants, wave devices,and tidal turbines it would take to power the world for all purposes. They propose to include 270 1,300 megawatt hydroelect­ric power plants in their combined list.

So how many renewable energy generation sources would we need in Canada to replace fossil fuels?

Every year in Canada we consume about 10,000 petajoules of energy, 70 per cent of which comes from fossil fuels. The Site C dam will produce 1,100 megawatts of energy operating at peak capacity and 680 megawatts of energy operating at average capacity.

Converting units, we would require 326 Site C Dams operating at average capacity to generate the energy we get from fossil fuels in Canada.

Similarly, a solar farm that would produce 1,100 MW of electricit­y, like the Site C dam, would require approximat­ely 189 square kilometres of land area. The Site C dam’s reservoir is just 55 sq. km in area.

This is just the production side. We would also require massive enhancemen­ts of electrical transmissi­on infrastruc­ture and need to convert all boilers, furnaces, engines, etc. to electric units. No small task.

If, as a society, we plan to actually transition to a low carbon economy, we must start building infrastruc­ture such as the Site C dam and other renewable energy infrastruc­ture such as solar, geothermal, wind and their associated distributi­on infrastruc­ture, to create the energy we need to allow us to transition away from fossil fuels.

Let’s get started by building one Site C dam.

David Gerein, Prince George

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