Calgary Herald

Sun smiling on Kimberley solar farm

- DERRICK PENNER

The builders of British Columbia’s first grid- scale solar power plant in Kimberley named the project SunMine owing in part to its location on a former mine site. But the operation is also finding more sun to mine, exceeding initial expectatio­ns for electricit­y production.

SunMine is small, just over one megawatt of generating capacity, but since turning on the switch in June, the experiment­al facility has delivered enough electricit­y to BC Hydro to power about 275 homes, considerab­ly more than expectatio­ns it would produce power for 200 homes.

“I’d say it’s operating at or a little above its designed potential,” said Kevin Wilson, Kimberley’s economic developmen­t officer, “so as far as surprises, I think we’re happy there are no surprises.”

Kimberley is one partner in a consortium that put the $ 5.3- million project together. The others are landowner Teck Resources Ltd., the Columbia Basin Trust and Southern Interior Developmen­t trust. Non- profit renewable energy firm EcoSmart contribute­d research and data.

Constructi­on on the facility started last fall as a proof- of- concept exercise for solar power in B. C. where, to date, it has been a microscopi­c factor in a province dominated by hydroelect­ricity.

They are selling the power its solar panels generate to BC Hydro on a contract under the utility’s standing offer program, which it uses to purchase small amounts of electricit­y by independen­t power projects at set prices.

Wilson said SunMine’s business case is helped by the fact it is the first in Canada using trackers — sophistica­ted sensors hooked up to mechanisms on the solar units capable of moving them independen­tly to best catch the sun.

“You can really see it perform on cloudy days,” Wilson said, watching the units turn and pivot to find an optimal position.

“But as the sun breaks through the clouds, it’s like gravity — they all get pulled toward the sun and align pretty quickly.”

The system also allows SunMine to optimize its power generation at sunrise and sunset, times when electricit­y demand in B. C. is highest and BC Hydro will pay a premium for the electricit­y.

The base rate that the utility pays SunMine is 11 cents a kilowatt hour, Wilson said, with 20- per- cent extra for power delivered during high- demand periods.

Wilson said at those rates, SunMine is hoping to generate net income of $ 50,000 to $ 100,000 annually.

The site has room for expansion, Wilson said, and they could build up to seven megawatts of solar generation without having to upgrade the transmissi­on infrastruc­ture left over from the facilities of the Teck- owned former Sullivan Mine.

EcoSmart president Michel de Spot, who scoured B. C. weather data looking for potential solar sights, prodded Kimberley into taking on the initiative, which it did in part to promote the community as a centre for innovation, said the city’s chief administra­tive officer Scott Sommervill­e.

And the project appears to have at least sparked more discussion about solar power in B. C. Since SunMine announced its intentions last year, BC Hydro has “had a handful of developers” inquire about possibilit­ies to build solar, including colleges and First Nations, said spokeswoma­n Mora Scott.

 ?? CITY OF KIMBERLEY ?? Kimberley Mayor Don McCormick stands in front of SunMine solar panels. Since June, the experiment­al facility has delivered enough electricit­y to BC Hydro to power about 275 homes.
CITY OF KIMBERLEY Kimberley Mayor Don McCormick stands in front of SunMine solar panels. Since June, the experiment­al facility has delivered enough electricit­y to BC Hydro to power about 275 homes.

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