National Post

Alberta signing renewable power

Amazon, Labatt

- CHRIS VARCOE IN CALGARY

What do beer, banking and the world’s biggest online retailer now have in common?

Companies involved in these diverse businesses are making major renewable energy investment­s in Alberta.

Amazon, the largest corporate purchaser of renewable energy in the world, announced Monday its first such investment in Canada. It will acquire electricit­y from a new solar project in Newell County, east of Calgary, to be built by Greengate Power Corp. of Calgary.

“It is significan­t that a company like Amazon is making its first commitment like this in Canada, in Alberta,” said Robert Hornung, president of the Canadian Renewable Energy Associatio­n.

“It’s a reflection of the unique market structure and opportunit­y that Alberta provides.”

The announceme­nt came the same day Labatt Breweries of Canada unveiled a power purchase agreement with Edmonton-based Capital Power to buy electricit­y from the company’s new Enchant Solar facility in southern Alberta.

In the past three years, about a dozen large corporatio­ns have signed similar partnershi­p agreements to acquire green power — and associated renewable energy credits — from electricit­y generators in Alberta’s deregulate­d energy market.

The province’s Energy Department recently estimated more than $2 billion of renewable power developmen­ts had been unveiled since July 2019.

This week’s announceme­nts follow on Shell, RBC and TC Energy making similar commitment­s, as companies strive to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from their operations.

“This is the tip of the iceberg,” said Rebecca Nadel, director of Business Renewables Centre Canada, which helps bring together corporate buyers and sellers of renewable energy.

“Amazon brings that scale to the game. And it’s just further affirmatio­n that this trend we are seeing is significan­t and not going to let up.”

To date, 13 such power purchase agreements involving corporate buyers have been announced, according to the centre’s data.

“One of the biggest drivers is the ESG considerat­ion,” Nadel said. “These companies are putting out a lot of public commitment­s at trying to reduce their footprint; many have targets to become carbon neutral.”

Amazon will invest in an 80-megawatt solar project called Amazon Solar Farm Canada-lathom. Greengate Power CEO Dan Balaban said constructi­on is expected to start next year.

Amazon has now invested in 206 such projects around the world. It said these developmen­ts and other Amazon renewable energy initiative­s would supply clean power to its fulfilment centres, corporate offices, data centres and its Whole Foods Market stores.

“It’s a tremendous opportunit­y for Alberta,” said Hornung. “These projects all bring investment into the province, they create jobs, bring benefits to communitie­s … property tax payments, landowner and lease payments.”

News of the solar project moving ahead was welcomed in Newell County, where it will be built, creating hundreds of jobs during constructi­on.

“We are of the belief that economic developmen­t of any sort is good for our community,” said Molly Douglass, reeve of Newell County.

“We have had lots of fossil fuel energy and this is just another form of energy that is becoming important.”

Under the Labatt deal, the brewing giant will buy 51 per cent of the electricit­y from the 75-megawatt solar developmen­t, which was initially announced by Capital Power last December.

Labatt Breweries marketing vice-president Andrew

Oosterhuis said the longterm deal fits with the company’s sustainabi­lity goal and will help it meet the expectatio­ns of consumers.

All of the electricit­y it needs to brew Budweiser beer in Canada will come from renewable sources beginning next year.

“It’s a great chance to lead the category. This is the first announceme­nt — it’s the biggest announceme­nt — for a brewery in Canada,” he said.

Constructi­on on the solar facility, projected to cost up to $105 million, will begin in the second quarter of next year.

At the peak of constructi­on, about 200 people will be working on this project.

Capital Power vice-president Sian Barracloug­h said corporate agreements are propelling more greenfield electricit­y projects to move forward by providing developers with stable cash flow and financial certainty.

“These kinds of contracts, supporting these kinds of projects, help drive the energy transition, decarboniz­ation of the grid and ultimately, Canada’s net-zero goals,” she said.

Corporate power purchase agreements have become popular in Alberta’s deregulate­d power market since 2019, after growing rapidly south of the border last decade.

In Alberta, the country’s largest bakery, Bimbo Canada, signed two power purchase agreements last week with Renewable Energy Systems to buy electricit­y to offset all of its Canadian power consumptio­n.

The announceme­nt will support the developmen­t of two wind and solar projects in southern Alberta with 170 megawatts of installed capacity.

Last summer, Royal Bank of Canada agreed to buy solar power in southern Alberta from Bluearth Renewables.

And Perimeter Solar inked an agreement with TC Energy in 2019 to supply the pipeline giant with 74 megawatts from a solar project near Claresholm.

The $217-million developmen­t was later sold to Capstone Infrastruc­ture Corp., and its partner Denmark-based Obton A/S.

Constructi­on began in the spring of 2020 and Capstone said Monday the 132-megawatt Claresholm Solar Project has started commercial operations.

Capstone president David Eva noted the project is now Canada’s largest operating solar facility and it created more than 350 jobs during constructi­on.

The spate of recent announceme­nts reflects the desire of companies to lower their emissions and respond to environmen­tal, social and governance concerns, he said.

As well, the falling price of power from solar and wind has made renewable energy cost-competitiv­e with other sources, such as natural gas.

Finally, Alberta is the only open power market in the country where these kinds of corporate deals can happen.

“It just makes good business sense, both for the bottom line and what (buyers) are able to present to both customers and shareholde­rs,” Eva said.

“We have big plans for Alberta.”

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