National Post (National Edition)

SOLAR POWER A RED-HOT GROWTH AREA IN ALBERTA.

- GEOFFREY MORGAN

CALGARY • Solar power is beating expectatio­ns in oil-rich Alberta, where the renewable energy source is poised to expand dramatical­ly in the coming years as internatio­nal power companies invest in the province.

Fresh capital is being deployed in Alberta’s electricit­y generation sector for both renewable and natural gas-fired power projects after years of uncertaint­y caused by changes and reversals in the province’s power market, said Duane Reid-Carlson, president of power consulting firm EDC Associates, who advises on electric projects in the province.

“From the mix of projects that we see in the queue at the (Alberta Electric System Operator) and the projects that have been announced, Alberta has no shortage of thermal and renewable projects,” Reid-Carlson said, adding that he sees “a great mix” of independen­t power companies and foreign firms looking to build renewable projects in Alberta.

Alberta is a unique power market in Canada because its electricit­y supply is not dominated by a Crown corporatio­n such as BC Hydro, Hydro One or Hydro Quebec. Instead, a mix of private-sector companies and a few municipall­y-owned utilities generate electricit­y, transmit and distribute that power to households and industries under long-term contracts.

Last week, Perimeter Solar Inc., backed by Danish solar power investor Obton AS, announced it had struck a deal to supply Calgary-based pipeline giant TC Energy Corp. with 74.25 megawatts of electricit­y from a new 130-MW solar power project, Claresholm Solar, about 125 kilometres south of Calgary. Neither company disclosed the costs of the transactio­n or the project.

“We are very pleased that of all the potential off-takers in the market for energy, we have signed with a company as reputable as TC Energy,” Obton CEO Anders Marcus said in a release announcing the deal, which it called “the largest negotiated energy supply agreement with a North American energy company.”

Pe r i m e t e r e x p e c t s to break ground on the project, which will more than double the amount of solar power being produced in the province, by the end of this year.

A report published Monday by the Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion, a unit of the U.S. Department of Energy, estimated that renewable energy powered 3 per cent of Canada’s energy consumptio­n in 2018.

Between the Claresholm project and other planned solar installati­ons, utility companies are poised to install far more solar power than the province is currently planning for.

University of Calgary adjunct professor Blake Shaffer said it was “ironic” that the Claresholm Solar project was announced the exact same day as the Alberta Electric System Operator (AESO) released a forecast that under-projected the amount of solar in the province’s electric grid. The AESO released its forecast on Sept. 30, which predicted that solar power projects would provide just 1 per cent of Alberta’s electricit­y supply by 2030 at 231 megawatts.

Shaffer said the AESO, which manages and operates the province’s electricit­y grid, is assuming that on a levelized basis solar power will need a price over $100 per megawatt hour for new investment. However, he said, based on recent auctions for government infrastruc­ture projects, the cost is closer to $70 MW/h.

Most forecastin­g organizati­ons like the Internatio­nal Energy Agency have had to adjust their forecasts for solar power adoption higher in the past, as growth of the renewable energy source has outperform­ed expectatio­ns.

Calgary-based Greengate Power has also proposed a $500-million, 400-MW solar project near Vulcan, a town roughly one-hour by car southeast of Calgary.

“So now we’re getting close to 700 MW (of solar power),” Shaffer said, which is three times the AESO forecast.

Financial Post

 ?? SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? “No shortage of thermal and renewable projects.”
SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS “No shortage of thermal and renewable projects.”
 ?? BILL GRAVELAND / CP FILES ?? Vulcan, Alta., Mayor Tom Grant at a solar park in 2016. A new 400-MW solar
project is set for Vulcan.
BILL GRAVELAND / CP FILES Vulcan, Alta., Mayor Tom Grant at a solar park in 2016. A new 400-MW solar project is set for Vulcan.

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