Title: Renewable Energy
1Renewable Energy Economic Development
- Deborah Doncaster
- Ontario Sustainable Energy Association
2Overview
- Who is OSEA?
- What is Community Power?
- Renewable Energy - an emerging economic
development sector - The added value of community power or local
ownership - Policy regime - beyond the private sector
- Role of EDCOs
3Ontario Sustainable Energy Association
- Member-based NGO representing over 30 community
organizations developing green power projects - Wind, solar, biogas, small hydro
- Generally small wind projects (lt 10 MW) with
large or utility grade turbines - Represented interests
- Community co-ops and non profits
- Municipalities (MUSH sector)
- Farmers and rural land owners
- Locally owned SMEs (developers, suppliers,
installers)
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5OSEA Community Power Orgs.
- Windy Hills Caledon
- WindShare
- WindFall Ecology Centre
- Toronto Renewable Energy Co-op
- Superior Renewable Energy Co-op
- The Renewable Energy Co-operative North
- Sustainable Energy Resource Group
- Power Up Renewable Energy
- Barrie Wind Catchers
- Cool Caledon
- Citizens For Renewable Energy (CFRE)
- Eco Energy Choices Ottawa
- Eco-energy Durham
- Hearthmakers Energy
- Countryside Energy co-op
- EcoPerth
- MChigeeng First Nation Economic Advancement
Project - Positive Power Co-op Hamilton
- Green Energy Co-operative
6What is Community Power?
- Locally owned (wholly or significantly) RE
generation projects - Commercial-scale (or aggregated micro)
- Optimizes local benefits (social, economic and
environmental) - Accessible, open participation
- Democratically controlled
- Financially viable
7What is Community Power?
- WindShare
- Toronto-based wind power co-operative
- Members are local residents, businesses,
Charities, financial institutions etc. - Members managed development process of project (
1 MW wind turbine on Toronto waterfront) via
staff, Board, contracts and volunteer committees - Members fundraised to cover development costs, do
Offering, and sales and marketing (1 million)
(1/2) - Members purchased shares (500 min - 5,000 max)
- Members sell power to Toronto Hydro (grid)
- Co-operative is paid for green power supply
(250K / MW / yr) - Co-op pays out expenses - lease, insurance, OM,
taxes, interest on debt, staff and org. expenses - Members receive dividends proportionate to number
of shares owned( number of kWhs they produce) - Members determine how to spend surpluses beyond
dividends
8What is Community Power?
- FarmShare
- Landowner and/or farmer co-operative
- Aggregation of micro-generators (100 Kw biogas
digester, 3 kW solar PV, 150 kW wind) - Aggregate sells power to the grid
- Members receive dividends
- Washington - PPA price set to encourage local
manufacturing and use of local installers
- Region of Niagara and Rankin Construction
- Representing local municipalities and a local
business - 10 MW wind farm
- Sells power to the grid
- Region provides feasibility financing through FCM
funding - Rankin provides construction and extends their
business know-how and practice - JV sells power to grid
9Community Power and Economic Development
- In the energy economy, there are 2 principle
organizational models by which to
develop/own/sell green power into the grid - As a private enterprise
- As a community-based enterprise
- Experience abroad (Denmark, Germany, U.K., Iowa,
Minnesota) proves that green power development
results in local and regional economic
development - However, community-based green power enterprises
can compete with the private sector AND result in
a greater degree of economic development for the
local community and region
10Community Power Potential
- Germany
- Largest installed capacity in the world (18,400
MW of Wind) - Supplies 6 of countrys electricity
- 35 wind projects are owned by local residents
and communities - Denmark
- 4th largest installed capacity worldwide (3,100
MW of Wind) - Supplies 20 of countrys electricity
- 85 wind projects owned by local residents and
communities
11An Emerging Economic Development Opportunity
- Operation of wind turbines employs more people
than traditional energy sector - 27 more jobs than coal plants
- 66 more jobs than natural gas plants
- (New York State Energy Research and Development
Authority)
12Human Resource Needs in Canadian Wind
Energy(Industry Canada report)
13Wind Jobs ED Potential
- According to Industry Canada, by 2012, Canada
will have 5600 MW of new wind and 13,000 jobs - We could see this growth in Ontario alone given
- Wind energy projects create new jobs in
manufacturing (electronic components, turbine
parts such as blades and towers), transportation
and construction (foundations and installation of
turbines) - Toronto turbine tower was made in Ajax Ontario
- New tower manufacturing facility built on Lake
Erie in response to sudden growth in wind
development along Lake Erie and Lake Huron (RMI -
US company) - Wind energy offers rural landowners a new cash
crop (2,000/ yr/turbine or 2-3 of projects
gross revenues) - Although a landowner may receive a lease payment
of 2,000 to 5,000 per turbine annually, owning
a turbine can double or triple the income
14Local Tax Revenues
- 75-90 cents of every energy dollar leaves the
local economy (FCM, RMI, US Dept Energy) - Property taxes for wind are often 2-3 time higher
than traditional power plants - Property taxes for munis 10,000 /MW/yr or 1
of assessed value of a wind project - Examples
- Lincoln County, Minnesota 470K in 2003 (155 MW)
- Kewaunee County, Wisconsin 200K/yr - or 50 of
countys budget (20 MW) - Iowa 2..5 million/yr (320 MW)
15-
- Wind Utility Consulting 2005
For 1 MW of generating capacity annually
Locally owned wind generation creates 10 times
more economic activity in the local community and
state than does wind generation owned by
out-of-state companies.
16Current Opportunity In Ontario
- Ontario requires over 20,000 MW in new generating
capacity to replace old units - Represents a 40 billion investment
- Ontario requires massive investment in
transmission system
17Wind Power Potential in Ontario
- Ontario has over 3 times the landmass of Germany
and a comparable wind regime, some say even
better. - Germany has 18,400 MW of installed capacity of
wind. - Several jurisdictions are supplied 100 by wind.
- Ontario presently has 175 MW of installed wind
capacity. - Ontario requires over 20,000 MW of new generation
capacity. - Ontario could easily provide 5000 MW of wind by
2010. - Industry Canada Study equates 5000 MW with 13,000
jobs
18Solar Power Potential in Ontario
- Solar Photo-Voltaic
- Germany 768 MW of installed capacity
- Canada 11 MW despite a superior resource to
Germany - CanSIA solar PV estimates
- 13,000 MW by 2025 in Ontario
- 39,000 MW by 2025 in Canada
19Biogas Small Hydro Power Potential
- Biogas
- 8,000 farms in Ontario with sufficient herd to
support biogas digesters between 100-200 kW - Overall generation capacity of 400 MW
- Include landfill gas, food oil wastes and energy
crops and the capacity grows to 1200 MW. - Small-hydro (lt 20 MW)
- 1000 MW (new and refurbished)
20Ontario RFP for Renewables
- Ontario Renewable Portfolio Standard
- 5 (1,350 megawatts) by 2007
- 10 (2,700 megawatts) by 2010
- Ontario Government Request for Proposals
- Awarded nearly 400 MW of renewables
- Awarded close to 1000 MW
- Poised to announce third RFP for projects
lt20 MW
21OSEAs SOCs campaign
- 2004 OSEA spearheaded a campaign for Advanced
Renewable Tariffs (SOC) - Fall 2005 - Ministry of Energy issues directive
to OPA to develop recommendations on a SOC
program for Ontario - February 2006 - Ministry of Energy will announce
details of SOC program for Ontario - Summer 2006 - Implementation of SOC program
22OSEAs ARTs Proposal
- Key components
- Size (0 up to 10 MW) suggested cap
- Open to all players
- 20 year contract between generator and OPA
- Price specific to production and technology
- 10.4 cents/kWh wind
- 42 cents/kWh solar PV
- 13 cents/kWh biogas and small hydro
- Guaranteed (within reason and established safety
guidelines) access to the distribution grid (lt 44
kV)
23Why ARTs
- Profound Need to increase public acceptance of
RETs - ARTs allow municipalities, farmers,
co-operatives, community groups, small businesses
and members of the public to participate in green
power generation - Simplified administrative process for government
and suppliers - Markets with ARTs have more players, stronger
local economies, more manufacturing, more jobs,
more renewable energy generation
24Co-operative Fund for CP
- Average Community Power wind project costs
650,000 to develop - Difficult for communities to raise this
- Fund would provide relatively easy capital
through grants and loans at fair rates
25Capacity Building for CP
- Certification Program - targets staff and
Directors - Technical Assistance Providers
- Org Dev
- Site Dev and Technical
- Financial
- Community Engagement
- Sales and Marketing
- Integration Manager
- Financial institutions
- EDCOs
- Universities and Colleges
- Specialized RE programs
- Co-operative curriculum
- Relevant government agencies
26Role of EDCOs
- Promote RE and ED opportunities
- Initiate local projects
- Facilitate information resources
- Organize the community (e.g.) Asset mapping
- Resource availability (prefeasibility)
- Organizational Development
- Financing
- Technical and site development
- Permitting and Approvals
- Legal
- Manufacturing, construction and OM
27Contact OSEA
- Please visit www.communitygreenpower.ca for more
info or contact Deborah Doncaster at 416.977.4441
or deb_at_ontario-sea.org