Medicine Hat looks to solar power

subscribe

Medicine Hat is hoping to become the first city in Canada to use solar energy help power the city.

The project would use solar power to create steam that would be fed into the existing city-owned power plant. That steam — instead of natural gas — would power the plant's turbines.

The solar-thermal energy project would provide one megawatt of electricity without emitting any carbon.

"Natural gas, as with other fossil fuels, is non-renewable so over time we're going to have to figure out a way to do things different than we do them today," said Russ Smith, the city's environment manager and the driving force behind the idea.

Smith said Medicine Hat is the perfect place for the project, even though it sits on huge reserves of natural gas.

"We've been aware for quite a while that the Medicine Hat area has some of the highest, if not the highest, solar radiation in Canada, which means we get the most sunlight hours of anywhere in Canada," Smith said.

"As we started to assess the potential for renewable energy in the Medicine Hat area, solar kept coming to the top of the pileÂ… as one of those resources that we need to understand a little bit better."

Guillermo Ordorica-Garcia, with the Alberta Research Council, said the benefit to the environment is sizeable. "There are no fossil fuels being burned at any stage of the process," he said.

While this technology has been successful in California and Spain, Medicine Hat would be the first city in Canada to be powered by solar thermal energy.

The $9 million project has already received $3 million in funding from the city, but will go ahead only if the federal and provincial governments provide the additional $6 million needed.

Related News

california-electricity

As California enters a brave new energy world, can it keep the lights on?

LOS ANGELES - Gretchen Bakke thinks a lot about power—the kind that sizzles through a complex grid of electrical stations, poles, lines and transformers, keeping the lights on for tens of millions of Californians who mostly take it for granted.

They shouldn’t, says Bakke, who grew up in a rural California town regularly darkened by outages. A cultural anthropologist who studies the consequences of institutional failures, she says it’s unclear whether the state’s aging electricity network and its managers can handle what’s about to hit it.

California is casting off fossil fuels to become something that doesn’t yet exist: a fully electrified…

READ MORE
renewables 2030 graph

U.S. Renewable and Clean Energy Industries Set Sights on Market Majority

READ MORE

net zero

Net-zero roadmap can cut electricity costs by a third in Germany - Wartsila

READ MORE

work from home

Residential electricity use -- and bills -- on the rise thanks to more working from home

READ MORE

southern-california-edison-faces-lawsuits-over-role-in-california-wildfires

Southern California Edison Faces Lawsuits Over Role in California Wildfires

READ MORE