Energy use cools as program heats up
The Ontario Power Authority's "peaksaver" program, activated for only the second time this summer on July 20, saved an estimated 45 megawatts of energy – enough to power more than 11,000 homes.
The program was first used this summer on July 7, and the OPA expects it will be activated up to 10 times before the season ends.
The program works when a special switch is installed in homes and small businesses to temporarily power down central air conditioning in order to manage electricity demand during peak energy-wasting hours, weekdays from 1-5 p.m., said Toronto Hydro spokesperson Denise Attallah.
The device works by allowing a wireless signal to cycle air conditioning with "minimal impact on comfort levels," the OPA said in a statement.
The peaksaver kicks in only after "a couple of hot days or heat wave," said Attallah. This was certainly true of the GTA, as Meteorologist Geoff Coulson, of Environment Canada, estimated that temperatures would soar to about 30C this weekend and the humidity could make it feel more like 40C until a cold front moves in.
Homes and businesses in the GTA constitute about half, or 45,000, peaksaver customers, said Attallah.
"Everyone in Ontario benefits when peaksaver is activated," said Sean Brady, the director of demand response and industrial programs for the OPA, in a written statement.
The program works in conjunction with the OPA and local electricity distribution companies across the province. Homeowners or small business owners who install the device receive $25 as well as saving money on their electricity bill, the authority said.
Last summer, residents reported they hardly noticed the cycle of lowered air-conditioning because it is never turned off completely.
By year's end, the OPA expects to offer 26 conservation programs. It wants Ontario to invest $10.2 billion in conservation over 20 years.
Related News

Hot Houston summer and cold winter set new electricity records
HOUSTON - Last year's Houston cold winter and hot summer drove power use to record levels, especially among households that rely on electricity for air conditioning.
Electricity generation increased 4 per cent nationwide in 2018 and produced 4,178 million megawatt hours, surpassing the previous peak of 4,157 megawatt hours set in 2007, the Energy Department reported.
U.S. households bought 6 percent more electricity in 2018 than they did the previous year, reflecting the fact 87 percent of households cool their homes with air conditioning and 35 percent use electricity for heating.
Electricity sales to the commercial sector increased 2 percent in 2018 compared…