Municipal participation in the electricity sector grows


NFPA 70E Training

Our customized live online or in‑person group training can be delivered to your staff at your location.

  • Live Online
  • 6 hours Instructor-led
  • Group Training Available
Regular Price:
$199
Coupon Price:
$149
Reserve Your Seat Today

Ontario waterpower projects led by municipalities advance clean energy and hydropower under HESOP, boosting grid reliability and sustainability across Renfrew, St. Catharines, and Ottawa with new MW capacity and community ownership.

 

At a Glance

Municipally led hydroelectric facilities in Ontario that supply clean, reliable power under the province's HESOP program.

  • 35.25 MW total across Ottawa, St. Catharines, and Horton Township
  • Majority municipal ownership ensures local benefits
  • Part of Ontario Power Authority planning and procurement
  • HESOP municipal stream and expansion stream details

 

The Ontario Power Authority OPA has recently signed contracts for three new-build waterpower projects owned by Ontario municipalities through the municipal stream of the Hydroelectric Standard Offer Program HESOP.

 

The projects, which are small hydro facilities, will be developed by Renfrew Power Generation in Horton Township 1.7 megawatts or MW, St. Catharines Hydro Generation Inc. in St. Catharines 4.2 MW and Chaudière Hydro in Ottawa 29.35 MW. All three projects have majority municipal ownership. They are examples of municipal contributions to Ontario’s reliable and sustainable electricity system and participation in the province’s clean energy sector.

Minister of Energy Bob Chiarelli announced the Renfrew project at an event today in Pembroke. He previously announced the Ottawa project on March 7, and the province’s green power supply goals were reiterated at the time, and Minister of the Environment Jim Bradley attended an event to mark the St. Catharines project on March 12.

The HESOP program offers two streams – a municipal stream and an expansion stream. The municipal stream was available for new waterpower projects larger than 500 kilowatts that were the subject of an application to the OPA’s Feed-in Tariff Program submitted before June 5, 2010. Applications for HESOP’s municipal stream were accepted from November 4 to December 6, 2013.

The expansion stream will be open to expansion projects at existing non-utility generation facilities under contract with the Ontario Electricity Financial Corporation and at existing facilities under contract with the OPA through the Hydroelectric Contract Initiative. Draft program rules and standard definitions for the new HESOP expansion stream are now posted on the OPA’s website for comment from interested stakeholders, communities and potential project developers until April 13, 2014, as the province moves to expand clean energy potential this year. This stream has a procurement target of up to 40 MW.

“Waterpower is an important part of Ontario’s clean energy supply mix, and wind-power development continues to grow alongside it for Ontario’s future. These new facilities will provide local benefits and contribute clean, reliable and affordable hydropower to the grid for years to come,” said Bob Chiarelli, who works with the Ontario Minister of Energy. “The Ontario Power Authority is pleased at this opportunity to work with municipalities to ensure a safe, reliable and sustainable electricity system for Ontario. These three waterpower projects are representative of the OPA’s focus in working with communities across Ontario in the planning and siting of electricity infrastructure,” said Colin Andersen, the Chief Executive Officer of the Ontario Power Authority.

The Ontario Power Authority is responsible for ensuring a reliable, sustainable supply of electricity for Ontario. Its key areas of focus are planning the power system for the long term, leading and coordinating conservation initiatives across the province, and ensuring development of needed generation resources, including Ontario hydro projects financed by utilities, among others.

Related News

Hydro-Québec will refund a total of $535 million to customers who were account holders in 2018 or 2019

Hydro-Québec Bill 34 Refund issues $535M customer credits tied to electricity rates, consumption-based rebates, and…
View more

Amazon Announces Three New Renewable Energy Projects to Support AWS Global Infrastructure

AWS Renewable Energy Projects deliver new wind power for AWS data centers in Ireland, Sweden,…
View more

Germany shuts down its last three nuclear power plants

Germany Nuclear Phase-Out ends power generation from reactors, prioritizing energy security, renewables, and emissions goals…
View more

Ontario introduces new fixed COVID-19 hydro rate

Ontario Electricity COVID-19 Recovery Rate sets a fixed price of 12.8 cents/kWh, replacing time-of-use billing…
View more

Alberta Ends Moratorium on Renewable Energy Projects

Alberta Ends Renewable Energy Moratorium, accelerating wind and solar deployment while prioritizing grid stability, reliability,…
View more

Daimler Details Gigantic Scope of Its Electrification Plan

Daimler Electric Strategy drives EV adoption with global battery factories, Mercedes-Benz electrified models, battery cells…
View more

Sign Up for Electricity Forum’s Newsletter

Stay informed with our FREE Newsletter — get the latest news, breakthrough technologies, and expert insights, delivered straight to your inbox.

Electricity Today T&D Magazine Subscribe for FREE

Stay informed with the latest T&D policies and technologies.
  • Timely insights from industry experts
  • Practical solutions T&D engineers
  • Free access to every issue

Download the 2026 Electrical Training Catalog

Explore 50+ live, expert-led electrical training courses –

  • Interactive
  • Flexible
  • CEU-cerified