Solar farm to generate 1,400 construction jobs

subscribe

Ontario welcomes the official opening of the world's largest solar photovoltaic PV farm and milestones for two new wind projects in southwestern Ontario.

The province has attracted over $1 billion in private sector investment and created more than 1,400 construction jobs through three renewable energy projects that will produce enough electricity to power about 83,000 homes each year, replacing dirty, smog-producing coal with clean, renewable energy.

These projects will add almost 300 megawatts MW of renewable energy capacity to the more than 8,000 MW of new cleaner power that has been created since 2003. Ontario is building more clean energy to phase out dirty, smog-producing coal-fired generation and to keep the lights on for Ontario families' homes, businesses, hospitals and schools.

The three renewable energy projects celebrated today include:

• The Sarnia Solar Project - 80 MW now online, represents approximately $400 million of investment and enough electricity each year to power more than 12,000 homes - or about 40 per cent of homes in the City of Sarnia. Construction of the project created about 800 jobs.

• The Gosfield Wind Farm - 50 MW now online in Kingsville, represents enough electricity each year to power about 16,000 homes. Construction of the project created about 300 jobs.

• The Comber Wind Project - 166 MW to come online next fall, in Lakeshore. Comber is expected to produce enough electricity each year to power 55,000 homes. Construction of the project is expected to create 300 or more jobs at peak.

• The Gosfield and Comber Wind projects represent about $650 million of private sector investment and enough electricity each year to meet the needs of over 40 per cent of Essex County homes.

Related News

molten glass

Melting Glass Experiment Surprises Scientists by Defying a Law of Electricity

LONDON - A team of scientists working with electrical currents and silicate glass have been left gobsmacked after the glass appeared to defy a basic physical law.

If you pass an electrical current through a material, the way that current generates heat can be described by Joule's first law. It's been observed time and time again, with the temperature always evenly distributed when the material is homogeneous (or uniform).

But not in this recent experiment. A section - and only a section - of silicate glass became so hot that it melted, and even evaporated. Moreover, it did so at a much…

READ MORE
warsaw climate change

What to know about the big climate change meeting in Katowice, Poland

READ MORE

central asian power shortage

Why Is Central Asia Suffering From Severe Electricity Shortages?

READ MORE

Was there another reason for electricity shutdowns in California?

READ MORE

Investigation reveals power company 'gamed' $100M from Ontario's electricity system

READ MORE