Toronto Hydro urged to spark solar panel industry


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

Toronto Hydro solar jobs can expand through green energy incentives, installing solar panels on public buildings, creating apprenticeships and workforce training in renewable power while supporting disadvantaged youth, unions, and community groups across Toronto.

 

Inside the Issue

Toronto Hydro solar jobs offer apprenticeships, renewable energy work, and union careers installing PV on buildings.

  • Leverages Ontario Green Energy Act incentives
  • Installs solar PV on schools and civic facilities
  • Creates paid apprenticeships for youth and newcomers

 

Most of the guys Chris Williams went to high school with in Scarborough have temporary or part-time jobs — if they are working at all.

 

But not Williams.

The 18-year-old earned a coveted spot in an Ontario Building Trades program for youth last December and is now training to become a licensed electrician, as Ontario renewables job creation continues to expand opportunities in the trades. He is earning $12.73 an hour while he learns, plus benefits that include three weeks paid vacation, pension, medical and dental benefits — a package worth $23 an hour.

“What I have is a career,” said Williams, who is working on an energy retrofit at Princess Margaret Hospital. “I think other young people like me should get a chance to have careers too.”

With the Ontario Green Energy Act offering financial incentives, including a premium for solar power that supports project viability for businesses to create green energy, a coalition of union, environmental and community groups says there is also an opportunity to create secure, well-paying jobs for disadvantaged groups such as youth, immigrants and people of colour.

And they want Toronto Hydro to take the lead by buying and installing hundreds of solar panels on the roofs of public buildings, including Toronto school rooftops across the city.

“Private businesses are already signing 20-year-leases with building owners to install solar panels to feed into the grid because they know there is money in Ontario's solar business today,” said CUPE Local 1 President John Camilleri, who represents about 1,700 Toronto Hydro workers. “We think Toronto Hydro should get in on the action too.”

“As a school teacher, I see the value of being able to put people to work in good jobs so that parents can be home at night reading to their children,” said coalition member Nigel Barriffe, who grew up in Rexdale and teaches Grade 3 in the economically disadvantaged community.

Toronto Hydro spokesperson Blair Peberdy said the public utility believes this could help it meet its commitment, as a recent new energy deal in Toronto shows, to reduce the city’s electricity use by 500 megawatts and create 500 megawatts of green power per year by 2020.

However, the only way Hydro could get funds for such a massive project would be through electricity rate increases. That would require provincial approval. And it might not be popular with the public, especially when rates are already on the rise.

City Councillor Gord Perks, a member of the Toronto Hydro board, said the utility should partner with non-profit groups to raise the money.

 

Related News

Related News

What can we expect from clean hydrogen in Canada

Canadian Clean Hydrogen is surging, driven by net-zero goals, tax credits, and exports. Fuel cells,…
View more

TCS Partners with Schneider Electric Marathon de Paris to Boost AI and Technology

TCS AI Partnership Paris Marathon integrates predictive analytics, digital twin simulations, real-time runner tracking, and…
View more

Extreme Heat Boosts U.S. Electricity Bills

Extreme Heat and Rising Electricity Bills amplify energy costs as climate change drives air conditioning…
View more

Snohomish PUD Hikes Rates Due to Severe Weather Impact

Snohomish PUD rate increase addresses storm recovery after a bomb cyclone and extended cold snap,…
View more

Europe Is Losing Nuclear Power Just When It Really Needs Energy

Europe's Nuclear Energy Policy shapes responses to the energy crisis, soaring gas prices, EU taxonomy…
View more

This Floating Hotel Will Generate Electricity By Rotating All Day

Floating Rotating Eco Hotel harnesses renewable energy via VAWTAU, recycles rainwater for greywater, and follows…
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