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The Joule - The BC SEA Quarterly Newsletter
Issue 7       June 2006
( Download PDF - 1.08mB)

A Publication of Sustainable Solutions for all of BC’s Energy Needs

In This Issue….

Climate Change Superheroes
SolarBC Heats Up
The German “Solar Capital”
Millijoules
BC Hydro’s Integrated Electricity Plan
Welcome to RETScreen
Events
Join the BCSEA!

 


Climate Change Superheroes
hit BC’s Lower Mainland
by Scott Sinclair

Have you ever wondered what the future will be like? When the climate change game comes to their classroom, this is the question grade 5 kids are asked just before our team heads off in a time machine to the year 2086.

In time machine magic, Keltie, Nathan and I return to the present time in just 30 seconds, though we’ve had a one-year visit to the future. But, as we explain to the class, something very strange happened along the way. The team was hit by a time distortion and two of us were sent to an alternate future. As it turns out, the future is not fixed, and while our team leader Keltie was sent off to our projected future, Nathan and I ended up in a very different place.

Here’s what Nathan and I saw in our alternate future. What an incredible transformation the Earth had seen! In only 80 years humans had learned how to look after the planet for future generations. After the oil crisis of 2010, people all around the world had to find new ways to live. Transportation became more difficult, so we had to live within walking or cycling distance of work and the places we wanted to play. Electric bicycles and high-speed trains replaced archaic automobiles and airplanes. All of our power came from sun, wind or tide harvesting stations. We grew food without chemicals on the rooftops of our houses right in the city, and there was virtually no noise or pollution. People had stopped fighting over energy, and a time of worldwide peace had taken over the land.

While Nathan and I returned from paradise, Keltie had seen our current path unfold. She came back wearing flashy reflective clothing to reflect the intense heat of the sun. Keltie said that there were giant deserts all over the planet, and that all areas around the equator had been abandoned by humans. A few places in the world still had a little oil left but it was no longer needed to heat our homes. Most houses had moved underground, and virtually all communities lived in giant domes to protect them from the heat. Chemical food production had become popular, so most people ate meals consisting of a few nutrient pills. Keltie said that she was glad to be back in 2006.

We wondered what happened in our two futures that made them so different. I recounted a story I’d heard while I was in the future about Climate Change Superheroes.

A group of young students in BC became concerned about the trend of Global Warming and they joined forces to save the Earth. These students found all the ways that we were wasting energy, and began to take charge. They convinced their parents to stop using their second cars, to turn down the thermostat and turn off anything that uses power unless it was needed. They even created a contest called the Superhero Showdown to see who could save the most energy, and a movement started that spread throughout the Earth to create the wonderful future that I saw.

The Climate Change Game Project began in Greater Vancouver in February 2006 and will be delivered to more than 75 classrooms by the end of June to schools in Vancouver, Richmond, Langley, North Vancouver, Surrey, Delta, Burnaby, Bowen Island, and West Vancouver.

Send me a note at ssinclair@bcsea.org to find out how you can bring the Climate Change Game to your community.

Learn more about the Climate Change Game here: www.bcsea.org/activities/ccgame .


SolarBC Heats Up
By Nitya Harris

SolarBC is bringing the solar industry to new heights. The Solar Summit, hosted by BCSEA March 31 - April 2 in Vancouver and Victoria, was a success, thanks to coordinator, Scott Sinclair, and many volunteers. Broad-based media coverage of the Summit raised awareness of solar energy in BC. The Summit also strengthened SolarBC’s relationship with pertinent government ministries, the utilities commission, local inspectors and other organizations. The Summit also gave the world formal notice of SolarBC’s program to install 100,000 solar roofs.

SolarBC is now planning the 100,000 Solar Roofs Program. We will be working with the Ministry of Environment (MoE) and the Ministry of Energy and Mines and Petroleum Resources (MEMPR) to develop a strategy and implementation plan. We will work with a Task Team of representatives from utilities and buildings industry, and all levels of government.

The rebate program has been very successful and SolarBC is presently awaiting confirmation of the rebate for 2006/07 from Natural Resources Canada. In the meantime, a waiting list has been started. Homeowners can sign up through a registered contractor at www.solarbc.org.

SolarBC will also play a part in the MEMPR pilot project to promote energy efficiency in communities (CAEE). As MEMPR unrolls this pilot project, SolarBC work to include solar hot water in its communications materials. The first target will be the 8 communities that are part of existing homes pilot project: North Vancouver, Central Saanich, Vancouver, Burnaby, Dawson Creek, Salt Spring Island, Smithers and Houston.

SolarBC is also working with Northern Lights College to start the curriculum development for a Solar Hot Water Installer training program. This will be a pilot program and organizers hope to establish similar installer training programs in colleges across Canada.

Nitya Harris is the Solar BC Project Leader.


Glimpsing into the Future at the German “Solar Capital”
by Chris Mott

May 16, 2005

My first face-to-face encounter with a wind turbine began as I rose above the clouds in a cable car in the Black Forest mountains of southern Germany. I was expecting something whirring and frenetic, but instead was mesmerized by immense blades that rotated with a confident, slow smoothness. The pleasure I experienced was in part due to the majestic forest view and seeing the sun for the first time in a week, but I was also inspired to know that wind turbines like this are part of a peaceful path forward for humanity.

It was on a recent trip to Europe in February 2006, that I made a detour on my way home to visit these wind turbines and experience Freiburg, the unofficial “Solar Capital” of Germany, and see some examples of what could be done here in BC.

Bright Welcome to the Solar Region

Freiburg is a university town of about 200,000 located in the southwest corner of Germany that is leading a wave of municipal and regional solar energy initiatives.

The foundations to Freiburg’s sustainable energy successes were built upon strong local environmental activism and community engagement since the 70’s that shaped public consciousness and the political spectrum. The mix of supportive citizens and an engaged city hall with a proactive regional energy utility, educational institutions and supportive federal government policies created perfect conditions for a solar energy innovation hub to blossom.

After arriving in the city, my first stop was to the Solar Freiburg office which is a staffed information centre located in the offices shared with the energy utility. I introduced myself as a visiting sustainable energy advocate from Canada, and received an overflowing package with a multi-lingual walking-tour guide book, regional maps with solar highlights, and recommendations for hotels with solar energy installations. It was a very impressive reception to the city, and I could see how the city cultivates its position as a “Solar Capital.” It led me to think about what potential cities in BC have to uniquely position themselves as regional leaders in an aspect of sustainable energy.

One of the major initiatives in Freiburg has been widespread installation of photovoltaic (PV) panels. Speaking further with the woman at the Solar Freiburg office, I learned that many other municipalities have been following suit, and they now have a Solar City Bundesliga (Championship League) to inspire some healthy competition! Borrowing the model from their popular sporting leagues, each “season” cities across German are ranked on their total and per capita solar PV installations and per capita PV installations with bragging rights bestowed upon the champions. Given our penchant for Cups in Canada (Stanley and Grey) this might translate for us as a Canadian Solar Cup. Not a bad idea. We just need a few more cities to start competing!

Walking Tour

The following day I braced myself for a chilly February day, and set off on one of the recommended walking tours. The first highlight of the trip, not mentioned in the guide book, was a car-free downtown. Thanks to a visionary town council, cars have been officially barred in a three block radius from the core, leaving a vibrant flow of pedestrians, bicycles and electric trams.

The first official stop of the solar tour was Vauban, a “sustainable neighbourhood” project which is a 5000-person housing development that had taken the place of an old army barracks. With the municipal government playing an active role in setting progressive sustainability guidelines during development, the neighbourhood included Low Energy buildings with emissions 30% less than national guidelines. Despite initial opposition from the building developer these guidelines are apparently now standards adopted by the building industry.

Walking through the neighbourhood I saw solar panels dotting the rooftops in various configurations, some roofs made entirely of PV panels, and I even passed a Solar Parkade. If you’ve got to have cars, you might as well put solar panels over them! Coupled into the properties were community gardens and evidence of a thorough recycling system.

Solar PV Versus Solar Thermal

Interestingly, I saw far fewer solar thermal systems, which use collectors to heat water, than photovoltaic systems, which create electricity. I asked someone about solar thermal systems at the Solar Freiburg office and the answer I received was that they just don’t make as much economic sense as photovoltaic systems. How curious! You’ll get the opposite response here in BC.

What’s the cause of the discrepancy? A major factor is the influence of government incentives. In Germany, production incentives called feed-in tariffs provide guaranteed premium rates to sell excess electricity back to the grid. Without that support here in BC, solar hot water is generally a better return on investment. This highlights the important role for government policy in shaping the direction of energy development.

What about BC?

I concluded my trip the next day with the cable car trip up the local mountain. From the peak I watched the movements of half a dozen pairs of wind turbines sitting atop peaks jutting like islands out of the low clouds covering the Freiburg valley. It was a nice spot to contemplate the successes of Freiburg and what opportunities we have in BC.

The well-integrated nature of the sustainable energy activities in Freiburg region impressed me. Systems included renewable wind and solar supply, low energy buildings, pedestrian and transit oriented transportation networks, and built environments supporting vibrant communities. Supported by all levels of government, an environmental consciousness in the citizens, and a network of business and educational institutes Freiburg has achieved a critical mass that seems to be propelling them forward on the path to energy sustainability. By developing a similarly broad base of support here in BC, with the BCSEA encouraging progressive provincial policy, and BCSEA chapter members creating unique opportunities in our communities it is inspiring to imagine creating our own critical mass for local sustainable energy progress.

For more information see:

Chris Mott is BCSEA board member and an electrical engineering graduate student at the University of British Columbia. Pictured in front of wind turbines.


MILLIJOULES
By Guy Dauncey

Port-u-Gale
Portugal (pop’n 10.6 million) is emerging as one of Europe’s sustainable energy leaders. It imports 86% of its energy, so it’s got reason to be creative. Portugal has set a target of 4,400 MW of wind energy by 2010, and is planning a new 1,500 MW wind farm to take advantage of the Atlantic gales. It is developing a Pelamis wave power project, and is building an 11 MW solar power project (the world’s largest), using 52,000 PV modules on a site near Lisbon.

Running out of Gas
Canada has less than 8 years’ supply of natural gas, and the industry is having to drill more and more wells to keep up with demand. Annual production has remained stable at 16 to 17 billion cubic feet a day, but the drilling that’s needed to find the gas has risen from 5,000 wells in 1998 to 15,000 wells in 2004. North America’s natural gas production peaked in 2001-2002, and is in permanent decline. The industry is pinning its hopes on liquefied natural gas from Russia and Iran, and coal bed methane, which tends to stir up strong local opposition. (Source: Speech by David Hughes, of natural Resources Canada, to the University of Calgary’s Geology Department in February 2006. http://republic-news.org/archive/131-repub/131_crawford.htm)

Pooch-Power
Animal poo makes up 4% of San Francisco’s residential waste, so the city has asked a company to find a way to turn it into methane for heat and power. If it is collected in biodegradable bags, it can be processed in a methane digester. At present, when it is collected in a regular plastic bag and tossed in the garbage, it goes to the landfill.

Are You an Efficient Driver?
In Holland, evidence from the “New Driving” program shows that drivers can reduce their fuel use by as much as a third if they learn to drive more efficiently. In Britain, from 2008, new drivers will be taught efficient driving techniques in preparation for their driving tests. Some tips:

  • Don’t use the accelerator when you start the car (it’s a habit from older cars that’s not needed any more)
  • Anticipate slow-downs and traffic lights so that you can slow without braking
  • Avoid sudden acceleration and braking
  • Turn the engine off when you stop for more than a minute
  • Keep your tire pressure at the right level
  • Take the rack off your roof
  • Don’t carry heavy things around in your car.

California Dreaming
Across the US, household power consumption rose from 8,000 kWh a year in 1975 to 12,000 kWh today. In California, however, it has remained flat at 7,300 kWh. As a result, the state has not had to build 65,000 MW of generating capacity, and consumers are saving $1,000 a year. How have they done it? It’s all about regulation. Refrigerators are 20% bigger than they used to be, but they use a quarter of the power, thanks to the state’s tough standards. Right across the board, the state is forcing equipment manufacturers to make their appliances and gizmos more efficient. It has also tightened up its building code, with tough new standards. A new program of smart meters, linked to the home thermostat and the power company’s control centre to reduce power use at peak periods, will reduce consumption by 0.5% a year and peak power consumption by 1% a year. Customers who insist on using the full air-conditioning will pay at six times the normal rate to reflect the cost of peak power production. How about it, BC?

Guy Dauncey is the president of the BCSEA


BC HYDRO’S INTEGRATED ELECTRICITY PLAN
By Tom Hackney

When I covered BC Hydro’s Integrated Electricity Plan last October, I described the extensive Public Integrated Electricity Plan Committee process, where independent power producers, first nations and electricity consumers said how they wanted BC Hydro to acquire electricity over the next twenty years. BCSEA Director Geza Vamos attended as an observer and worked behind the scenes to support the all-green energy portfolio. It eventually emerged as the majority’s favorite. Tom is back with an update on BC Hydro’s Integrated Electricity Plan (IEP).

In March, BC Hydro finally filed the 2006 Integrated Electricity Plan with the BC Utilities Commission, which will now hold a formal public review. The BCSEA has teamed up with Sierra Club of Canada, BC Chapter and the Peace Valley Environmental Association to intervene. This is a major crossroads in BC’s electricity planning, and we expect the main interested parties – industry, commercial consumers, consumer advocates, independent power producers, coal groups, first nations, etc. – to participate.

The IEP consists of BC Hydro’s forecast of electricity demand growth over the next twenty years, a list of what resources might meet that demand (including conservation, renewable energies, imports, coal-fired power and the 900 MW Site C hydro-electric dam on the Peace river), and estimates of the costs and risks associated with each energy type (e.g. the “firmness” of power delivery; and greenhouse gas emissions risks).

BC Hydro does not pick the energy projects: according to government policy, electricity acquisitions will be developed by independent power producers and selected through a competitive bidding process. The two exceptions are energy conservation and the Site C dam. BC Hydro is responsible for energy conservation and plans to meet roughly a third of projected load growth this way. The government has reserved to itself the decision on building the Site C dam, as well as the decision on whether BC Hydro or a private developer should build it.

The current electricity demand is some 55,000 Gigawatt-hours per year in BC Hydro’s service area, containing 94% of BC’s population, with 1.7 million residential, commercial and industrial customers. Demand is forecast to rise to 67,000 GWh/y by 2015 and to 78,000 GWh/y by 2025. Adding the gap left by the expected retirement of the Burrard Thermal generation plant, and BC Hydro predicts a firm supply gap of some 18,000 GWh/y by 2015.

(BC Hydro plans according to “firm” supply, so that for example, BC Hydro plans according to the amount of power available from its dams in a low water year, rather than in an average year. This builds in a considerable safety factor.)

The IEP proposes to meet the 2015 projected gap with:

  • 5,900 GWh/y of energy conservation (including industrial load displacement);
  • 2,500 GWh/y from the 2006 Call for Power (81 bidders; results expected in August 2006);
  • 5,000 GWh/y from a Call for Power in 2007 (open to all energy types, except nuclear);
  • 5,000 GWh/y from another open Call for Power in 2009.

For the period from 2015 to 2025, the plan retains flexibility to adjust the amount or electricity acquisitions.

The plan calls for stakeholder engagements on Site C, which is the next step toward a government decision on whether to build the controversial dam (likely first nations land claims; and environmental opposition).

Meanwhile, the government has been touting the dubious claims of the BC Progress Board’s report that BC Hydro needs to import electricity to meet domestic demand. This is untrue. In the past few years BC Hydro has sometimes chosen to be a net importer because it has been economic to do so, rather than drawing down its reservoirs or running the Burrard Thermal plant.

Possibly the government wants to create a public myth of scarcity, so as to support the coal-fired generation proposals now being brought forward. In reality, energy conservation and sustainable energies can easily meet all BC’s requirements, and can do so without compromising the well-being of future generations. This is the message the BCSEA will bring to the IEP review.

Tom Hackney is a BCSEA board member.


Welcome to RETScreen
By Randyn Seibold
www.turbinemarketing.com

March 27th, Vancouver BC

Always on the lookout for ways to improve my knowledge of sustainable energy applications, I registered for a one-day presentation on Natural Resources Canada’s renewable energy project assessment software, better known as RETScreen. The presentation was offered free-of-charge to anyone interested in sustainable energy options, and gave a detailed yet efficient overview of the RETScreen program. About 100 representatives from the renewable and non-renewable power industries, government, BC Hydro, and environmental planners and advocates attended.

RETScreen assists planners, developers, financiers, students and educators to assess the feasibility of a prospective project. One of its major methods is to compare the parameters and costs of a conventional power source or development with the cost-and-savings potential of a cleaner alternative technology (‘base-case vs. proposed case’). Comparisons generally centre around initial costs, savings and expenses over time and greenhouse gas emissions. Its standardized international format allows for objective analysis, simplifies evaluation, and increases the prospects for a project’s success.

The RETScreen user is guided through a comprehensive 5-step process:

1) Energy model (type of tech, site, etc)
2) Cost analysis
3) Greenhouse gas analysis
4) Financial summary
5) Sensitivity & risk assessment

Kevin Borque and Emily Richard of NR Canada, and Michael Ross, a renewable energy consultant working with NR Canada on the RETScreen program, were on hand to walk the attendees through the software’s nuances. Their main objectives were to tell audience that the program is fully available to them now to begin assessing potential projects.

One of the objectives in designing and distributing RETScreen is to reduce the amount of time and money would-be developers spend to assess the viability of technologies or resources. The designers estimate that it costs ten times less to utilize this software than it does to pay the various environmental, financial and technological consultants that would normally be required to do a proper feasibility assessment. Vast amounts of data have been stitched together into a powerful tool. From over 1000 weather monitoring stations globally, to NASA satellite feeds, to an extensive ‘marketplace’ section containing 1000 renewable energy technology providers worldwide, RETScreen is the most elaborate use of Microsoft Excel I have ever seen. Presently, parts of the program are available in 21 languages, while the entire program is available in English and French . Version 4, to be released in 2006, will offer the whole program in 21 languages. RETScreen now has over 81,000 users in 213 different countries.

The program models data for 10 different technologies. They are grouped into three general categories: power generation, heat production and heating/cooling. They are found in the main e-textbook, which introduces the user to the various systems, formulas and algorithms used to assess resources, costs, and emissions, plus 60 different real-life case studies of projects assessed and developed using RETScreen.

The Marketplace connects customers with suppliers, has discussion forums, and the RETScreen on-line training calendar and registration desk.

Project Analysis

RETScreen is intended for use in the pre-feasibility and feasibility study stage of a project. Optimally, the project developer will have all the major hurdles accounted for before moving into the more expensive engineering and construction phases.

One of the major barriers to the renewable energy industry is that clean energy projects are not routinely considered in the early stages of industrial and commercial project assessments.

Another challenge is the Accuracy vs. Investment dilemma. The more accurate the feasibility data desired, the higher the cost of gathering it. When it comes to comparing conventional projects with the viability of a clean energy scenario, RETScreen endeavours to take as much of the guesswork out of the equation as possible.

Further financial considerations are loans and interest, taxes on purchases and income, rates-of-return on investment, environmental credits and subsidies (eg. carbon credits), and the individual developer’s concept of ‘cost-effective’.

In short, RETScreen can forecast more than just the weather. The software has received three major upgrades over the last seven years, and minor updates are ongoing. One technology area noticeably absent from the program was tidal and wave generation. We were informed that as technologies mature and are implemented, performance can be monitored and parameters established for their inclusion in the program.

The presentation included an update on the federal government’s REDI program (Renewable Energy Deployment Initiative) and two case studies. Someone without an engineer’s head for numbers might have been left scratching it at this point, but RETScreen is flexible in its level of complexity.

Natural Resources Canada and the RETScreen team have done a remarkable service for those engaged in sustainable energy, no matter where they are living or working.

Visit www.RETScreen.net for more information.


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