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Overview. Who is OSEA?What is Community Power?Renewable Energy - an emerging economic development sectorThe added value of community power or local ownershipPolicy regime - beyond the private sectorRole of EDCOs. Ontario Sustainable Energy Association. Member-based NGO representing over 30 community organizations developing green power projectsWind, solar, biogas, small hydroGenerally small wind projects (< 10 MW) with large or utility grade turbinesRepresented interests:Community co-29813
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1. Renewable Energy & Economic Development Deborah Doncaster
Ontario Sustainable Energy Association
2. Overview Who is OSEA?
What is Community Power?
Renewable Energy - an emerging economic development sector
The added value of community power or local ownership
Policy regime - beyond the private sector
Role of EDCOs
3. Ontario Sustainable Energy Association Member-based NGO representing over 30 community organizations developing green power projects
Wind, solar, biogas, small hydro
Generally small wind projects (< 10 MW) with large or utility grade turbines
Represented interests:
Community co-ops and non profits
Municipalities (MUSH sector)
Farmers and rural land owners
Locally owned SMEs (developers, suppliers, installers)
5. OSEA Community Power Orgs. Citizens For Renewable Energy (CFRE)
Eco Energy Choices Ottawa
Eco-energy Durham
Hearthmakers Energy
Countryside Energy co-op
EcoPerth
M’Chigeeng First Nation Economic Advancement Project
Positive Power Co-op Hamilton
Green Energy Co-operative
Windy Hills Caledon
WindShare
WindFall Ecology Centre
Toronto Renewable Energy Co-op
Superior Renewable Energy Co-op
The Renewable Energy Co-operative North
Sustainable Energy Resource Group
Power Up Renewable Energy
Barrie Wind Catchers
Cool Caledon
6. What is Community Power? Locally owned (wholly or significantly) RE generation projects
Commercial-scale (or aggregated micro)
Optimizes local benefits (social, economic and environmental)
Accessible, open participation*
Democratically controlled*
Financially viable
7. What is Community Power? WindShare
Toronto-based wind power co-operative
Members are local residents, businesses, Charities, financial institutions etc.
Members managed development process of project ( 1 MW wind turbine on Toronto waterfront) via staff, Board, contracts and volunteer committees
Members fundraised to cover development costs, do Offering, and sales and marketing (~$1 million) (1/2)
Members purchased shares ($500 min - $5,000 max)
Members sell power to Toronto Hydro (grid)
Co-operative is paid for green power supply (~$250K / MW / yr)
Co-op pays out expenses - lease, insurance, O&M, taxes, interest on debt, staff and org. expenses
Members receive dividends proportionate to number of shares owned( number of kWhs they produce)
Members determine how to spend surpluses beyond dividends
8. What is Community Power? FarmShare
Landowner and/or farmer co-operative
Aggregation of micro-generators (100 Kw biogas digester, 3 kW solar PV, 150 kW wind)
Aggregate sells power to the grid
Members receive dividends
Washington - PPA price set to encourage local manufacturing and use of local installers Region of Niagara and Rankin Construction
Representing local municipalities and a local business
10 MW wind farm
Sells power to the grid
Region provides feasibility financing through FCM funding
Rankin provides construction and extends their business know-how and practice
JV sells power to grid
9. Community Power and Economic Development In the energy economy, there are 2 principle organizational models by which to develop/own/sell green power into the grid:
As a private enterprise
As a community-based enterprise
Experience abroad (Denmark, Germany, U.K., Iowa, Minnesota) proves that green power development results in local and regional economic development
However, community-based green power enterprises can compete with the private sector AND result in a greater degree of economic development for the local community and region
10. Community Power Potential Germany
Largest installed capacity in the world (18,400 MW of Wind)
Supplies 6% of country’s electricity
35% wind projects are owned by local residents and communities
Denmark
4th largest installed capacity worldwide (3,100 MW of Wind)
Supplies 20% of country’s electricity
85% wind projects owned by local residents and communities
11. An Emerging Economic Development Opportunity Operation of wind turbines employs more people than traditional energy sector:
27% more jobs than coal plants
66% more jobs than natural gas plants
(New York State Energy Research and Development Authority)
12. Human Resource Needs in Canadian Wind Energy(Industry Canada report)
13. Wind Jobs & ED Potential According to Industry Canada, by 2012, Canada will have 5600 MW of new wind and 13,000 jobs
We could see this growth in Ontario alone given
Wind energy projects create new jobs in manufacturing (electronic components, turbine parts such as blades and towers), transportation and construction (foundations and installation of turbines)
Toronto turbine tower was made in Ajax Ontario
New tower manufacturing facility built on Lake Erie in response to sudden growth in wind development along Lake Erie and Lake Huron (RMI - US company)
Wind energy offers rural landowners a new cash crop (~$2,000/ yr/turbine or 2-3% of project’s gross revenues)
Although a landowner may receive a lease payment of $2,000 to $5,000 per turbine annually, owning a turbine can double or triple the income
14. Local Tax Revenues
75-90 cents of every energy dollar leaves the local economy (FCM, RMI, US Dept Energy)
Property taxes for wind are often 2-3 time higher than traditional power plants
Property taxes for munis ~ $10,000 /MW/yr or 1% of assessed value of a wind project
Examples:
Lincoln County, Minnesota: $470K in 2003 (155 MW)
Kewaunee County, Wisconsin: $200K/yr - or 50% of county’s budget (20 MW)
Iowa: $2..5 million/yr (320 MW)
15.
Wind Utility Consulting – 2005
16. Current Opportunity In Ontario Ontario requires over 20,000 MW in new generating capacity to replace old units
Represents a $40 billion investment
Ontario requires massive investment in transmission system
17. Wind Power Potential in Ontario Ontario has over 3 times the landmass of Germany and a comparable wind regime, some say even better.
Germany has 18,400 MW of installed capacity of wind.
Several jurisdictions are supplied 100% by wind.
Ontario presently has ~175 MW of installed wind capacity.
Ontario requires over 20,000 MW of new generation capacity.
Ontario could easily provide 5000 MW of wind by 2010.
Industry Canada Study equates 5000 MW with 13,000 jobs
18. Solar Power Potential in Ontario Solar Photo-Voltaic
Germany 768 MW of installed capacity
Canada 11 MW despite a superior resource to Germany
CanSIA solar PV estimates:
13,000 MW by 2025 in Ontario
39,000 MW by 2025 in Canada
19. Biogas & Small Hydro Power Potential Biogas
~8,000+ farms in Ontario with sufficient herd to support biogas digesters between 100-200 kW
Overall generation capacity of 400 MW
Include landfill gas, food oil wastes and energy crops and the capacity grows to 1200 MW.
Small-hydro (< 20 MW)
1000 MW (new and refurbished)
20. Ontario RFP for Renewables
21. OSEA’s SOCs campaign
2004 OSEA spearheaded a campaign for Advanced Renewable Tariffs (SOC)
Fall 2005 - Ministry of Energy issues directive to OPA to develop recommendations on a SOC program for Ontario
February 2006 - Ministry of Energy will announce details of SOC program for Ontario
Summer 2006 - Implementation of SOC program
22. OSEA’s ARTs Proposal Key components:
Size (0 up to 10 MW) suggested cap
Open to all players
20 year contract between generator and OPA
Price specific to production and technology
10.4 cents/kWh wind
42 cents/kWh solar PV
13 cents/kWh biogas and small hydro
Guaranteed (within reason and established safety guidelines) access to the distribution grid (< 44 kV)
23. Why ARTs Profound Need to increase public acceptance of RETs
ARTs allow municipalities, farmers, co-operatives, community groups, small businesses and members of the public to participate in green power generation
Simplified administrative process for government and suppliers
Markets with ARTs have more players, stronger local economies, more manufacturing, more jobs, more renewable energy generation
24. Co-operative Fund for CP Average Community Power wind project costs $650,000 to develop
Difficult for communities to raise this $
Fund would provide relatively easy capital through grants and loans at fair rates
25. Capacity Building for CP Certification Program - targets staff and Directors
Technical Assistance Providers
Org Dev
Site Dev and Technical
Financial
Community Engagement
Sales and Marketing
Integration Manager
Financial institutions
EDCOs
Universities and Colleges
Specialized RE programs
Co-operative curriculum
Relevant government agencies
26. Role of EDCOs Promote RE and ED opportunities
Initiate local projects
Facilitate information resources
Organize the community (e.g.) Asset mapping
Resource availability (prefeasibility)
Organizational Development
Financing
Technical and site development
Permitting and Approvals
Legal
Manufacturing, construction and O&M
27. Contact OSEA
Please visit www.communitygreenpower.ca for more info or contact Deborah Doncaster at 416.977.4441 or deb@ontario-sea.org