Southeastern Ontario has the potential to produce almost as much power as all the nuclear reactors in the United States! Queen’s mechanical engineering professor Joshua Pearce is the first person to find out the astounding possibilities of the region’s solar energy potential. He says, “The number is enormous. Solar can no longer be laughed off as something that can only power your cottage.” comes out with two studies that claim solar power in southeastern.
Queen’s University Applied Sustainability Research Group
located in Kingston, CanadaOntario can be created
in abundance. The natural question is how much abundance? The answer is
mind-boggling.
Southeastern Ontario has the potential to produce almost as much
power as all the nuclear reactors in the United States! Queen’s mechanical
engineering professor Joshua Pearce is the first person to find out the
astounding possibilities of the region’s solar energy potential. He says, “The
number is enormous. Solar can no longer be laughed off as something that can
only power your cottage.” comes out with two studies that claim solar power in southeastern.
Professor Pearce was surprised by how many gigawatts could
be produced. The researchers from the university in Kingston, Ontario is
of the view if they can mount solar panels on the rooftops and on those areas
that are economically unproductive they can produce enormous amount of solar
power. They have already marked 365,000 hectares of land in southeastern Ontario suitable for
solar farms. That amounts to about 7.6 per cent of the 48,000-square-kilometre
wedge of land between Toronto, Ottawa and the Quebec-Ontario border.
So many gigawatts of solar power can be produced but Prof
Pearce still claims, “We came up with enormous numbers and we were being
conservative. There are about 95 gigawatts of potential power just in
southeastern Ontario
— that shows there is massive potential.” It is needless to say that Professor
Pearce specializes in solar photovoltaic materials and applied sustainability.
According to one study, if some of the roof tops in
southeastern Ontario were covered with solar
panels, they could generate five gigawatts, or about five per cent of all of Ontario’s energy. The
study paid attention to the shading and orientation of the roofs. This study
will be published in the journal Computers, Environment and Urban Systems.
Professor Pearce further pushes his point, “To put this in
perspective, all the coal plants in all of Ontario produce just over six gigawatts. The
sun doesn’t always shine, so if you couple solar power with other renewable
energy sources such as wind, hydro and biomass, southeastern Ontario could easily cover its own energy
needs.”
Canada
is a vast country and has plenty of land. If that land can be utilized for
generating solar power, it can produce substantial amount of clean and green
energy. This second study will appear in May issue of the journal Solar Energy.
It studied the barren, rocky, non-farmable areas near electrical grids and
arrived at a conclusion that it has the potential to produce 90 gigawatts.
Professor Pearce claims, “Nuclear power for all of the United States
is about 100 gigawatts. We can produce 90 on barren land with just solar in
this tiny region, so we are not talking about small potatoes.”
The researchers identified 25 million square metres of
shade-free, south-facing roofs in southeastern Ontario suitable for solar panels. They say
if high-efficiency panels were installed on all the roofs, they could provide
24 per cent of current peak Ontario power
demand, and 157 per cent of peak demand in southeastern Ontario.
Professor Pearce is preparing the ground for solar power. He
comes out with real facts for the policy makers of the country. He is also on
the look out for the possible solar farm locations for developers.
The government is creating conducive environment for the
clean and green energy. Ontario’s
new Green Energy Act offers feed-in tariffs, or FITs incentive. This FITs has
generated “an enormous stampede” by solar companies to set up shop in Ontario. Prof Pearce
says, “It’s opened up the market.” Pearce said, if one or two known solar power
manufacturers set up their plants in Canada, more will be tempted to do
the same and it will lead to generating thousands of manufacturing jobs.
“They’ll cluster together like the semi-conductor manufacturers in California, and we’ll be
in great shape.”