Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
International

Alberta's Alternative Wind Energy Industry Is Getting Bigger Role

The Canadian Press, 17 Mar, 2016 12:03 PM
    PINCHER CREEK, Alta. — There are three things one can be assured of in the Pincher Creek area of southwestern Alberta — death, taxes and the wind will blow.
     
    Windswept is the word often used to describe the region with its rolling hills, cattle ranches, farms and the Rocky Mountains to the west.
     
    And it is the wind that's eliciting some optimism at a time when Canada is seeking to reduce its carbon footprint and turn to alternative energy sources.
     
    With their giant 80-metre-high turbines stretching as far as the eye can see and 45-metre-long blades turning gracefully in the breeze, wind farms are potentially a big beneficiary of changes promised by both the Alberta and federal governments.
     
    "The wind is always blowing in southern Alberta it seems. For the locals who have grown up around the wind from childhood, it's just another day for them," said Wayne Oliver, TransAlta's operations supervisor for the region, which includes Fort Macleod.
     
    TransAlta, Canada's largest publicly traded power generator and marketer of electricity and renewable energy, has 460 wind turbines in the area. Some of the older models are being decommissioned and the pricetag for new ones isn't cheap, running between $2 million and $5 million, depending on the output, which can be as much as three million watts of electricity per hour.
     
    But Oliver said 100 megawatts of energy will supply the needs of about 120,000 homes.
     
    He also said most people don't understand where their electricity comes from.
     
    "The general public just wants to know that when they hit the switch the lights will come on and they can cook supper when they get home from work."
     
    With Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promising to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and Alberta's plan to impose a broad carbon tax and eventually end coal-fired electricity generation, wind energy is getting increased attention.
     
    "We have a long-term, viable resource in the quantity of wind that blows through southern Alberta," Oliver said.
     
    "Until we get to the point that we'd have large-scale battery storage of wind energy, wind is always going to be supplemental to a base power load structure," he added.
     
    "In Alberta we have coal and natural gas, we have some hydro. These are our baseload generators and wind can nicely supplement that for the time being."
     
    TransAlta said last month that plans to invest in hydroelectric, wind, solar and natural gas co-generation facilities in Alberta were “on hold” until the details of the province’s climate change plans are known.
     
    Alberta’s resource-based economy makes up a third of Canada’s total greenhouse gas emissions and the province's energy minister said a climate implementation team is currently looking at how big a role wind, solar and hydro can play in the future.
     
    Marg McCuaig-Boyd said right now only about 11 per cent of Alberta's electricity is provided from renewable energy.
     
    "It's going to play a role just like solar and hydro and thermal — we're going to look at a mix," McCuaig-Boyd told The Canadian Press.
     
    "At the end of the day we're still going to have the bulk of our generation from natural gas but there will be around a 30 per cent mix. Wind will certainly play a key role."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    New Polls Bring More Bad News For Hillary Clinton

    New Polls Bring More Bad News For Hillary Clinton
    Amid speculation that Joe Biden might enter the 2016 presidential race, the polls found that the vice president is more popular than Clinton - among both Democrats and the general electorate

    New Polls Bring More Bad News For Hillary Clinton

    Waiter Milan Dehal Wins $15,000 Compensation After Indian Hotelier Refused Him Proper Pay

    Waiter Milan Dehal Wins $15,000 Compensation After Indian Hotelier Refused Him Proper Pay
    The 29-year-old waiter had been fighting for almost 18 months to have AUS$1,640.06 ($1,137) of his pending salary paid back.

    Waiter Milan Dehal Wins $15,000 Compensation After Indian Hotelier Refused Him Proper Pay

    Indian-Origin Man Jailed For Stealing 61,000 Pounds From Employer In UK

    Indian-Origin Man Jailed For Stealing 61,000 Pounds From Employer In UK
     A court in Britain has sentenced an Indian-origin man to 18 months in prison after he was found guilt of stealing 61,000 pounds from his employer,

    Indian-Origin Man Jailed For Stealing 61,000 Pounds From Employer In UK

    Charity To Be Launched In Name Of Murdered Hotelier NRI Ranjit Singh Power

    The Ranjit Singh Power Foundation Trust will be launched on Monday in a ceremony at the Ramada Park Hall in Britain's Wolverhampton city to commemorate Power's 55th birthday

    Charity To Be Launched In Name Of Murdered Hotelier NRI Ranjit Singh Power

    Indian-Origin Physician Couple Convicted Of Health Care Fraud In US

    Indian-Origin Physician Couple Convicted Of Health Care Fraud In US
    Paramjit Singh Ajrawat, 60, and his wife Sukhveen Kaur Ajrawat, 57, who operated Washington Pain Management Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, were charged with engaging in a scheme to defraud federal health benefit programmes

    Indian-Origin Physician Couple Convicted Of Health Care Fraud In US

    Amazon, Pennsylvania University Sued Over 20-Year-Old Indian-Origin Student Arya Singh's Suicide

    Amazon, Pennsylvania University Sued Over 20-Year-Old Indian-Origin Student Arya Singh's Suicide
    Online giant Amazon and the University of Pennsylvania have been sued in the US over the death of an Indian-origin nursing student who killed herself two years ago by consuming cyanide, media reports said.

    Amazon, Pennsylvania University Sued Over 20-Year-Old Indian-Origin Student Arya Singh's Suicide