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Ontario Unveils Green Energy and Green Economy Act, 2009

By Jennifer Runyon, Managing Editor
February 25, 2009   |   7 Comments
U.S. and Canada marching towards a green revolution.

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"Ontario's Green Energy Act could propel the province past California as the most innovative North American leader in the renewable energy field."

-- Denis Hayes, former director, NREL and founder of Earth Day.
7 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 7
February 27, 2009
It is about time gov. stops hindering home power generation, and supports its growth. That is reason we see so little solar being used all these years, nothing in concrete about incentives being permanent, only temporary measures all these years.

Net metering tariff or feed in tariff as it is called in CAN is essential, and it should not set limits of any kind if they really want to see us all go green. No cap on output size would be first step, then mandate power companies pay us the same as they would pay to purchase power from neighboring utilities when brown outs loom. They have gotten away with paying pennies, or nothing more than zeroing out our electric consumption, so they have been allowed to steal from consumers which makes no sense at all.

Hopefully we will see progress so it will encourage growth in home power system use, and if they were smart, with no cap, imagine how many people would install systems if power companies were mandated to pay us going rate for excess generation. It could solve all issues, boosting green energy, plus provide a new income stream for home owners with each home producing a profit every month, would you install a system that paid for itself in less than a year, never mind pay you a thousand a month, as example. I have my hydrogen 115kwh generator ready to fire up. lol

www.Nano-Electric.com
Comment
2 of 7
February 27, 2009
Dennis Baker
103-66 duncan ave west
penticton bc canada V2A6Z3
cell 250-462-2771
fax 250-493-3463
RE : The solution to climate change.
( human excrement + nuclear waste = hydrogen )
Canada discharges Billions of tons of sewage annually, sufficient quantity to sustain electrical generation requirements of Canada.
Redirecting existing sewage systems to containment facilities would be a considerable infrastructure modification project.
It is the intense radiation that causes the conversion of organic material into hydrogen, therefore what some would consider the most dangerous waste because of its radiation would be the best for this utilization.
I believe the combination of clean water and clean air, will increase the life expectance of humans.
yours sincerely
Dennis Baker (slave)
Comment
3 of 7
February 27, 2009
Hmm, as an American I welcome this prod from up north. Canada (or at least, Ontario) is showing that a government can vote and approve such measures and not be thrown out or hooted at by their citizens.

The only reason I can think that the American government has been so timid for 30 years, unlike Denmark and others, is that oil and auto interests have lobbied hard and spread propaganda to paralyze action.

Denmark's early wake-up: http://www.planetthoughts.org/?pg=pt/Whole&qid=2627

Wake up, USA, and turn a problem into an economic engine. The current stimulus plan, with its very modest portion for alternative energy and environment, is a poor substitute for a bold and visionary answer to environmental and energy needs.
Comment
4 of 7
February 27, 2009
Ontario is a province, which is like a state in the U.S.

As renewable energy is like weather--local--it's state governments which should be taking the lead, no?

50 different solutions is better than one solution if that one solution turns out sub-optimal....
Comment
5 of 7
February 27, 2009
Biochar-Ontario is a group of positive, visionary and dedicated people from across Ontario who have come together to elevate biochar to the critical status it needs to explore and fulfill the potential that it has to offer.

http://groups.google.com/group/biochar-ontario?pli=1

Following a successful meeting of the International Biochar Initiative (IBI) in Newcastle, England, a Canadian group with similar interests met on December 11 and 12 at the Macdonald Campus of McGill University near Montreal, Quebec to form the Canadian Biochar Initiative.

http://www.biochar.ca/
Comment
6 of 7
February 28, 2009
Ontario's Green Energy & Green Economy Act has great potential. Of course it's the details that will make or break it's future.

The rules need to be simple enough for the average person to understand, if you expect them to embrace conservation, and implement a distributed power system (rooftop solar). In addition to a F.I.T. and low financing costs, the Ontario governement needs to cover a significant portion of the up front cost. Consumers will need a "significant rebate" to the price of a rooftop solar system, before they will foot the multi-thousand dollar cost.

Even though new kitchen cupboards and counters have ZERO Payback, thousands are installed each year. However, given a 15 year payback on a rooftop solar system, you will see very few installs in the coming years.

I hope this GEA Act gets it right.

Bruce Knight
www.OntarioSolarFarms.com
Comment
7 of 7
March 8, 2009
Bruce:

Your reading of the mood of the retail consumer in Ontario is correct. Wind and solar Renewable Energy are at the same stage as people were with computers 20 years ago - expensive, lots of personal research, waiting forever for prices to drop (they won't for at least a decade!), etc.

Perhaps, despite their 'tell-people-what-they-want-to-hear politics', both Ontario & Canadian govts do Not want Distributed Energy because they won't be able to Tax it ...! They can't tax or charge for the kiloWatt hours we Don't buy from Ontario Hydro. How will they pay for the hydro lines & poles & ... nuclear plants, eh? (Even though it would be a Lot cheaper to incent Distributed Renewable Energy than to build nuclear.)

Even worse, as you pointed out, Ontario & Canadian citizens are waiting for the same type of ecoEnergy grants offered for Solar Hot Water.
Why have they omitted Small Wind & Solar PV & Solar Hot Air from the ecoEnergy residential programme?
And why do they require so much paperwork?
Why not the simple form used for the Ontario Sales Tax refund?
Why not the simple filing of receipts that the Feds will be using for their new Home Renovation (income) Tax Credit?

Oh, almost forgot to mention that the Yanks are Canada's largest market, and they've had 25-50% Renewable Energy grants since George W Bush (who'd a thunk it!) decided to encourage Renewable Energy and reduce oil dependency after 9/11. How will we compete with them if their businesses -big & small- have cheaper Renewable Energy, and we don't?
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Jennifer Runyon

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About: Jennifer Runyon is managing editor of RenewableEnergyWorld.com and Renewable Energy World North America magazine, coordinating, writing and/or editing columns, ... more »

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