Energy blueprint for Rural Alberta

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Published: April 11, 2024

The author argues petroleum has an important place when it comes to meeting society’s energy demands, but so do solar, wind and biomass forms of energy.   |  File photo

Living in what I’ve whimsically dubbed “M&M-ville” holds the promise of a ground-breaking energy paradigm for rural Alberta.

Nestled about 45 minutes southwest of Calgary along Highway 543, this imaginary locale embodies the dynamic interplay between traditional petroleum industries and innovative renewable energy ventures.

“M&M-ville” is my imaginary descriptor for the community of Molecules and Megawatts, a notional place that embodies the contemporary energy dynamics and opportunities that characterize so much of rural Alberta.

With all the talk about energy corridors these days, here’s one right under our noses — a place that, if we get our act(s) together, could be a blueprint for diverse and disparate energy systems.

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Picture pumpjacks and natural gas wellheads symbolizing our energy past and present at one end of the highway, while at the other, projects harnessing solar, waste recovery and storage technologies for a sustainable future.

In my mind, there’s an aspirational framework in which different energy systems coexist, collaborate with and complement each other in a way that foregrounds economic strength and environmental integrity. In this world, petroleum has a place, but so do solar, wind, storage and biomass forms of energy.

Unfortunately, instead of fostering unity, our leaders seem intent on fostering division, jeopardizing Alberta’s potential as a leading energy hub.

Recent governmental actions, such as the Alberta Utilities Commission’s report contradicting renewable energy skepticism and the imposition of buffer zones stifling new development, illustrate this short-sighted approach.

Gazing west from my porch, I see the Turner Valley area, where Alberta’s energy legacy began, fading into memory. The eastward view hints at a new era of renewable energy. However, without coherent policy frameworks, this potential remains untapped.

Within a stone’s throw of my home, there are innovative projects like:

  • Big Rock Solar Project: a 430-acre project about 10 km southwest of Okotoks proposed by Brazilian renewables firm Enerfin. With more than 200,000 panels, its generation goal is 90 megawatts, enough to power 24,000 homes. It also incorporates 40 MW of battery storage.
  • Rimrock Renewables: a partnership between Rimrock Feeders and Tidewater Renewables that proposes a renewable natural gas biodigester project to use waste from cattle-feeding operations. It is adjacent to the feeding facility west of High River.
  • Enfinite: a Calgary-based company proposing a 105-lithium battery storage facility called Laramide, just northeast of High River. It would store 100 megawatts of power and contribute to Alberta’s power grid through a nearby AltaLink substation through a new 240KV transmission line.

Lack of policy clarity threatens their viability.

Foothills County, home to Highway 543, was dealt a significant blow in 2017 when the Alberta Energy Regulator shut the operations of Lexin Energy. The county still has petroleum production, of course, but its days as an oil and gas “super municipality” are long behind it. There’s room for new energy business models that create different types of socio-economic value, from the municipal tax base and property rentals to new employment and supply chain development.

None of this will matter, however, if the proposed buffer zone and viewscape zone cut off the country’s energy future at the knees.

It’s time to depoliticize energy discourse in Alberta; it is time to get back to the fundamentals of getting things right for the sake of doing right.

Bill Whitelaw is a director and advisor to many industry boards, including the Canadian Society for Evolving Energy, which he chairs. This article first appeared on the Troy Media website. It has been edited for length.

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