15 Canada 1.0 Overview

Canada is the ninth largest producer of wind energy in the world. It has more than 6 GW of wind energy capacity, which produces enough power to meet about 2.8 % of the country's total electricity demand. Canada has more than 170 wind farms, spread across ten provinces and two territories. In 20...

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Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
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Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.396.1271
http://www.ieawind.org/annual_reports_PDF/2012/Canada.pdf
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Summary:Canada is the ninth largest producer of wind energy in the world. It has more than 6 GW of wind energy capacity, which produces enough power to meet about 2.8 % of the country's total electricity demand. Canada has more than 170 wind farms, spread across ten provinces and two territories. In 2012, Canada placed ninth globally, in terms of new wind energy capacity installed. Nearly 940 MW of new wind capacity were installed in six provinces and one territory. The province of Quebec led the way, with 430 MW of new installations. The world’s most northern large-scale wind-diesel hybrid power facility was commissioned in Canada’s Northwest Territories. The government of Canada continues to fund the growth of Canada’s wind power sector through its ecoENERGY programs. Provinces across Canada continue to offer a range of incentives for renewable power, including wind. In some cases, existing programs have or will undergo reviews and changes. Ontario, for example, completed a scheduled two-year review of its Feed-in Tariff (FIT) program. A rate reduction in the price paid for wind generated electricity was one of several recommendations put forward, as a result of the review. In Nova Scotia, a review of the province’s Community FIT (COMFIT) program is under way. Community power was given a boost in 2012 with the approval of 46 community projects under Nova Scotia's COMFIT program. The projects range in size from 50 KW–6 MW, and are located in over 40 different communities across Nova Scotia. In