Hudson’s Hope, BC Goes Solar As Town Faces Site C’s Biggest Impacts
November 16, 2017
Solar-powered curling, anyone? Or what about solar-powered sewage treatment?
Hudson’s Hope, the municipality that would be most affected by the Site C dam, is going solar with a blast.
“It’s starting to look like a real, honest to goodness twenty-first century solar community,” said Don Pettit of the Peace Energy Renewable Energy Cooperative, the business that recently installed 1,580 photovoltaic panels, giving Hudson’s Hope the largest municipal solar array in the province.
The panels — in more than a half-dozen locations, including on the rooftops of the public works shop, municipal building, curling rink, arena, and beside sewage treatment lagoons — will save an estimated $70,000 a year in hydro bills, according to Hudson’s Hope mayor Gwen Johansson.
“Over 30 years, that amounts to savings of more than two million dollars,” Johansson told DeSmog Canada. “If hydro rates go up the savings will be even greater.”
Johansson said Site C had nothing to do with the district’s decision to embrace solar, even though the project’s impacts on Hudson’s Hope will be extensive.
“It’s purely a financial decision,” she said. “It’s a pragmatic cost saving.”
Despite conservation efforts such as installing LED lights in the town arena and other district buildings, Johansson said Hudson Hope’s annual hydro bill climbed from $68,000 in 2000 to $172,000 in 2016.
The cost of electricity for buildings with solar panels will be reduced by an average 75 per cent, according to the mayor.
Article by: Sarah Cox
Originally published at: https://www.desmog.ca/2017/11/02/hudson-s-hope-goes-solar-town-faces-site-c-s-biggest-impacts