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Showing posts with label windpower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label windpower. Show all posts

Friday, December 11, 2009

Hecate Strait windpower project to power Haida Gwaii

Lucy Shaw is director of North Coast relations for NaiKun Wind Energy and this puts her in touch with Haida councils, Tsimshian councils, and Gitxsan councils in the Pacific North West of Canada. A lot of the activity involves Council of Haida Nation business arrangements, but a submarine cable that will deliver the wind power to the BC Hydro mainland puts Lucy in touch with Tsimshian in Lax W Alaams and Metlakatla, and the Gitsugulka of the Gitxsan nation.
     
“I've been working in the project since 2006,” says Lucy. “Initial discussions began in 2002 and it was four years of negotiations between our corporate heads and their leadership that began to  move the project to the ready.” She says that by 2007 the Haida and NaiKun had signed a Memorandum of Understanding that began to formalize arrangements and by 2009 the commercial partnerships had been formed.
     
Everybody can be proud of the seven year effort but the First Nations in particular find wind power to be an attractive way to build capacity for economic development. “It meets the bottom line regarding stewardship, employment and training, and equity ownership with long-term income,” says Lucy.
     
Protection of the environment is one of the primary goals of the people of these unique islands, and the Haida NaiKun Wind Operating Limited Partnership was formed around principles that flowed from the earliest discussions. The Haida Nation partnership includes equal seats on the board of directors and equal say in day-to-day operations in the operations of the wind farm.
     
“The Haida Nation's interest in the project includes the wind power generation facilities planned for the giant Hecate Strait, and equity interest in the cables that will deliver power not only to the mainland but also to Haida Nation communities. “Haida is burning diesel to create electricity,” said Lucy. “They wanted to put an end to that,” which created the need for the Haida Link, a smaller cable from the NaiKun array of turbines that will power up Haida Gwaii.
     
Wind will supply 90 percent of the power on Haida Gwaii when the project is all connected.  Diesel power generation will remain as a back-up system and will be operational for one month out of each year. “The wind power generation of electricity is going to save 26,000 tonnes of green house gas emissions.
     
Construction is awaiting the permitting process, completion of a purchasing agreement for the power with BC Hydro, and Environmental Assessment Certificates from the province, and approvals from Haida Nation when everybody’s ducks are in a row. Then they raise the money and start to build it, “over a three year seasonal construction schedule,” says Lucy. “It's a six-month building season and we hope to prepare the way with pre-construction activities.”
     
Assembly points and warehousing facilities for construction materials will be arranged, surveys and arrays of turbines will be finalized, and once permitting and procedures are finished the project construction will commence in 2012. “Foundations are constructed in the first and second years, and towers are raised in the second and third years,” says Lucy. “The electricity will be flowing by 2015.”
     
The Hecate Strait is the giant body of water between Haida Gwaii and the mainland that once was coursed by boatloads of Haida warriors and traders in the coastal Potlatch economy. "It's a great wind source with consistent winds and a shallow, relatively flat seabed," says Lucy. 
     
Meanwhile offices in Skidegate and Massett provide the connections to the Haida communities and currently as group of Haida Nation representatives are touring England where wind power is well-established.

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