
Iqaluit homeowner installs solar panels, pays cents on his energy bill
CBC
A couple in Iqaluit hasn't paid more than a couple cents for their power bill all summer.
Bert Rose installed 10 solar panels on his house in Iqaluit. Before the installation, he says his bill was about $200 a month, but now it's free.
"May, the bill was one cent. June, the bill was two cents. July, the bill was one cent," said Rose.
In June during the summer solstice, Iqaluit gets nearly 21 hours of light. During these bright summer months, Rose's solar panels produce more energy than his house actually needs.
That extra energy is going back into Qulliq Energy Corporation's power grid through its net metering system, which banks the extra energy as a credit on Rose's account.
"Come November and December, when we're down [to] five or six hours of sunlight and the panels aren't getting electrified quite as well as they are now, we'll be able to draw those credits out of the bank," said Rose.
This reduces the cost of Rose's bill during the winter.
"Anything that reduces our bill means it's money in our bank accounts at the end of the month," said Rose.
Rose's solar panels aren't just saving him money, they're actually reducing the amount of diesel burned to power the city.
"Every community burns a lot of diesel in order to supply electricity," said Bill Nippard, director of operations for Qulliq Energy Corp. (QEC). "So anything we can do to offset our diesel consumption is a good thing for the environment."
Nippard says every 3.73 kilowatt hours produced from solar energy saves QEC about one litre of diesel.
Iqaluit burns about 16 million litres of diesel a year to produce electricity. That's enough diesel to fill more than six Olympic swimming pools.
Nippard says there are currently 16 houses across Nunavut with solar panels.
But QEC isn't about to get into the business of renewable energy, even though QEC is building a hybrid solar-diesel energy plant in Kugluktuk, Nunavut.