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Monday, April 29, 2024

Climate Crisis

Dr. Stephen Ellis, MPFinance and Administrative ClerkYour best choice is O'Briens PharmaChoice.

This Week

Monday, April 29, 2024 10:45 AM

Gordon Johnson will be on Morning Talk to chat about Tedx Pugwash, the community component of Ted Talks, home of "good ideas worth sharing." Listen at 10:45.

Monday, April 29, 2024 8:00 PM

Pickleball and Basketball played every Monday from 8 to 9 pm at the OREC gym in Oxford. Click HERE for details.

Tuesday, April 30, 2024 9:45 AM

Listen to Stephen Ellis, Member of Parliament for Cumberland-Colchester, on Morning Talk every 2nd Tuesday at 9:45. Click HERE for our online player. Click HERE for our direct player.
Tuesday, April 30, 2024 1:00 PM

Walk and Talk is held every Tuesday and Thursday at 1 pm at the Wentworth Recreation Centre.

Tuesday, April 30, 2024 1:00 PM

The Oxford Seniors Club (31 Ellis Street) will host a Coffee House from 1 to 3 pm every Tuesday. All Are Welcome.

Tuesday, April 30, 2024 6:00 PM

Women's Pickle Ball is played every Tuesday from 6 to 8 PM at the Wentworth Recreation Centre.

Wednesday, May 1, 2024 9:00 AM

Listen to Tory Rushton, Minister of Natural Resources and Renewables on Morning Talk each Wednesday at 9 am.
Wednesday, May 1, 2024 10:45 AM

Listen to Oxford Mayor Greg Henley on Morning Talk every Wednesday at 10:45.
Thursday, May 2, 2024 9:00 AM

Listen to Murray Scott, Mayor of Cumberland County, on Morning Talk every Thursday at 9:00.
Saturday, May 4, 2024 8:00 PM

Listen to Saturday Night in a Harbour Town, traditional East Coast Music, with your host, Eric MacEwen, Saturdays at 8 pm.
Sunday, May 5, 2024 11:00 AM

Hope Centre Online offers a faith based message that speaks to science not as the alternative but as a function of faith. Every Sunday at 11am at www.hopecentre.ca, YouTube, or Facebook.

Sunday, May 5, 2024 2:00 PM

Listen to a replay of Saturday Night in a Harbour Town with host Eric MacEwen, every Sunday at 2 pm.
Sunday, May 5, 2024 2:00 PM

The Wentworth Recreation Centre will host its annual Mega BINGO at 2 pm. Click HERE for details.

Top Stories

New Dawn for Climate-friendly Living
Allison Lawlor, Climate Story Network
/ Categories: News, Climate

New Dawn for Climate-friendly Living

The Cape Breton social enterprise and leader in community self-reliance is on the path to a cleaner, more affordable energy future.

As the head of a non-profit social enterprise with a mission to support a culture of self-reliance in Cape Breton, backing a huge solar project to power an affordable-living community was daunting for Erika Shea (photo above), but still made perfect sense.

An array of 1,800 solar panels at a former military radar base in Sydney is now providing electricity to Pine Tree Park Estates, a community of 28 homes, a curling club, an office, and a 30-bed residential facility for adults with physical and intellectual disabilities, all of which are also located on the former base lands.

“Through the solar and the building retrofits we’ve been able to remove all fossil fuels from the property,” says Shea, President and CEO of New Dawn Enterprises, which owns and operates Pine Tree Park.

The 700-kilowatt solar project not only powers all the homes and buildings on the site and cuts greenhouse gas emissions, but, along with building retrofits, is reducing people’s energy costs by a third, says Shea. The clean energy generated at Pine Tree Park feeds electricity into Nova Scotia Power’s electricity grid when it’s sunny and draws from the grid when it’s not.

“We are putting energy onto the grid and then taking energy off the grid,” she says.

New Dawn worked closely with Cape Breton-based Verschuren Centre for Sustainability in Energy and the Environment on the $3.5-million project that also included building upgrades, including the installation of heat pumps and improvements to insulation and air sealing.

The solar project is just one of several energy efficiency initiatives New Dawn has recently undertaken to ensure that access to affordable housing in Cape Breton is also environmentally friendly. The non-profit social enterprise owns and manages a total — including Pine Tree Park — of 175 residential units and five commercial buildings, all of which are located in Sydney and Glace Bay.

“As an organization, we want to become net zero wholly,” says Shea. 

To help get there, the New Dawn Centre in Sydney recently underwent a major retrofit to make it more energy efficient. The 38,000 square foot, three-story former high school, which houses New Dawn’s office, as well as 40 tenants, had 85 new windows installed last year, and its old boiler replaced by heat pumps. The retrofits dramatically cut energy costs. No longer do they spend $150,000 annually on oil to heat the building while remaining unable to regulate temperature.

“It was either cold or hot. People would have their windows open in February,” she says. “Through these upgrades, we’ve had an immense decrease in our impact on the climate.”

Upgrades to the building’s roof will soon begin, followed by a move to have the building powered by solar energy. With a grant provided through Nova Scotia’s Low Carbon Communities fund, a study will look at the feasibility of installing two new large arrays of solar panels on currently vacant land. Shea would like to see New Dawn in a position where it can charge low-income households (primarily in Sydney and Glace Bay) less for their power than they are currently paying. 

“Our preference is for communities to own renewables and to own their own power,” she says.

Outside of providing affordable housing, New Dawn also leads food security initiatives. Its Meals on Wheels program provides 20,000 meals a year to mostly low-income households, connecting to local food production whenever possible.

In May, New Dawn will become the first food enterprise in Cape Breton to use e-bikes as part of its food delivery fleet. A grant from the Department of Communities, Culture, Tourism and Heritage allowed them to purchase five e-bikes at a cost of $5,000 per bike. Some volunteers will soon be hopping on to deliver meals in and around Sydney. 

“It allows us, in a small way, to reduce our carbon footprint by using fewer vehicles,” she says.

The latest in a string of green initiatives, Shea knows that the e-bikes are getting New Dawn Enterprises one step closer to its goal of becoming a net zero organization.

The photos below show the New Dawn Enterprises headquarters and the solar array they installed to power their operations. Photos courtesy of New Dawn Enterprises.

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