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Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Climate Crisis

Tory Rushton, Minister of Natural Resources and Renewables, MLA Cumberland SouthDr. Stephen Ellis, MPFinance and Administrative Clerk

This Week

Tuesday, May 14, 2024 9:45 AM

Listen to Stephen Ellis, Member of Parliament for Cumberland-Colchester, on Morning Talk every 2nd Tuesday at 9:40.
Tuesday, May 14, 2024 1:00 PM

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

Tuesday, May 14, 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, May 14, 2024 6:00 PM

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

Wednesday, May 15, 2024 9:00 AM

Listen to Tory Rushton, Minister of Natural Resources and Renewables on Morning Talk each Wednesday at 9 am.
Wednesday, May 15, 2024 10:45 AM

Listen to Oxford Mayor Greg Henley on Morning Talk every Wednesday at 10:45.
Thursday, May 16, 2024 9:00 AM

Listen to Murray Scott, Mayor of Cumberland County, on Morning Talk every Thursday at 9:00.
Thursday, May 16, 2024 10:00 AM

Liberal Leader Zach Churchill, Leader of Nova Scotia's Official Opposition will be on Morning Talk on the third Thursday of every month. Listen at 10 am.

Saturday, May 18, 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 19, 2024 11:00 AM

Hope Centre Online offers a faith based message that challenges you to look at today's culture and issues in a new way. Every Sunday at 11am at www.hopecentre.ca, YouTube, or Facebook.

Sunday, May 19, 2024 1:00 PM

Listen to a replay of Saturday Night in a Harbour Town with host Eric MacEwen, every Sunday at 1 pm.
Sunday, May 19, 2024 3:00 PM

Listen to Let's Talk, a live, radio, talk show syndicated across the Maritimes on nine radio stations, hosted at Hope Centre in Pugwash, NS. Listen every Sunday at 3 pm on Inspire FM or sixrivers.ca or hopecentre.ca.

Monday, May 20, 2024 9:45 AM

Listen to Tim Houston, Premier of Nova Scotia, on Morning Talk on the 3rd Monday of each month at 9:45. Click HERE for our online player. Click HERE for our direct player.
Monday, May 20, 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.

Top Stories

What is Community Solar?
By Sean Kelly, Climate Story Network
/ Categories: News, Climate

What is Community Solar?

The Nova Scotia government has announced a community solar program. But how is it different from the solar panels you already see on homes?

Stroll around most communities these days, and you’ll see more and more solar panels on buildings, converting sunlight directly into electricity through photovoltaic cells. 

Solar energy is renewable and reduces your home’s carbon emissions. It can help offset your energy costs and be a hedge against rising electricity prices.

There are even SolarHomes rebates from Efficiency Nova Scotia to help make this clean electricity more affordable to install. Solar makes sense — and cents.

But what if your home’s roof can’t support solar panels? Perhaps your property doesn’t get enough sunlight? Maybe the upfront costs of installation, even with rebates, is just too much? Or you are a renter, and the roof isn’t yours to add panels? 

Your share of the sun

Community solar could be the light at the end of your power bill, adding renewable power to your electricity mix.

A community solar “garden” is a centrally located and operated solar array where the energy is widely distributed to residents, some of whom may not actually live close to the panels.

Also called shared solar, community solar is a way for multiple subscribers to buy a share of a solar project and receive credit on their electricity bill for their portion of the power produced. 

A solar garden requires an area large enough to install numerous panels: this could be on the rooftop of an industrial or institutional building, or on land with ground-mounted arrays. (Putting solar gardens on the ground does require careful considerations of land use, including agricultural needs.) 

But whether on a roof or on the ground, shared solar is a pathway for more people to virtually access clean energy from the sun. 

A different kind of harvest

Like any farm, there are different ways to own and operate the solar facility. It could be utility-owned, where an entity like Nova Scotia Power owns the solar garden but distributes the benefits to homeowners or neighbourhoods.

Alternately, it could be community-owned, where a municipality, First Nation, non-profit, university, college, business, or community organization pays for and operates the solar garden.

Or it could be third-party owned, where a business or co-operative owns and operates the solar array.

There are also different ways to distribute the harvested power. Residents could lease a panel or panels in the array and reap the benefits of the power they produce. There could be many subscribers in a power purchase agreement, where you pay a predetermined rate for energy produced by the solar array. And then there is outright panel ownership, where someone buys a panel within the solar garden; they get the power produced by their panels, but the entire array is still owned by one body.

Bright days for Nova Scotian solar

The Province of Nova Scotia has announced a new Community Solar Program aimed at helping non-profits, municipalities, First Nations, and businesses set up solar gardens. They would then sell this renewable electricity to subscribers who aren’t able — for one of the reasons listed above — to install solar panels where they live.  

The program will also contribute to the province’s climate goals. Nova Scotia has plans to reach 80 per cent renewable energy and to move away from coal by 2030; however, our grid still includes around 60 per cent of energy generated by the burning of fossil fuels, mainly coal.

“Not everyone has the ability to install their own solar panels,” said Tory Rushton, the Minister of Natural Resources and Renewables, about the launch of the program. “This creates the opportunity to buy solar energy from a community provider instead.”

New arrays under the Community Solar Program are expected to be up and running by spring 2026, at which point people can subscribe to them at a slightly lower power rate. 

Participants will get to decide how much of their electricity usage comes from solar, choosing to offset some of their electricity usage, or all of it. According to the announced guidelines for the program, participants will be able to increase, decrease, or cancel their subscription at any time, and there’s no penalty for changing the subscription.

The province plans to invest just over $5 million during the next year to help with the capital costs of building the community solar gardens. Each solar garden is allowed to produce up to 10 megawatts of power; one megawatt of solar can power around 130 homes for a year.

Subscribers will get a solar energy credit of $0.02 per kilowatt hour on their power bill for energy generated by their subscription.

“We’re thrilled to see the launch of the Community Solar Program,” said David Bruschett, the Chair of Solar Nova Scotia, a volunteer-run not-for-profit organization that works to support a strong local solar industry and more renewable energy.

Bruschett is confident this new program will help grow the solar industry in the province. 

“It will also contribute to the ambitious shared goal of transitioning away from coal-based electricity in Nova Scotia by 2030.” 

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1 comments on article "What is Community Solar?"

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Bill Martin

Editor's Note:

The Municipality of Cumberland is currently considering a mega, community, solar garden that could be hundreds of acres or more. It may even be shared by the Town of Truro.

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