Trillium Power Wind 1

Trillium Power Wind 1
Country Canada
Location Southwest of Main Duck Island Shoal, northeastern Lake Ontario
Coordinates 43°50′24″N 76°41′24″W / 43.84000°N 76.69000°W / 43.84000; -76.69000Coordinates: 43°50′24″N 76°41′24″W / 43.84000°N 76.69000°W / 43.84000; -76.69000
Status Under development
Owner(s) Trillium Power Wind Corporation
Power generation
Nameplate capacity 500 MW

Trillium Power Wind 1 ("TPW1") was a proposed 450 to 500 megawatt (MW) far-offshore wind farm in the Canadian waters of northeastern Lake Ontario at least 17 to 28 km (11 to 17 mi) from the nearest mainland. This renewable energy project was being developed by Trillium Power Wind Corporation, a privately, Canadian-owned company headquartered in Toronto, Ontario.[1] The project was cancelled by the Ontario government on February 11, 2011. Had it not been cancelled TPW1 would have been among the first offshore wind farms built in the Great Lakes.[2] Trillium's subsequent lawsuit was struck down almost in its entirety by the Ontario Court of Appeal which ruled that it could proceed with a claim for misfeasance in public office.

Project description

Following the cancellation of the project, on May 19, 2011, Trillium Power Wind Corporation gave notice to the McGuinty Government that if its action against Trillium Power was not corrected it would initiate an action suing the Government of Ontario for CDN$2.25 billion.[3] No correction was made as requested. Therefore, on September 28, 2011, Trillium Power Wind Corporation filed its claim in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice and was assigned the court file No. CV-11-436012. While the legal claim was initiated against the government of Dalton McGuinty, Trillium Power has continuously stated in the media that it does not hold Premier Wynne responsible for creating the cause of the litigation. Instead, Trillium Power has stated that litigation was the last option and was only taken when the McGuinty government would not even meet or discuss options to correct their targeted action to harm Trillium Power.

The TPW1 far-offshore wind site is acknowledged as the premier site in North America and especially The Great Lakes. The TPW1 site was to be located in northeastern Lake Ontario, approximately 38 km (24 mi) southwest of Kingston, Ontario on the shoals of Main Duck Island.[4] The project was to consist of approximately 90 to 100 either 5.0 MW or 6.0 far-offshore turbines and two offshore substations linked to the Lennox Transmission Station by way of an underwater cable. The total project cost was estimated at $1.5 billion of private capital with no cost to taxpayers for the proposed construction.[4]

The wind farm was to produce between 450 and 500 megawatts (MW) of electricity with a net capacity factor of 43%, which is equivalent to the amount of power consumed by a minimum of 130,000 typical Ontario households.[4] TPW1 would have offset at least 1.5 million tonnes of CO2 emissions from coal-fired generation and 931,745 tonnes of CO2 emissions from natural gas generation every year.[4] All power generated by the project was to be sold to the Ontario Power Authority under a 20-year minimum Power Purchase Agreement. Under Ontario's Green Energy and Green Economy Act adopted in May 2009, offshore wind facilities of any size will receive a 19¢ per kilowatt hour (kWh) Feed-in tariff.[5]

Key attributes

  • Mean wind speed of 9.0 m/s at 100 m hub height based on data collected by both LIDAR and Meteorological Mast wind-measuring devices, along with 36 years of data collected on Main Duck Island;[6]
  • Water depth ranging from 2 to 40 m (6 to 130 ft);[4]
  • Power density of 938 W/m3;[4]
  • Close proximity to major grid interconnection points (28 km);[4]
  • Average wave height of less than 1 m (3.2 feet) 94% of the time from April to November;[4]
  • Low/zero visibility from mainland shore or nearby major islands.[7]

Approvals process and current status

Trillium Power followed Ontario's Renewable Energy Approval process.[8] As of February 11, 2011, when the project was cancelled, Trillium Power had completed 105 studies, reports and regulatory actions including, but not limited to: avian, aquatic, geophysical, ice, wave, navigation, noise, etc. The first round of public consultations were held in Napanee, Ontario, Picton, Ontario and Cape Vincent, New York in early July 2010.[9][10]

The TPW1 site was to be located on provincial Crown Land secured through Ontario's Windpower Site Release and Development Program via an embedded Land Use Permit (LUP).[11]

All offshore wind power projects were cancelled/suspended by the Ontario government, on February 2011 prior to Trillium Power's imminent closing of a $26 million tranche of equity financing on February 11, 2011 at 3:00 pm.[12]

The claim by Trillium Power vs. Ontario was initially struck down by a motions judge and was then appealed to Ontario's highest court, the Ontario Court of Appeal. The Appeal was heard on March 22, 2013. On November 12, 2013, the three judges of the Ontario Court of Appeal rendered their decision whereby they found Trillium Power's case could proceed on the claim of misfeasance in public office. On February 28, 2014, the Ontario Government filed a Statement of Defense.

Additional projects

TPW1 was to be the first of Trillium Power's four unique offshore wind developments in the Great Lakes. Trillium Power's additional sites include: Trillium Power Wind 2, The Great Lakes Array and The Superior Array.

See also

References

  1. http://www.trilliumpower.com/corporate/
  2. http://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/26/who-will-build-the-first-offshore-wind-farm-in-north-america/
  3. "Trillium Power Statement of Clair" (PDF). siskinds.com. Retrieved 2017-08-11.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 http://www.trilliumpower.com/energy/project-wind-1/
  5. http://fit.powerauthority.on.ca/
  6. http://www.trilliumpower.com/energy/winds-of-the-great-lakes/
  7. http://www.trilliumpower.com/environment/visual-aesthetics/
  8. http://www.ene.gov.on.ca/en/business/green-energy/
  9. http://napaneeguide.ca/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=2649570
  10. http://www.watertowndailytimes.com/article/20100709/NEWS03/307099978
  11. http://www.mnr.gov.on.ca/en/Business/Renewable/2ColumnSubPage/284683.html
  12. Offshore wind development hits a snag in Ontario Alberta Oil Magazine, April 2011. Accessed: 29 September 2011.
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