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$84M for UVic-led program looks to accelerate local energy transitions

7-year project aims to see rapid shift to renewable energy in small to mid-sized communities
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Researchers involved with Accelerating Community Energy Transformation (ACET) pictured at Mt. Tolmie in Victoria. UVic has received $84 million for ACET as it looks to help small to mid-sized communities rapidly deploy clean energy solutions. (Courtesy of Armando Tura)

An almost $84-million infusion into a University of Victoria-led initiative will help communities realize and shift to renewable energy solutions in the coming years.

The Accelerating Community Energy Transformation (ACET) project will aim to enable the rapid adoption of technology and policy that moves the dial in the transition to clean energy, according to the program含羞草研究社檚 lead. It含羞草研究社檚 one of 11 major research initiatives funded through the Canada First Research Excellence Fund and is being hailed as a transformational investment for UVic.

The focus will be on small communities 含羞草研究社 like remote and off-grid areas or isolated First Nations 含羞草研究社 to mid-sized centres with up to around half a million people.

含羞草研究社淚t含羞草研究社檚 all about bottom-up energy transition,含羞草研究社 Curran Crawford, a UVic engineering professor and ACET lead, said in an interview.

Curran Crawford, a UVic engineering professor and lead of the Accelerating Community Energy Transformation (ACET) initiative. (Courtesy of Armando Tura)
Curran Crawford, a UVic engineering professor and lead of the Accelerating Community Energy Transformation (ACET) initiative. (Courtesy of Armando Tura)

With about 80 per cent of Canadian communities outside of major metropolitan areas, there含羞草研究社檚 a significant amount of emissions coming from how people in those communities get around or heat their buildings, UVic said.

The 40-partner ACET initiative will work with individual communities to implement on-the-ground solutions 含羞草研究社 like getting Indigenous communities off diesel as their sole electricity source 含羞草研究社 as it hopes to help Canada achieve its net-zero emissions goal.

The millions in funding will provide UVic personnel 含羞草研究社 including around 60 graduate and other students, faculty members and others 含羞草研究社 plus a range of partners with the capacity to support dozens of communities without repeatedly vying for new research grants.

Many small communities are all-in on sustainable energy solutions that fit their local realities, but Crawford said they usually lack the resources of bigger cities that could make those climate-action aspirations into a reality.

含羞草研究社淭hat含羞草研究社檚 why we focused in at that community level, to get down into the weeds and help the communities.含羞草研究社

Prototype testing with the UVic-led Blind Channel off-grid tidal power project, near West Thurlow Island, is successfully demonstrating the potential for harnessing tidal currents to power off-grid communities. (Courtesy of the Institute for Integrated Energy Systems at UVic)
Prototype testing with the UVic-led Blind Channel off-grid tidal power project, near West Thurlow Island, is successfully demonstrating the potential for harnessing tidal currents to power off-grid communities. (Courtesy of the Institute for Integrated Energy Systems at UVic)

The ACET program will also put an emphasis on sharing the lessons learned by its participants. The hope is other Canadian and global communities can use that information to more quickly scale up clean energy technologies.

含羞草研究社淎t the end of it, what we would like to see is those successes replicated in other communities,含羞草研究社 Crawford said. 含羞草研究社淲e含羞草研究社檙e not just trying to publish academic papers, it含羞草研究社檚 really to see those communities actually implementing solutions.含羞草研究社

The seven-year project runs until 2030, a year many interim emission targets are tied to, and several projects will be up and running by then.

Some of ACET含羞草研究社檚 current projects include harnessing tidal energy off Vancouver Island, using wave energy to help the Mowachaht/Muchalaht First Nation return to their ancestral lands on Nootka Island, bringing electric vehicle fast charging options to Victoria含羞草研究社檚 multi-unit buildings and powering Haida Gwaii with 100 per cent renewables.

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About the Author: Jake Romphf

In early 2021, I made the move from the Great Lakes to Greater Victoria with the aim of experiencing more of the country I report on.
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