World Byte News

Alberta to hold nuclear power consultations as reactor companies weigh opportunities

CALGARY — Alberta plans to hold public consultations this fall on adding nuclear power to the province’s energy mix, Premier Danielle Smith said Monday. Read More

​CALGARY — Alberta plans to hold public consultations this fall on adding nuclear power to the province’s energy mix, Premier Danielle Smith said Monday. There have long been discussions about building reactors in Alberta — including ones that could power oilsands operations — but the province is currently reliant on greenhouse-gas emitting natural gas for   

Article content

CALGARY — Alberta plans to hold public consultations this fall on adding nuclear power to the province’s energy mix, Premier Danielle Smith said Monday.

Article content

There have long been discussions about building reactors in Alberta — including ones that could power oilsands operations — but the province is currently reliant on greenhouse-gas emitting natural gas for electricity.

Article content

Article content

Story continues below

Article content

Those conversations are to begin anew around September or October, when Chantelle de Jonge, parliamentary secretary for affordability and utilities, plans to hold nuclear consultation sessions.

Article content

Article content

“We want to talk to Albertans, because it’s new for us,” Smith told reporters alongside Ontario Premier Doug Ford after the two flipped pancakes at the Alberta premier’s annual Stampede breakfast.

Article content

“It’s not new for Ontario. Ontario gets 60 per cent of their power, I understand, on their grid from nuclear energy.”

Article content

Small modular reactors probably make the most sense at remote rural sites that are heavy energy users, the premier added.

Article content

“Our oilsands projects are perfect for it, if you can get both the power and steam, power and heat.”

Article content

Small modular reactors, or SMRs, generate about one-third of the power of traditional nuclear plants and can be prefabricated elsewhere before being shipped to site.

Article content

Story continues below

Article content

Ontario Power Generation is building an SMR at its Darlington site east of Toronto, which would make it the first power company in North America to connect such a plant to the grid. There are plans to build three more SMR units there.

Article content

Ford said SMRs don’t themselves employ a lot of people when they’re up and running, but they could enable tech giants like Amazon or Google to set up shop with electricity-hungry artificial intelligence data centres.

Article content

“And that’s where the jobs are created because they just suck an endless amount of energy, these data centres,” Ford told reporters.

Article content

“So that’s the way of the future. We’re leading the world and we’re gonna make sure we share that technology right across the country.”

Article content

At least one U.S. developer of small modular rectors has a keen eye on Alberta as a growth market.

Article content

“We have designed a small modular reactor that is perfectly suited for Alberta,” Clay Sell, CEO of X-Energy Reactor Co., said in an interview last month.

 

Exit mobile version