Energy sources
The amazing ABCs of electricity generation
CBC News
Posted: Mar 30, 2011 12:51 PM ET
Last Updated: Apr 1, 2011 3:20 PM ET
How electricity is created is as varied as the devices that use it. Here is a look at some of the methods used to generate electricity. (iStock)
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The electrons that flow from the grid to your home are essentially all the same, and your electronic devices — TV's, computers, kitchen appliances — don't discriminate. Electricity is, well, electricity.
The way those electrons are generated, on the other hand, is quite varied.
Power generators range from fossil-fuel powered plants that spew greenhouse gas emissions, to large nuclear reactors, to windmills, to photovoltaic cells that harmlessly capture the sun's rays.
The size of these generating projects can also vary from huge, multi-megawatt plants capable of powering cities, down to small microgeneration units installed on roofs and in backyards.
Over the next 10 years, the electricity grid in Canada will undergo a series changes. New power plants will be smaller and probably built by private companies, instead of public utilities.
Here is a look at some of the ways to generate electricity.
Wind power
A 1.2 megawatt wind turbine produces power on Higgins Mountain in central Nova Scotia on Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2007. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press) Early civilizations learned to use wind as a power source, fashioning sheets into sails to steer their ships. The mighty airstream was later used to spin the vanes of windmills, thereby speeding the process of crushing grains and pumping water.
The modern wind turbine operates on the same principle of harnessing the wind's force. An imposing structure, a 1.8 MW turbine is built with a base tower that spans 65 metres skyward. The turbine's spine, made of rolled steel, is planted firmly into a foundation and supports a trio of blades sweeping the air.
The spinning turbine blades, which are shaped like the wings of an airplane, are used to crank a generator that converts the rotational spin into electricity. Electricity then moves down electric cables to a transformer before moving through lines to a power station where it is stored or distributed.
Though a turbine’s blades are aerodynamically shaped and sensitive to the wind's force, wind speeds must typically reach about 13 km/h hour before they will start to spin. To prevent structural damage, blades will stop spinning once wind speeds reach about 90 km/h.
The amount of energy produced is dependent on wind speed, altitude, the height of the tower and the size of the blade. For example, six 65kW wind turbines stationed in N.L. would produce about 1 million kWh of electricity per year and cut CO2 emissions by approximately 750 tonnes, according to Natural Resources Canada. Put another way, a 1.8 MW turbine would generate about 6,000 MWh in one year — enough to provide enough power for more than 750 homes, according to the trade group the Canadian Wind Energy Association.
A typical wind turbine in Canada has a power capacity of 1.8 MW. CANWEA offers the following structural comparisons:
- The base tower weighs about 132,000 kg – containing enough steel to manufacture the equivalent of 206 cars.
- The aerodynamically shaped turbine blades weigh 35,000 kg and measure about 40 metres – the equivalent length of a Boeing 737.
- The sweep of the blade crosses an area of 5,024 square metres, roughly the same size of three NHL hockey rinks.
- The total weight of a turbine, including its blades, is about 230,000 kg – about the same as two 3,200 HP diesel electric locomotives.
Biomass
The sun rises while a John Deere combine sits idle on a freshly harvested field. Corn, wheat and barley can be used to make ethanol, which some say is a clean-burning fuel alternative. (Seth Perlman/Associated Press) Bioenergy is created from the conversion — combustion, gasification, or fermentation — of organic material, known as biomass. This type of energy comprises five per cent of Canada’s total primary energy, according to Natural Resources Canada.
Common sources of biomass include the following:
- Pulp and paper mill residue such as bark, wood chips and pulping chemicals
- Plants such as switchgrass, hemp, corn and sugarcane
- Biodegradable waste and sewage
- Gases captured at landfill sites or farms
In its simplest form, tossing logs of wood onto a fire to produce heat is a form of bioenergy. Newer examples include the conversion of corn into ethanol and landfill gas into methane that can be used to produce electricity.
Canada has an ample supply of biomass, owing to the country’s large agricultural and forestry sectors. Wood waste from mills — burned to produce electric power, heat and steam — is the country’s largest supply of biomass, according to Natural Resources Canada. In 2006, 7 million megawatt-hours of electricity were generated through the processing of wood biomass and pulping liquor, according to the federal agency.
The process of fermentation is also used to treat biomass, such as corn, wheat or barley to produce ethanol — often touted as a clean-burning fuel alternative. The ethanol is then distilled and treated before it can be used as fuel. In 2006, Canada produced 600 million litres of ethanol and 100 million litres of biodiesel.
Landfill sites are also being mined for methane, a naturally occurring gas that is produced when biomass slowly decays in an oxygen-free setting. Farms and sewage facilities are also treating manure with anaerobic bacteria, to spur the production of methane rich biogas. The methane is then captured by microturbines and converted into heat, electricity and ethanol.
Tidal power
A large tidal power turbine rests at a metal fabrication plant in Dartmouth, N.S. in 2009. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press) Tidal power, much like hydroelectricity, converts the force of moving water into electricity. While hydroelectric plants generate power from the flow of a river, tidal fences and barrages do the same using the ebb and flow of the ocean’s waves.
Tidal barrages are constructed to capture the flow of water moving in and out of a harbour, much like a dam. The water flows into an estuary during high tide and rolls back out during low tide. Hydraulic turbines at the exits and entrances capture the movement and force of the moving water, converting it into electricity. Similarly, tidal fences equipped with water turbines are also placed along the coast to generate power. Water moving through fence is forced through a turbine, thereby creating electricity.
The complexity of engineering tidal barrages, turbines and fences to withstand the ocean’s saltwater and its shifting sands without disrupting the natural environment and marine life have slowed development of this technology. Nova Scotia’s 20 MW Annapolis Royal tidal generating station is the only commercial station of its kind in North America.
Coal power
A dragline works in coal pits in front of the SaskPower Shand Power Station, located south of Estevan, Sask. (Troy Fleece/Canadian Press) Coal is an organic material composed of carbon, oxygen, hydrogen and sulphur, formed from decaying vegetation over millions of years. The combustible sedimentary rock is mined across Canada with large reserves situated in B.C., Alberta and Saskatchewan.
Thermal coal is ground into a fine powder before it is processed in a boiler that holds pipes of water. Heat from the coal produces steam, which is used to spin the blades of a turbine connected to a generator.
Coal power plants emit sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, carbon dioxide and mercury though new methods of production aim to filter and in some cases bury emissions.
There are 20 coal power plants with at least 50 MW capacity across the country, the bulk of them located in Alberta. Natural Resources Canada estimates there are 6.6 billion tones of proved resources of coal that are recoverable – enough to last 100 years.
Nuclear power
The Pickering nuclear plant in Ontario. Nuclear fission is used to heat water into steam which drives turbines to produce electricity. (OPG) Canada holds the world's largest reserves of high-grade low cost uranium with known deposits projected to last more than 40 years, according to Natural Resources Canada. In 2007, Canada produced 9,476 tonnes of uranium worth $835 million.
Uranium pellets are fed into a nuclear reactor. The force of the neutrons in the reactor causes atoms in the uranium to split, in a process called nuclear fission. A chain reaction occurs where the split atoms release neutrons that divide other uranium atoms. The process generates heat that is circulated to a boiler that reaches temperatures of up to 300 degrees C. Steam from the boiler is then fed into a turbine that is used to drive a generator.
Though Canada exports much of its supply, the radioactive element is also used in six of the country's nuclear power plants — one in Quebec and five in Ontario.
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The Adam Beck hydroelectric dam in Ontario. In 2006, hydro power accounted for 59 per cent of Canada's electricity generation. (OPG)
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