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Thursday, February 11, 2016

Sarnia Lambton Energy Symposium 2016

The symposium was a one-day event focusing on renewable energies, energy storage, micro-grid technologies, material development for energy applications, policies, strategies, trends and initiatives.

The Sarnia-Lambton Energy Symposium is a Canadian event that explores energy-related topics. The 2016 symposium focused on catalyzing large energy projects to drive Canada's energy strategy.

Hosted by The Ditchley Foundation: Plenary Sessions discussing: Is nuclear power an important part of the path to a lower carbon future, or an expensive and risky dead end? Where is technology likely to take us in the next 20 years? How much has the debate on safety been influenced by what happened at Fukushima? Are we likely to see long term waste solutions coming on stream in the next 20 years? The sessions were followed by Working Group discussions to address the economics and politics of nuclear power; nuclear technology and safety; security risks and solutions.

The Workshop was held at Canadian Standards Association - CSA Group headquarters. 

The objective of this workshop was to detail existing Code and Regulatory barriers impeding the deployment of EVSE technology in Canada and, provide recommendations to overcome the identified barriers. Professor Mehrdad Kazerani attended the worshop.

Five speakers travelled from Waterloo Region to participate in COP21 in Paris. 

  • Erik Davies, Manager of Strategic Initiatives and Special Projects, CIGI
  • Alexandra Graham, Graduate Student, School of Planning, University of Waterloo 
  • Laura Maxwell, Graduate Student, School of Environment, Enterprise and Development, University of Waterloo 
  • Ian Rowlands, Professor, School of Environment, Resources and Sustainability, University of Waterloo 
  • Berry Vrbanovic, Mayor, City of Kitchener

Organized by The Council for Clean & Reliable Electricity (bythinkingpower.ca) and The Ivey Energy Policy and Management Centre. The Ontario government's decision to partially privatize Hydro One’s transmission and distribution restarted a debate about the appropriate role of the private sector in the electricity industry, and ways in which privatization could affect short- and long-run performance. What will be the impact on costs, infrastructure investment, and rates of a privately-owned and managed entity? What can be learned from other jurisdictions that have also restructured their electricity sectors over the last 20 years? These questions were discussed at the session. 

Monday, October 5, 2015

The GridSmartCity 2015 RoundTable

Energy Council of Canada Fellow Stephanie Whitney attended the GridSmartCity 2015 Round Table as a student member of WISE. GridSmartCity is a cooperative of utilities, Smart Grid innovators, industry regulators, government, academia and other electricity industry stakeholders. The partner organizations are committed to work collectively towards productivity and efficiency improvements, advancements in self-healing grids, conservation program implementation, the emergence of renewable energy and community energy planning.