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Shell to partner with renewables firm on solar farm near Scotford refinery

Shell Canada previously built a five-megawatt solar farm at Scotford that will start up this fall and offset emissions from the Shell-owned chemicals plant. But the project announced Tuesday — which Shell said will begin construction next year and be operational by the end of 2023 — will be much larger.
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A Shell gas station is seen in Ottawa, Tuesday, March 30, 2021. Shell Canada and its North American solar platform Silicon Ranch have announced plans to build a 58-megawatt solar farm adjacent to Shell’s Scotford refinery and chemicals park near Edmonton, Alta. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

CALGARY — Shell Canada and its North American solar platform Silicon Ranch have announced plans to build a 58-megawatt solar farm adjacent to Shell’s Scotford refinery and chemicals park near Edmonton.

The solar farm will be the first in Canada to be built, owned, and operated by Tennessee-based Silicon Ranch, which is 47-per-cent owned by Royal Dutch Shell plc and building solar projects for the global energy giant all over the U.S.

Silicon Ranch expects to invest about $100 million to install the facility and will hire about 150 people to support construction efforts, said Cara Kovach, a spokeswoman for the company.

Shell Canada previously built a five-megawatt solar farm at Scotford that will start up this fall and offset emissions from the Shell-owned chemicals plant. But the project announced Tuesday — which Shell said will begin construction next year and be operational by the end of 2023 — will be much larger.

In an interview, Shell senior vice-president Mark Pattenden said all of the power generated by the new solar farm will be dedicated to the Scotford refinery, for at least the next 25 years. The solar farm is expected to produce enough renewable electricity to provide 20 per cent of the refinery's energy needs.

"This is really material decarbonization, of either the existing products we produce through the refinery . . . or it creates the opportunity for future production of things like hydrogen or biofuels as well," Pattenden said.

Shell has said it wants to transform the Scotford Complex into one of five energy and chemicals parks owned by the company around the world.

Within this decade, the company wants to use carbon capture and storage (CCUS) and renewable power to process new feedstocks such as bio-oils or waste oils to reduce the C02 emitted in the production of fuel.

As part of its vision, Shell has proposed its Polaris CCUS project, that will capture carbon dioxide from the Scotford refinery and chemicals plant, with storage capacity of about 300 million tonnes of C02. Shell said it will make a final investment decision about the project in 2023

Shell also has plans to collaborate with Mitsubishi Corp. on the production of low-carbon hydrogen at Scotford.

The proposed solar farm at Scotford won't require any government subsidies or funding. Pattenden said as the company moves forward with its goal of reducing direct and indirect carbon emissions by 50 per cent by 2030 compared with 2016 levels, what it needs most is regulatory certainty around things like carbon pricing and renewable energy policy.

"We continue to look not so much for specific policy, but more certainty," Pattenden said.

The construction of a solar farm near Scotford will mark the first large-scale solar installation in Alberta's industrial heartland, Pattenden said, noting solar farms are typically built in the southernmost portion of the province.

But he said there's no reason a solar farm can't produce effectively at Scotford, pointing out it will be designed with panels that can also capture sunlight reflected off snow.

"It's without a doubt that southern Alberta is one of the best places in the world [for solar power] but the Edmonton area is not far off," Pattenden said. "We do have shorter days in the winter, but longer days in the summer offsetting that, and just about as many sunshine hours as southern Alberta."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 9, 2021.

Amanda Stephenson, The Canadian Press

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