Where the wind blows: Jay Scotland shoots the breeze in North Cape, P.E.I.
Shane Ross | CBC News | Posted: November 24, 2017 8:00 PM | Last Updated: November 28, 2017
North Cape provides ideal conditions to harness wind energy
It may be just a small community in western P.E.I., but anyone who studies wind energy has probably heard of North Cape.
The area has been a test site for wind energy since 1981. It's currently home to the Wind Energy Institute of P.E.I., a not-for-profit that generates and sells power from five 2-megawatt turbines.
Scott Harper, the institute's CEO, says North Cape has a wind that's "uncomparable."
We've been in many countries where as soon as you mention you're from North Cape, P.E.I., they know exactly where you're coming from. — Scott Harper
"In the very small wind energy technical research world, this site is well known," he told CBC P.E.I. meteorologist Jay Scotland.
"We've been in many countries where as soon as you mention you're from North Cape, P.E.I., they know exactly where you're coming from."
Not only is the wind strong in North Cape, Harper said, but it also has the advantage of about 300 degrees of exposure to the ocean.
"If the wind is coming off the water, there's very low turbulence. It's a nice, steady wind that the wind turbines just love."
The P.E.I. Energy Corporation also operates a wind farm in the area, one of three in the province. (The others are in in East Point and Hermanville.)
According to the province, P.E.I. generates 25 per cent of its own electricity from wind, the second-highest percentage in the world.
The province said it plans to increase wind energy production in the coming years.
But Harper said it can't rely totally on wind energy. He said the new cables installed under the Northumberland Strait are necessary to maintain a mix of energy sources.
"I don't think we're going to be successful telling Islanders the days the wind is not blowing that they can't use electricity."
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