When the Lutsel Kâe Dene First Nation (LKDFN) launched its 35 kW solar project, the community became the first independent power producer in Canadaâs northern territories.
After an oil spill on its traditional territory in 2011, the Lubicon Lake Band in Alberta decided to chart a new course for a cleaner future with an 80-panel solar project, supported by bullfrogpowered customers.
With support from Bullfrog Power, Kitchener-based LIFE Co-op is giving residents in Waterloo Region the power to develop community solar projects. The Co-opâs portfolio includes 18 solar projects throughout the region, including one on Mapletonâs Organic Dairy.
Lake Babine Nation is the third largest Aboriginal Band in British Columbia. Through a partnership with Bullfrog Power and W Dusk Energy, Lake Babine Nation is currently planning a new solar project that will reduce the communityâs reliance on fossil fuels.
A hundred kilometres northwest of Fredericton, New Brunswick, a former one-room church was transformed into the Knowlesville Art and Nature Centre, a community meeting space that now generates clean energy from its solar roof.
In June 2018, the Kluane First Nation broke ground for the Kluane Nâtsi (Wind) Energy Project, a three-turbine wind farm with a combined capacity of 300 kW.
The Kitasoo/XaiâXais First Nation in B.C. aims to be energy independent by building renewable energy sources to help power its communityâbeginning with a 23 kW solar roof on its public school.
In September 2016, Bullfrog and the Beach Community Energy Co-operative launched a 72 kW solar project on the roof of Kew Beach Junior Public School. The project will, in combination with the schoolâs existing solar installation, generate the equivalent to one third of the schoolâs annual electricity use.
In partnership with Beauâs Brewery, Bullfrog is providing financial support for a 10 kW ground mounted solar system that will help lower the costs of Just Foodâs sustainable farming education and food equality initiatives.
Through this project, landfill gas is captured, cleaned, and repurposed to dry the biosolids, and the resulting fertilizer is used by agricultural, commercial, and residential applications across the Sunshine State.
Bullfrog Powerâs green fuel is a renewable alternative to petroleum-based transportation fuel. We source our green fuel from Biodiesel Las Americas LLC (âBDLAâ), a biodiesel producer in Doral, Florida, that repurposes used cooking oil, a waste stream collected from restaurants, commercial kitchens, and food processing plants.
We source our green fuel from Innoltek, a biodiesel producer in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec, that repurposes waste streams from the food industry.