The St. Joseph wind facility is located in the rural municipalities of Montcalm and Rhineland. The farm is the largest wind energy project in Manitoba with a capacity of 138 MW.
The St. Leon wind farm is a 99 MW project consisting of 63 turbines, each 80 metres high, equipped with three 41-metre blades. The wind farm is situated on the Pembina Escarpment, which rises above the surrounding plains, exposing the turbines to the prevailing prairie winds.
The Providence Bay Wind Farm is located on Manitoulin Island and currently operates 2 Enercon E48 800 kW turbines. The site generates approximately 3 million kWh of clean, emission-free power annually.
WEICan’s 10 MW Wind R&D Park generates clean, renewable electricity to help support WEICan’s mandate of advancing the development of wind energy through research, testing, innovation, and collaboration.
The Petites Bergeronnes Hydro Power Plant is a 4.2 MW low-impact hydro facility in Petites Bergeronnes, Quebec. This facility harnesses the power of the Petite Bergeronnes river, located in the Cote-Nord region of Quebec.
The West Cape Wind Farm is Prince Edward Island’s largest wind farm. Situated near O’Leary, the farm has a total of 55 turbines with a capacity of 99 MW–and is capable of powering approximately 25,000 homes annually!
Sometimes it takes a village to raise a turbine—and that’s exactly how locals in Ellershouse, Nova Scotia, came together to launch the first independent wind farm in the province.
Completed in 2009, the Bear Mountain Wind Park is the first fully operational wind project in B.C. Today it delivers enough electricity to power most of B.C.’s South Peace region. The site is also used for cattle grazing, hiking, snowmobiling, cross country skiing and other recreational activities.
This facility is made up of two solar farms with a combined capacity of 39 MW. Located southwest of Medicine Hat, the Burdett and Yellow Lake Solar Facility is Canada’s eighth largest solar project.
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 Power’s green fuel is a renewable alternative to petroleum-based transportation fuel. We source our green fuel from Biodiesel Las Americas LLC (“BDLA”), 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.