'Promising' P.E.I. hydroelectric project featured in new book about King Charles III - Action News
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PEI

'Promising' P.E.I. hydroelectric project featured in new book about King Charles III

A new green energy project on Prince Edward Island is getting an unexpected boost: The small-scale hydroelectric project developed by Andrew Murray of Aslan Renewables in Stratford, P.E.I., is included in a new book about King Charles III.

Aslan Renewables will use small turbines to power up P.E.I.'s decommissioned dams

A man stands on a bridge overlooking a stream
The CEO of Aslan Renewables, Andrew Murray, checks out the water level at MacLures Pond Dam in Murray River, one of the sites for a company pilot project. (Shane Hennessey/CBC)

Prince Edward Island's Andrew Murray will be part of the birthday celebrations for King Charles III, which includethe launch of a new book featuring the monarch's vision for his reign and related stories from around the Commonwealth.

It amounts to a very public debut for a project that has been in development for three years in Murray's home province of P.E.I., breathing new life into former damsto generate green energy.

The book, called King Charles III: The Leadership and Vision of a Modern Monarch, features stories from around the world. One of the pages isdedicated to Aslan Renewables, the company Murray launched a few years ago in Stratford, P.E.I.

The 36-year-old tech entrepreneur said receiving a message from the Royal Family's publishinghouse was quite a surprise.

"It was a really unique day, obviously, a fantastic honour for the company and the project, something that we weren't expecting at all," Murray said.

"They were looking for companies and projects within the Commonwealth that really reflected the King's mission, his vision as a monarch, and what we're doing here on P.E.I. really aligned with those values."

A man in a blue jacket stands in front of a dam
Andrew Murray, 36, says receiving a message from the Royal Family's publishing house was a surprise. (Shane Hennessey/CBC)

Recycling old dams

The concept came to Murray during the COVID-19 pandemic, when he and his father would go on trips to explorethe Island landscape as a diversion, away from crowded places. One of the destinations was the scenic and historic MacLures Pond dam in Murray River.

"What we found at sites like MacLures and many, many other sites across the Island was that we had a similar configuration of box dam," he said.

"What we've done is develop a modern system to actually bring these retired dam sites back online. Fifty, 60, 70 years ago, these would have been the sites of water mills, old water wheels, that powered industry in our small communities and today we aim to bring them back to life."

A drone shot of a culvert between two parts of a dam
Aslan has signed a power purchase agreement with the P.E.I. government, and the power generated by the dam turbines will be fed into the Maritime Electric grid. (Shane Hennessey/CBC)

Murray said governments around the world retired the box dams half a century ago as they moved towardlarger-scale power generation.

He said there are 170 potential sites across P.E.I. alone, and tens of thousands across Canada.

Murray said Aslan has signed a power purchase agreement with the P.E.I. government, and the power generated by the dam turbines will be fed into the Maritime Electric grid.

A turbine unit with a black cap
Murray say the scale of the Aslan project will make it possible to share the concept across the country and around the world. (Aaron Adetuyi/CBC )

The pilot project will include three dams and could supply more than 350 megawatthours peryear.

"A site like MacLures, or the Morell watershed, each one of these sites can power about 15 to 20 homes year-round on a renewable footprint," Murray said.

Obviously, [it's] a fantastic honour for the company and the project, something that we weren't expecting at all. Andrew Murray, Aslan Renewables

"When we start to repeat that project across the entire nation, it scales incredibly well.

"We want that same approach to be applied in other provinces, even other countries."

Easy to replicate

Murray said one of the biggest challenges was creating a turbine unit that would be easy to both produce and use.

"We wanted to make sure that it was something that fit our local ecology, that was not disruptive to fish populations," he said."But also we wanted to make sure that the configuration could be easily repeated."

A silver propeller inside a white tube
Murray says the units cost between $55,000 and $75,000 and take about two weeks to install. (Aaron Adetuyi/CBC)

Murray said Aslan Renewables is hoping to take the concept global, as a way to provide an easy, low cost way to generate power for small communities.

"The light scale of each one of these installationsallows for us to think about shipping them overseas, especially into the communities where they're going to have the most impact," he said.

"When we're generating energy for 15 to 20 homes here in Canada, it may not seem like a lot. But if we apply that same model to rural communities or developing nations, places like Southeast Asia or the Bahamas, the impact there could be tremendous."

A small dam with flowing water
Mooney's Pond in Mount Stewart is one of the locations for the Aslan Renewables pilot project. (Shane Hennessey/CBC)

Murray said each of the sites will have four to six turbines. The units are not submerged, making them easy to work with.

Stable supply

Murray has been talking to UPEI's Faculty of Sustainable Design Engineering about projects using the Aslan technology.

Assistant professor Kuljeet Grewal said the cost of the new dam technology is currently more per kilowatt hour than wind or solar. That's based on the installation cost of $65,000 to $70,000 per dam, to generate 120 MWh of energy annually per site.

But he saidthe average life span of solar and wind turbines are 20 to 25 years, compared to 45 years for hydroelectric projects, so the average cost per unit of producing electricity becomes more comparable over time.

A man in a turban stands in a lab
Murray has been talking to assistant professor Kuljeet Grewal and others at UPEI's Faculty of Sustainable Design Engineering about projects using the Aslan technology. (Aaron Adetuyi/CBC)

"It seems promising," Grewal said."But the biggest advantage is it's a stable form of electricity in comparison with wind and solar. Because of weather variability, wind and solar are highly unpredictable sources of energy, but this technology is a more stable form of electricity that is much easier to handle at grid."

I was talking to Andrew last year and he mentioned his vision of having something similar to IKEA furniture, so that they can send out those turbines and people can install those turbines. Kuljeet Grewal, UPEI Faculty of Sustainable Design Engineering

Grewal said the small size of the units is also important.

"I was talking to Andrew last year and he mentioned his vision of having something similar to IKEA furniture so that they can send out those turbines and people can install those turbines," he said.

That is a very importantconsideration for remote communities especially, said Grewal.

"If you consider Northern Canada, where people are relying on diesel for their power requirements, this sort of project can be really beneficial."

Murray said they are starting with rivers first, as a smaller pilot project, but the company does planto use the same approach forinshore tidal projects down the road.