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Tuesday, November 5, 2024
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Tuesday, November 5, 2024 | Latest Paper

Tim Weis

Canada’s electrified future is a challenge, but one we can achieve

Opinion | BY SARA HASTINGS-SIMON, TIM WEIS | March 10, 2021
The significant existing hydro capacity that provides the majority of the country’s electricity today can also act as a battery to facilitate integration of low-cost, but variable, technologies like wind and solar, whose costs have fallen dramatically in the past decade, write Sara Hastings-Simon and Tim Weis. Pixabay photograph by Ed White
Opinion | BY SARA HASTINGS-SIMON, TIM WEIS | March 10, 2021
Opinion | BY SARA HASTINGS-SIMON, TIM WEIS | March 10, 2021
The significant existing hydro capacity that provides the majority of the country’s electricity today can also act as a battery to facilitate integration of low-cost, but variable, technologies like wind and solar, whose costs have fallen dramatically in the past decade, write Sara Hastings-Simon and Tim Weis. Pixabay photograph by Ed White
Opinion | BY SARA HASTINGS-SIMON, TIM WEIS | March 10, 2021
The significant existing hydro capacity that provides the majority of the country’s electricity today can also act as a battery to facilitate integration of low-cost, but variable, technologies like wind and solar, whose costs have fallen dramatically in the past decade, write Sara Hastings-Simon and Tim Weis. Pixabay photograph by Ed White
Opinion | BY SARA HASTINGS-SIMON, TIM WEIS | March 10, 2021
Opinion | BY SARA HASTINGS-SIMON, TIM WEIS | March 10, 2021
The significant existing hydro capacity that provides the majority of the country’s electricity today can also act as a battery to facilitate integration of low-cost, but variable, technologies like wind and solar, whose costs have fallen dramatically in the past decade, write Sara Hastings-Simon and Tim Weis. Pixabay photograph by Ed White