Nihtat Energy Ltd. is installing 3,456 solar panels in Inuvik, N.W.T.

Northern Affairs Minister Dan Vandal, third from left, visited Inuvik, N.W.T., Monday to see progress on the Nihtat Energy solar project. From left is Cameron Ouellette, senior project manager of Solvest, a solar panel installation company, and Grant Sullivan, president of Nihtat Energy Inc. On right is Diane Archie, the N.W.T.’s minister for Infrastructure and minister responsible for the Northwest Territories Power Corp. (Karli Zschogner/CBC)

A new renewable energy project is moving forward in Inuvik, N.W.T.

Northern Indigenous-owned and operated company Nihtat Energy Ltd. is developing a 1-megawatt solar farm in the community, according to a news release Tuesday.

“This project is about energy security and diversifying the energy in Inuvik,” said Grant Sullivan, president of Nihtat Energy. “This is just adding a bunch of energy security to the community.”

It’s expected the project will reduce 380,000 metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions per year, the release says, which may help improve the local air quality and save the community $1 million in diesel costs per year.

The project is also set to create six construction jobs and four part-time operation jobs for members of the local Gwich’in community. The project is also said to facilitate training and capacity-building opportunities for local Indigenous-owned businesses.

Cameron Ouellette, senior project manager of Solvest, a solar panel installation company, and Grant Sullivan, president of Nihtat Energy Inc. (Karli Zschogner/CBC)

The new solar farm, which will be made up of about 3,456 panels, is being built on a brownfield site in Inuvik — meaning the area was formerly an industrial site, and was sitting unused. Sullivan said the solar project has been in the works for close to three years.

The company began buying panels and all the equipment in September 2021, Sullivan said, and construction started earlier this summer.

Construction is anticipated to be completed by the end of this year, and Sullivan said they are eyeing spring of 2023 to begin supplying power to Inuvik’s grid.

According to the news release, Inuvik consumes the most diesel for heat and power in the Northwest Territories.

The solar project builds on other solar initiatives in Inuvik developed by Nihtat Energy Ltd., including those providing power to Northmart, the Solar Residential Program, the Mackenzie Hotel and the Inuvik Satellite Station Facility.

In a news announcement Monday, Dan Vandal, minister of northern affairs, along with Jonathan Wilkinson, minister of natural resources, announced an investment of $5.586 million from Canada’s new Clean Energy for Indigenous and Remote Communities Hub in the project.

That includes, the release said, $1 million from Northern Responsible Energy Approach for Community Heat and Electricity Program (Northern REACHE), and $4.189 million from Natural Resources Canada’s Clean Energy for Rural and Remote Communities Program, as well as $397,000 from Natural Resource Canada’s Indigenous Off-Diesel Initiative.

Related stories from around the North:

Canada: “Our climate is changing before our eyes,” says WMO upon release of new report, Eye on the Arctic

Finland: The world could transition entirely to cheap, safe renewable energy before 2050: Finnish study, Yle News

Greenland: Melting of Greenland glacier generating its own heat and accelerating thaw from base, says study, Eye on the Arctic

Norway: Will the green transition be the new economic motor in the Arctic?, Eye on the Arctic

Russia: Russian renewable energy soon without foreign partners, The Independent Barents Observer

Sweden: Decision-makers must close 50-year ‘action gap’ on climate, says report, Eye on the Arctic

United StatesBiden closes half of NPR-A acreage in Arctic Alaska to oil drilling, Alaska Public Media

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