Wind Farm Co-Ops Get Funding

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: January 13, 2011

Two Manitoba communities have received $62,000 in federal grants to examine the feasibility of building locally owned wind farms.

The Saint-Claude and De Salaberry Wind Energy co-operatives will use the money to see if a Quebec co-operative model for such a project could work in Manitoba.

It’s the first step toward possibly constructing two wind farms owned by local residents, not outside companies, organizers say.

The money from the Co-operative Development Initiative will help the Saint- Claude and De Salaberry co-ops adapt a model by the Val-Eo cooperative in St.-Bruno, Quebec to Manitoba conditions.

Read Also

a worker pushes a cart loaded with crates in a community food bank warehouse

Upgrades on menu for food bank operator Harvest Manitoba

Upgrades to food bank operator Harvest Manitoba’s warehouse operations, receiving cash from Farm Credit Canada, are expected to help speed up delivery and reduce waste across the province’s agri-food supply chain.

The goal is to help local farmers and their communities control management of their wind energy, said Roger Robert, a member of the De Salaberry co-op.

That way, profits from wind energy projects would remain at home instead of going outside the community, he said.

The De Salaberry co-op currently has 45 members, all local farmers who have each invested $1,000, said Robert, a MAFRI farm production adviser in St. Pierre- Jolys.

The co-op could eventually provide share offerings to non-farmers, making it truly community owned, he said.

explore

Stories from our other publications