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Water sourced from the great depths of Lake Ontario is used to cool over 100 buildings in Toronto.
Deep below scenic Lake Ontario’s surface is Toronto’s most valuable source of renewable energy — cold, cold water. Since water is densest at 39°F (4°C) and sinks to the bottom, it can become a stable chilled water source for deep lake water cooling (DLWC). A very successful DLWC system now provides refreshing and soothing air temperatures to many of Toronto’s hospitals, data centers, educational campuses, government buildings, and commercial and residential buildings.
The idea behind the technology isn’t that complex: rather than focusing on energy-intensive compressors and chillers to dissipate heat from buildings, DLWC uses water from nearby Lake Ontario to whisk away the warmth. It’s a system that is sustainable, low-carbon, and energy-sharing.
Connecting to the network can reduce water consumption and operating costs, provide more predictable energy costs, and improve building resilience. The environmental benefits also run deep; the system currently displaces 55 MW of energy a year from Toronto’s electricity grid.
The deep lake water cooling result is less energy consumption than other sources and significant reductions in water consumption. The system is so successful that it saves the city 90,000 mega-watt hours of electricity use annually, which can be equated to the energy needed to power a town of 25,000. It’s expected that 30% of the city’s floor space will be connected to low-carbon heating and cooling by the year 2050.
Completed in 2004, the original DLWC system provided energy to a limited amount of customers in the city. The system became so popular, however, that Toronto’s DLWC system has nearly reached capacity, cooling over 100 downtown buildings such as City Hall, the Scotiabank Arena, Toronto General Hospital, various hotels, and a brewery.
Enwave owns and operates Toronto’s DLWC systems and shares infrastructure with the City of Toronto’s water utility. The City and Enwave operate under an existing Energy Transfer Agreement (ETA) that facilitates the transfer of cooling energy from the City’s drinking water infrastructure into Enwave’s District Energy Supply through heat exchangers.
The partnership is an essential element of TransformTO, which outlines a pathway to achieve net zero emissions in Toronto. The pathway includes a set of long-term, low-carbon goals and strategies to reduce local greenhouse gas emissions and improve the city’s health, grow its economy, and improve social equity. On October 2, 2019, the City Council voted unanimously to declare a climate emergency and accelerate efforts to mitigate and adapt to climate change, adopting a stronger emissions reduction target of net zero by 2050 or sooner. GHG emissions in Toronto were 38% lower in 2019 than in 1990.
The deep water lake cooling system features prominently in the TransformTO plan, as it already saves 90,000 mega-watt hours of electricity use annually — roughly enough to power a town of 25,000. Energy savings are about 90%, and, as the required cold water is available year-round, the need for supplementary chilling is eliminated.
It is so popular that the city has nearly reached capacity and recently committed to an expansion that may run to $100 million. “It’s a big investment,” Carlyle Coutinho, president of Enwave, told the Washington Post, adding that “it would be challenging to keep growing commercially without increasing the baseload.”
Traditional commercial water-cooling systems often involve towers that evaporate water as a means of expelling heat. DLWC avoids that evaporation, and Enwave estimates that the Toronto system saves roughly 220 million gallons of water annually — equivalent to 350 Olympic-sized swimming pools.
How does the DLWC system bring so much energy savings to Toronto?
There are certain parameters that need to be in place for the DLWC system to be a good fit.
Location: Shallow, sloped ocean shelves don’t work, as they system can’t be positioned efficiently.
Demand: While appealing to many communities, the DLWC system must have enough applications to justify a system.
Upfront investment: It costs a lot. Cornell University’s lake water cooling system cost $58.5 million. However, it provides the university with a method of cooling that eliminates refrigeration equipment and its associated energy use, impacts on the environment from energy use, and any future problems with the new generation of refrigerants that have been designed to replace CFC’s. The City of Toronto invested $170 million in its project.
Other ways of harnessing deep water are in the study stage; one is called salt water air conditioning. Salt water air conditioning (SWAC) utilizes ocean instead of lake water as coolant. The technology comes in two parts. First, the salt needs to be dissolved in water, then it has to be regenerated so it can be reused over and over again. There are also issues with this approach, as it often utilizes ammonium nitrate, which is categorized as a hazardous substance.
Image retrieved from NOAA/open source
Carolyn Fortuna (they, them), Ph.D., is a writer, researcher, and educator with a lifelong dedication to ecojustice. Carolyn has won awards from the Anti-Defamation League, The International Literacy Association, and The Leavy Foundation. Carolyn is a small-time investor in Tesla. Please follow Carolyn on Twitter and Facebook.
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