Source Feed: City of Ottawa News Releases
Author: City of Ottawa - Media Relations / Ville d'Ottawa - Relations avec les médias
Publication Date: May 7, 2025 - 15:55
Innovative sewage energy project underway at LeBreton Flats
May 7, 2025
A new era of sustainable energy is dawning in Ottawa with the formation of the LeBreton Community Utility Partnership, a joint venture between Envari Holding Inc. (a subsidiary of Hydro Ottawa Holding Inc.) and Theia Partners. Together with the City of Ottawa, the partners have formalized a landmark agreement to implement an advanced Sewage Energy Exchange System (SEES) at the LeBreton Flats redevelopment.
This groundbreaking energy project will harness the untapped thermal potential of wastewater to provide sustainable and efficient building heating and cooling to Odenak, a development in a partnership between Dream Unlimited Corp, Dream Impact Trust and Multifaith Housing Initiative. Located at 665 Albert Street, Odenak will be the first customer for LeBreton Community Utility's SEES.
Odenak is a 608-unit, two-tower project adjacent to the Pimisi light rail transit (LRT) station. It features a mix of market-rate and affordable residential units as well as retail spaces. In a first for Ottawa, it will be sustainably powered by the SEES, which leverages advanced Canadian technology from SHARC Energy Systems. The SEES utilizes highly efficient heat pumps and operates entirely without fossil fuel, marking a significant step towards a cleaner energy future for the city.
Construction to connect to the City’s sewer infrastructure is slated to begin later this year, following a collaborative design phase between the City of Ottawa and the LeBreton Community Utility partners.
The LeBreton Community Utility Partnership is also engaged in discussions with the National Capital Commission (NCC) to explore the potential for the SEES network to serve additional land parcels at the LeBreton Flats redevelopment and take advantage of economies of scale. This forward-thinking approach positions the site as a model for sustainable community energy infrastructure in Canada.
Quick facts:
- This project advances Hydro Ottawa Holding Inc.’s goal of enabling sustainable energy solutions and of its strategic pillar of being the partner of first choice for signature green energy and carbon reduction projects in the community.
- This project advances the City of Ottawa’s goal of reducing community greenhouse gas emissions by 96 per cent by 2040, as outlined in its Climate Change Master Plan and Energy Evolution.
- The project will use a Sewage Energy Exchange System (SEES) to transfer thermal energy to/from wastewater for heating and cooling buildings at LeBreton Flats, the first of its kind in Ottawa.
- The type of SEES proposed for the pilot connection will divert sewage from the City’s collection system into an external well, then filter it to remove large solids and pump it through a heat exchanger to draw energy for either heating or cooling. After, the pumped sewage will be discharged back into the municipal sewer.
- Once completed, the SEES will provide more than 9 MW of heating and cooling capacity for approximately 2.4 million sq ft of development.
- By utilizing this system, the LeBreton Community Utility estimates a reduction of approximately 5,066 tonnes of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions annually compared to traditional buildings relying on boilers and chillers. To visualize 5,066 tonnes, it is the equivalent of the electricity used by 3,387 homes for a full year (as calculated by the Natural Resources Canada’s Greenhouse Gas Equivalencies Calculator).
- The system will use patented and Canadian-built SHARC Energy technology for efficient heat exchange.
- There are SEES projects operating in Europe, the United States, Toronto and Vancouver, with other Canadian ones planned. There is growing interest in this technology. City of Ottawa staff are part of a working group with other municipalities to share and exchange ideas as they collectively start using these systems.
- Odenak is anticipated to welcome its first residents in 2027 and will utilize approximately one-third of the SEES system’s total capacity.
- 41% of Odenak’s residential units will be affordable housing and prioritize Algonquin and other Indigenous peoples, veterans, recent immigrants, women and children and adults with cognitive disabilities. 31% will also be accessible. The City of Ottawa contributed $15,000,000 to support the project’s affordable housing.
- This is the second partnership for Dream, Theia Partners and Hydro Ottawa. In 2022, they partnered with Kruger to create the Zibi Community Utility, which uses heat from Kruger’s effluents to heat and cool all of Zibi’s residential and commercial buildings in Ontario and Quebec.
- SEES may be suitable for connection with other large collector sewers elsewhere in the city.
- Mayor Mark Sutcliffe, City of Ottawa
- Bryce Conrad, President and CEO, Hydro Ottawa Holding Inc.
- Scott Demark, Partner at Theia Partners
- Michael Cooper, President and Chief Responsibility Officer, Dream
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