Editor:
Winter has decided to arrive early this year, and the early snow bodes well for skiers and snowboarders and other winter enthusiasts. The Canadian Avalanche Center even issued its earliest ever special avalanche warning due to the amount of snow already accumulated on B.C. mountains. They say it鈥檚 more typical of what B.C. usually sees in late December and January.
But the best part is yet to come, because once we鈥檝e had our fill of skiing, snowboarding and cold weather, the accumulated snow on our mountains can be used to generate clean electricity as it melts away. Snow is the ultimate storage medium for green energy. It鈥檚 mother nature鈥檚 battery, and as it melts it flows into the reservoirs behind the province鈥檚 hydroelectric dams and through smaller run-of-river projects that light up our homes and businesses.
Having more snow means we鈥檒l also have more electricity. And having more electricity means the province can wheel and deal with other jurisdictions that need energy but don鈥檛 have the hydroelectric capability and natural energy storage advantages B.C. has. Energy trading is very lucrative for B.C. and perhaps we should be measuring snowfall and rainfall in kilowatt/hours instead of inches.
Charles Davis
White Rock