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DuPont Solar Technology Helps Power a Sustainable City

Solar Simulator Launched at Concordia University

December 15, 2011
Solar Simulator Launched at Concordia University

The only facility of its kind worldwide, the Solar Simulator-Environmental Chamber assists in developing cost-effective, net-zero energy buildings that produce as much energy as they use. 

MONTREAL, December 15, 2011  - Concordia University's new Solar Simulator - Environmental Chamber is a unique laboratory that will revolutionize solar energy applications and building standards.

This new facility will be officially opened on Friday, December 16, and will feature the inauguration of the NSERC Smart Net-Zero Energy Buildings Strategic Network, a new national research initiative that will be headquartered at Concordia University.

"These projects represent a huge vote of confidence for our work on solar energy and building innovation," says Frederick Lowy, President and Vice-Chancellor of Concordia. "Our researchers have long been ahead of the pack in these closely related evolving fields and it is truly wonderful to receive provincial and national recognition for their efforts."

The Solar Simulator-Environmental Chamber was built with $4.6 million in funding from Industry Canada and Quebec's Minister of Economic Development, Innovation and Export Trade, under the federal government's Knowledge Infrastructure Program.

The one-of-a-kind facility will strengthen Concordia's expertise and Canadian leadership in solar energy applications, while facilitating research to develop smart net-zero energy buildings that produce as much energy as they use.

The NSERC Smart Net-Zero Energy Buildings Strategic Network, headquartered in Concordia's Faculty of Engineering and Computer Science, is a national research initiative funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC). 

The network will receive $5 million in federal funding over five years and will establish research initiatives that will increase the use of net-zero energy buildings while developing the most effective methodsz for achieving zero average annual energy consumption at both the building and neighborhood levels.

The  new research network grew out of the expertise established by Concordia and its partners through the NSERC Solar Buildings Research Network, which received federal funding from 2006-2011 and resulted in several important innovations like the one-of-kind solar system, which is integrated into the recently built John Molson School of Business Building.

This installation, which acts as a Photovoltaic/Thermal energy generating system, will also be officially opened during the event.

 
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