Energy & Science

The Key to New York’s Green Dreams May Be Turning Quebec Into a Mega-Battery

Power grids on both sides of the border could slash emissions by sending electricity back and forth, MIT researchers say.

The spillway for Hydro-Quebec’s Romaine 3 hydroelectric dam in the Côte-Nord Administrative Region of Canada.

Photographer: Lars Hagberg/AFP via Getty Images
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Dotted within the sparsely populated forests and tundra of northern Quebec is an existing technology that could hold the key to slashing greenhouse-gas emissions created by powering the dense cities and suburbs between Boston and New York, at the lowest possible price. All that’s needed is a handful of new transmission lines, according to researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the existing network of hydroelectric dams from the Hudson Bay to the St. Lawrence River could serve as a giant battery for the U.S. Northeast.

Quebec’s dams ship some power south across the Canadian border, supplying 15% of New England’s electricity right now. But the key to driving down emissions from both power grids lies in sending more electricity back and forth. Solar and wind facilities being built in the U.S. would help power Quebec on sunny or windy days, giving hydroelectric reservoirs time to recharge. Then, when the sun falls or the wind calms, the Canadian dams would take over.