What is The Grid Factor?

The Electricity Grid Displacement Factor (EGDF) or the grid factor measures how much carbon dioxide emissions are being produced by the electricity grid.

It’s like a score – higher means there is more electricity produced by fossil-fuels flowing through the grid than electricity produced by zero-emission power plants. We multiply this score by the amount of electricity your solar PV system produces in order to calculate the emissions reductions and turn them into carbon offsets. The Alberta Emission Offset System (AEOS) uses fixed scores that are updated every year.

So, if the EGDF is high, your solar electricity production reduces a high amount of carbon dioxide emissions and will result in more carbon offsets.

If it is lower, your solar electricity production reduces less emissions and will result in fewer carbon offsets.

However, if you sign up with Re(source), your solar PV system will use the grid factor during the year it becomes a part of Re(source) for its entire term. So, signing up sooner will result in significantly higher carbon offset payments.

The table below shows the published EGDF for the Alberta electric grid from 2024 to 2029.

Vintage
Electricity Grid Displacement Factor with line loss applied (tCO2e/MWh)

2024
0.5226

2025
0.4907

2026
0.4588

2027
0.4271

2028
0.3952

2029
0.3633

Related

Blog

What is a Carbon Credit?

The terms carbon credit, emission offset, carbon offset, and offset credit can be used interchangeably, though they can mean slightly different things. The definition Re(source) Energy uses is based on the Alberta Emission Offset System. An offset refers to a reduction in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions that is used to compensate for emissions that occur elsewhere. An offset

Read More »
News

Alberta Innovates Funding

Re(source) Energy is proud to announce we have received $50,000 in grant funding from Alberta Innovates through the Digital Traction Program. 

Read More »

Find out how much you can earn from your solar grid system by selling your carbon offsets to Re(source)