Statistics Canada's Web Modernization Journey: Closed consultation
Current status: closed
Consultation period: May 20, 2025 to July 4, 2025
Results published: March 3, 2026, see Statistics Canada's Web Modernization Journey: What we heard
Statistics Canada's Web Modernization Journey: Closed consultation
Consultation period: May 20, 2025 to July 4, 2025
Results published: March 3, 2026, see Statistics Canada's Web Modernization Journey: What we heard
Consultation period: January 1, 2025 to December 31, 2027
Institution ID:
Name of Institution:
Name and title of principal contact:
Telephone:
Report completed by:
Date:
E-mail:
Telephone:
Fax:
Collected under the authority of the Statistics Act, Revised Statutes of Canada 1985, Chapter S19.
Completion of this questionnaire is a legal requirement under the Statistics Act.
Statistics Canada is prohibited by law from releasing any information it collects which could identify any person, business, or organization, unless consent has been given by the respondent or as permitted by the Statistics Act. Statistics Canada will use the information from this survey for statistical purposes.
This survey is designed to obtain information about tuition and living accommodation costs for full-time students at Canadian degree-granting institutions. The information will be published by Statistics Canada and used to calculate the Consumer Price Index. The information may also be used by Statistics Canada for other statistical and research purposes.
Statistics Canada advises you that there could be a risk of disclosure during the transmission of information by facsimile or e-mail. However, upon receipt, Statistics Canada will provide the guaranteed level of protection afforded all information collected under the authority of the Statistics Act.
To enhance the data from this survey, Statistics Canada may combine it with information from other surveys or from administrative sources.
If you require assistance in the completion of this questionnaire or have any questions regarding the survey, send an email to: statcan.tlac-fss.statcan@statcan.gc.ca.
For more information about this survey, visit our website Information for survey participants (ISP).
Please refer to TLAC survey respondent guide for complete instructions.
Note: Whenever possible, final fees and living accommodation costs should be reported. If they have not yet been determined your best estimate should be reported. If it applies, please check the box showing that these are estimated fees for 2026/2027.
Select 1 option to report Undergraduate tuition fees.
Please report 2026/2027 tuition fees charged to full time students in undergraduate programs offered by your institution. If necessary, make revisions to last year's data included in the section,"2025/2026 Actual Tuition Fees".
| Undergraduate programs | 2026/2027 Actual Tuition Fees (or Estimated) | 2025/2026 Actual Tuition Fees | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canadian students | International students | Canadian students | International students | |||||
| Lower | Upper | Lower | Upper | Lower | Upper | Lower | Upper | |
| Education | ||||||||
| Visual and Performing Arts, and Communications Technologies | ||||||||
| Humanities | ||||||||
| Social and Behavioural Sciences, and Legal Studies | ||||||||
| Law | ||||||||
| Business, Management and Public Administration | ||||||||
| Physical and Life Sciences and Technologies | ||||||||
| Mathematics, Computer and Information Sciences | ||||||||
| Engineering | ||||||||
| Architecture | ||||||||
| Agriculture, Natural Resources and Conservation | ||||||||
| Dentistry | ||||||||
| Medicine | ||||||||
| Nursing | ||||||||
| Pharmacy | ||||||||
| Veterinary medicine | ||||||||
| Optometry | ||||||||
| Other Health, Parks, Recreation and Fitness | ||||||||
| Personal, Protective and Transportation Services | ||||||||
| Other | ||||||||
Comments:
Select 1 option to report Graduate tuition fees.
Please report 2026/2027 tuition fees charged to full time students in graduate programs offered by your institution. If necessary, make revisions to last year's data included in the section, "2025/2026 Actual Tuition Fees".
| Graduate programs | 2026/2027 Actual Tuition Fees (or Estimated) | 2025/2026 Actual Tuition Fees | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canadian students | International students | Canadian students | International students | |||||
| Lower | Upper | Lower | Upper | Lower | Upper | Lower | Upper | |
| Education | ||||||||
| Visual and Performing Arts, and Communications Technologies | ||||||||
| Humanities | ||||||||
| Social and Behavioural Sciences, and Legal Studies | ||||||||
| Law | ||||||||
| Executive MBA | ||||||||
| Regular MBA | ||||||||
| Business, Management and Public Administration | ||||||||
| Physical and Life Sciences and Technologies | ||||||||
| Mathematics, Computer and Information Sciences | ||||||||
| Engineering | ||||||||
| Architecture | ||||||||
| Agriculture, Natural Resources and Conservation | ||||||||
| Dentistry | ||||||||
| Nursing | ||||||||
| Pharmacy | ||||||||
| Veterinary medicine | ||||||||
| Optometry | ||||||||
| Other Health, Parks, Recreation and Fitness | ||||||||
| Personal, Protective and Transportation Services | ||||||||
| Other | ||||||||
Comments:
Do not include foreign student fees; make note in "Comments" section instead
Select 1 option to report Undergraduate additional compulsory fees.
Please report 2026/2027 additional compulsory fees charged to full time Canadian students in undergraduate programs offered by your institution. If necessary, make revisions to last year's data included in the section, "2025/2026 Actual Tuition Fees".
| Undergraduate programs | 2026/2027 Actual Additional Compulsory Fees (or Estimated) | 2025/2026 Actual Additional Compulsory Fees | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compulsory Fees | Compulsory Fees | |||||||||
| Athletics | Health Services | Student Association | Other please specifyTable 3 note 1 | Total | Athletics | Health Services | Student Association | Other please specifyTable 3 note 1 | Total | |
| Please report compulsory fees for all full-time Undergraduate students where these fees do not vary according to their field of study | ||||||||||
|
Please enter additional clarifications where necessary. Please also refer to Survey respondent guide.
|
||||||||||
Comments:
Do not include foreign student fees; make note in "Comments" section instead
Select 1 option to report Graduate additional compulsory fees.
Please report 2026/2027 additional compulsory fees charged to full-time Canadian students in graduate programs offered by your institution. If necessary, make revisions to last year's data included in the section, "2025/2026 Actual Tuition Fees".
| Graduate programs | 2026/2027 Actual Additional Compulsory Fees (or Estimated) | 2025/2026 Actual Additional Compulsory Fees | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compulsory Fees | Compulsory Fees | |||||||||
| Athletics | Health Services | Student Association | Other please specifyTable 4 note 1 | Total | Athletics | Health Services | Student Association | Other please specifyTable 4 note 1 | Total | |
| Please report compulsory fees for all full-time Graduate students where these fees do not vary according to their field of study | ||||||||||
|
Please enter additional clarifications where necessary. Please also refer to Survey respondent guide.
|
||||||||||
Comments
Select 1 option to report residence/housing costs for single students.
Please report 2026/2027 fees charged to single students.
If necessary, make revisions to last year's data included in the section, "2025/2026 Actual Tuition Fees".
| 2026/2027 Actual Accommodation Fees (or Estimated) | 2025/2026 Actual Accommodation Fees | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower | Upper | Lower | Upper | |
| Room only | ||||
| Meal plan only | ||||
| Room and meal plan package | ||||
Select 1 option to report residence/housing costs for married students.
Please report 2026/2027 fees charged to married students.
If necessary, make revisions to last year's data included in the section, "2025/2026 Actual Tuition Fees".
| 2026/2027 Actual Accommodation Fees (or Estimated) | 2025/2026 Actual Accommodation Fees | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower | Upper | Lower | Upper | |
| Room | ||||
Suggestions: (Please refer to the Respondent Guide)
| Data source | ||
|---|---|---|
| Response or edited | Imputed | |
| % | ||
| Sales of goods manufactured | 87.3 | 12.7 |
| Raw materials and components | 76.4 | 23.6 |
| Goods / work in process | 81.3 | 18.7 |
| Finished goods manufactured | 78.2 | 21.8 |
| Unfilled Orders | 87.5 | 12.5 |
| Capacity utilization rates | 68.0 | 32.0 |
1. As of February 17, 2026, please select whether there was regular ongoing child care services provided at this location for each of the following age groups:
Regular ongoing child care services include full-time, part-time, before and after school, overnight, and weekend services provided on a fixed or flexible schedule and drop-in child care.
If this organization is providing child care services at more than one address, please respond for this location only.
If this organization is a school, please report for the activities taking place at the child care service only.
Select all that apply.
Flow Condition: If "None of the above" is selected in Q1, exit survey. Otherwise go to Q2.
2. As of February 17, 2026, what type of child care services did this location provide?
3. In what year was your home child care service or this centre first established?
Year your home child care service or this centre was first established:
OR
Don’t know
Flow Condition: If "Centre-based" is selected in Q2, go to Q3. Otherwise go to Q5.
4. Is this centre licensed to provide child care services by either the provincial or territorial or local government?
Flow Condition: If "Home-based" was selected in Q2, go to Q5. Otherwise go to Q6.
5. To which of the following categories does this home child care service belong?
Flow Condition: If "Not licensed by the provincial or territorial or local government directly and not approved or registered by a child care agency, association, or coordinating office" was selected in Q5, go to Q6. Otherwise go to Q7.
6. For which of the following reasons is this home child care service unlicensed?
Select all that apply.
Flow condition: If "Centre-based" was selected in Q2, go to Q7. Otherwise go to Q10.
7. On February 17, 2026, was this centre operated directly by a government agency?
e.g., school board or district, municipality, regional district or public health authority
8. On February 17, 2026, was this centre operated by a First Nations, Métis or Inuit organization or association?
Flow condition: If “No” was selected in Q7 and Q8, go to Q9. Otherwise go to Q10.
9. On February 17, 2026, what was the status of this centre?
10. On February 17, 2026, what types of care options did your home child care service or this centre offer?
Select all that apply.
11. On February 17, 2026, what languages were regularly spoken while providing child care with children or parents in your home child care service or this centre?
Include only languages that services are provided in.
Select all that apply.
12. In January 2026, what were the usual days of operation of your home child care service or this centre?
Usual days of operation are the days during which your home child care service or this centre is open to provide care for children.
Select all that apply.
Display condition: Only days of the week that were selected in Q12 are shown in Q13.
13. In January 2026, what were the operating hours of your home child care service or this centre during its usual days of operation?
Operating hours are the hours during which your home child care service or this centre is open to provide care for children.
14. On February 17, 2026, what was the overall maximum capacity of your home child care service or this centre?
Maximum capacity refers to the maximum number of children to which child care services can be provided to at one time during your home child care service's or this centre's operating hours.
Report the maximum capacity or maximum number of children allowed at this child care location, considering the number of caregivers and the ages of the children enrolled. This would typically be indicated on the child care licence or permit for this child care location.
Maximum capacity in number of children:
15. On February 17, 2026, was your home child care service or this centre operating at its maximum capacity?
Refers to capacity occupied by children who were scheduled to attend on this day, even if they were absent.
16. Compared to February 18, 2025, has there been a change in the maximum capacity of your home child care service or this centre?
Maximum capacity refers to the maximum number of children to which child care services can be provided to at one time during your home child care service's or this centre's operating hours.
Flow condition: If "Centre-based" is selected in Q2, go to Q17. Otherwise, go to Q19.
17. On February 17, 2026, how many children were enrolled at this centre?
Include children 12 years and younger, including those enrolled full-time, part-time, before school only, after school only or both before and after school.
Full-time refers to children enrolled to attend this centre for 6 hours or more per day, at least 5 days per week. Part-time refers to children enrolled to attend this centre for either 6 hours or more per day and less than 5 days per week or for less than 6 hours per day, for any number of days per week.
Total number of children enrolled:
Total number of children enrolled may exceed the maximum capacity of this centre.
Display condition: Based on the province or territory the home or centre was located in, the age groups for that province or territory were displayed.
18. On February 17, 2026, how many children were enrolled at this centre on a full-time and part-time basis by age group?
Provide the number of children enrolled full-time and part-time separately by age group. Age groups provided are defined by provincial or territorial licensing age ranges or by child care agencies, associations or coordinating offices.
Count each child once according to the age group to which the child was assigned to meet provincial or territorial maximum group size regulations.
Full-time refers to children enrolled to attend this centre for 6 hours or more per day, at least 5 days per week. Part-time refers to children enrolled to attend this centre for either 6 hours or more per day and less than 5 days per week or for less than 6 hours per day, for any number of days per week.
Enter "0" if there is no value to report.
Newfoundland and Labrador:
Prince Edward Island:
Nova Scotia:
New Brunswick:
Quebec:
Ontario:
Manitoba:
Saskatchewan:
Alberta:
British Columbia:
Yukon:
Northwest Territories:
Nunavut:
Flow condition: If "Home-based" is selected in Q2, go to Q19. Otherwise, go to Q20.
19. On February 17, 2026, how many children were enrolled at this home child care service by age group?
If applicable, include your own children or children living in your household who count toward the maximum number of children allowed at this child care service.
Children attending school includes children regardless of age, in full or part-day schooling external to the child care service, enrolled to attend this home service either 6 hours or more per day and less than 5 days per week or for less than 6 hours per day, for any number of days per week.
Enter "0" if there is no value to report. Total number of children enrolled may exceed the maximum capacity of this home child care service.
Flow condition: If "Centre-based" is selected in Q2, and did not report any infant enrollment in Q18, go to Q20. Otherwise, go to Q21.
20. Does this centre accept infants for enrollment?
21. On February 17, 2026, did your home child care service or this centre have a list of children waiting to be enrolled?
Flow condition: If “Centre-based” is selected in Q2, go to Q22. Otherwise, go to Q23.
Display condition: Based on the province or territory the centre was located in, the age groups for which the centre reported enrollment were displayed.
22. On February 17, 2026, how many rooms and employees were allocated to children enrolled at this centre by age group?
Rooms with mixed age groups should be assigned to the age group that contains most of the children in that room. For example, if a room contains 4 toddlers and 6 pre-school aged children, allocate the room to the pre-school aged group. For rooms that contain an equal number of children in more than one age group, assign the rooms to the youngest age group. For example, if a room contain 4 toddlers and 4 pre-school aged children, allocate the room to the toddler age group.
Newfoundland and Labrador:
Prince Edward Island:
Nova Scotia:
New Brunswick:
Quebec:
Ontario:
Manitoba:
Saskatchewan:
Alberta:
British Columbia:
Yukon:
Northwest Territories:
Nunavut:
Flow condition: If “Centre-based” is selected in Q2, go to next condition. Otherwise, go to Q24.
If infant age groups were not reported in Q18 and school age groups were reported in Q18, go to Q24.
Display condition: Based on the province or territory the centre was located in, the age groups for which the centre reported enrollment were displayed.
23. On February 17, 2026, what were the full-time fees collected from parents per child by age group?
Age groups provided are those defined in provincial or territorial child care regulations.
Full-time refers to children enrolled to attend this centre for 6 hours or more per day, at least 5 days per week.
Newfoundland and Labrador:
Prince Edward Island:
Nova Scotia:
New Brunswick:
Quebec:
Ontario:
Manitoba:
Saskatchewan:
Alberta:
British Columbia:
Yukon:
Northwest Territories:
Nunavut:
Flow condition: If "Home-based" is selected in Q2 and "Children aged 5 and younger not attending school" is reported in Q19, or "Children aged 5 and younger not attending school" and "Children attending school" are 0 in Q19, or "Children aged 5 and younger not attending school" and "Children attending school" are nonresponse in Q19, or "Children aged 5 and younger not attending school" is nonresponse and "Children attending school" is 0 in Q19, go to Q24. Otherwise, go to Q25.
24. On February 17, 2026, what was the full-time fee collected from parents for children aged 5 and younger that were not attending school?
Full-time refers to children enrolled to attend this home child care for 6 hours or more per day, at least 5 days per week.
If there are multiple fees, indicate the most frequently charged.
Flow condition: If “Centre-based” is selected in Q2, go to next condition. Otherwise, go to Q26. If infant age groups were not reported in Q18 and school age groups were reported in Q18, go to Q26.
Display condition: Based on the province or territory the centre was located in, the age groups for which the centre reported enrollment were displayed
25. On February 17, 2026, what were the fees collected from parents per child by age group?
Age groups are those defined by provincial or territorial child care regulations.
Newfoundland and Labrador:
Prince Edward Island:
Nova Scotia:
New Brunswick:
Quebec:
Ontario:
Manitoba:
Saskatchewan:
Alberta:
British Columbia:
Yukon:
Northwest Territories:
Nunavut:
Flow condition: If "Home-based" is selected in Q2 and "Children attending school" is reported in Q19, or "Children aged 5 and younger not attending school" and "Children attending school" are 0 in Q19, or "Children aged 5 and younger not attending school" and "Children attending school" are nonresponse in Q19 or, "Children aged 5 and younger not attending school" is 0 and "Children attending school" is nonresponse in Q19, go to Q26. Otherwise, go to Q27.
26. On February 17, 2026, what was the fee collected from parents for school-aged children at your home child care service?
If there are multiple fees, indicate the most frequently charged.
27. On February 17, 2026, did your home child care service or this centre charge parents for other goods or services in addition to those covered by the set daily fee?
Include transportation, late pick up, supplies, food, diapers, activity fee and field trips.
Flow condition: If province is Quebec, go to Q29. Otherwise go to next condition.
If “Home-based” is selected in Q2 and “Approved or registered by a child care agency, association or coordinating office” or “Not licensed by the provincial or territorial or local government directly and not approved or registered by a child care agency, association, or coordinating office” is select in Q5, go to Q28. Otherwise go to next condition.
If “Centre-based” is select in Q2, go to Q28. Otherwise go to Q29.
28. Did any of the children enrolled at you home child care service or this centre on February 17, 2026 receive a subsidy to cover all or part of the usual parent fee?
Include costs that parents received full or partial direct coverage for.
Exclude the Canada Child Benefit, the Child Care Expense Deduction, and other child care tax credits.
Flow condition: If "Centre-based" is selected in Q2, go to Q29. Otherwise go to Q30.
29. On the last pay period of January 2026 how many paid employees did this centre have in the following categories?
Include paid employees at this location who work on-site, as well as casual workers, supply staff, on call employees, paid students and employees that work full-time or part-time. Exclude volunteers and any unpaid employees or students.
Supervisory staff includes directors, managers, or supervisors regardless of whether they provided direct care to children or not.
Full-time employees include employees that work 30 hours or more per week.
Part-time employees include employees that work less than 30 hours per week.
Flow condition: If "Home-based" is selected in Q2, go to Q30. Otherwise go to Q31.
30. On February 17, 2026, did this home child care service have any paid employees providing direct care to children other than the owner or operator?
Include full-time, part-time, casual, on-call and supply staff providing direct care to children.
Exclude volunteers, unpaid students, workers on leave and any paid employees that did not directly provide care to children such as cooks, cleaners or accountants.
Flow condition: If "Centre-based" is selected in Q2, go to Q31. Otherwise go to Q32.
31. Provide the number of employees this centre had based on their highest level of formal Early Childhood Education (ECE)-related training as of February 17, 2026.
Exclude volunteers, unpaid students, workers on leave and any support staff e.g., cooks, cleaners, accountants.
Supervisory staff includes directors, managers, or supervisors regardless of whether they provided direct care to children or not. Include both full-time and part-time supervisory staff under supervisory staff only.
Flow condition: If "Home-based" is selected in Q2, go to Q32. Otherwise go to Q33.
32. As of February 17, 2026, what was the highest level of formal Early Childhood Education (ECE)-related training of the owner or operator of this home child care service?
Include highest level of formal ECE-related training as of February 17, 2026.
Flow condition: If "Home-based" is selected in Q2 and "Yes" or "nonresponse" in Q30, go to Q33. Otherwise go to Q34.
33. Provide the number of paid employees this home child care service had with formal Early Childhood Education (ECE)-related training as of February 17, 2026.
Exclude volunteers, unpaid students, workers on leave and any paid employees that did not directly provide care to children such as cooks, cleaners or accountants.
Number of paid employees with formal ECE-related training:
Flow condition: If “Centre-based” is selected in Q2, go to Q34. Otherwise go to Q36.
34. On February 17, 2026, did this centre have permission from licensing authorities to operate, for a specified period, with fewer Early Childhood Education (ECE)-qualified staff than required?
Include ECE-qualified staff and staff with equivalent training.
35. Over the last year, did any paid employees providing direct care to children increase their Early Childhood Education (ECE) levels while employed at this centre?
An increase in ECE levels refers to a new certificate or diploma.
Exclude volunteers, unpaid students, workers on leave and any support staff such as cooks, cleaners and accountants.
36. Over the last year, did any employees at this centre or did you or your employees or did you participate in any of the following child care-related professional development training, conferences, workshops or courses?
Include both in-house and external non-mandatory staff development training, conferences, workshops and courses.
Select all that apply.
Flow condition: If "Centre-based" is selected in Q2, go to Q37. Otherwise go to Q38.
37. On the last pay period of January 2026, what was the minimum, maximum and most frequently paid hourly rate of employees at this centre?
Include all top-ups or wage enhancements on top of the hourly rate.
Exclude volunteers, unpaid students, workers on leave and any support staff e.g. , cooks, cleaners, accountants.
Flow condition; If "Yes" is selected in Q30, go to Q38. Otherwise go to Q39.
38. On the last pay period of January 2026, what was the most frequently paid hourly rate of employees at this home child care service?
Exclude volunteers, unpaid students, workers on leave and any support staff such as cooks, cleaners and accountants.
Flow condition: If “Centre-based” is selected in Q2, go to Q39. Otherwise go to next condition.
If “Home-based” is selected in Q2 and “yes” is selected in Q30, go to Q39. Otherwise go to Q41.
39. On the last pay period of January 2026, which of the following health or pay-related benefits were available to employees of your home child care service or this centre?
Select all that apply.
40. On the last pay period of January 2026, which of the following benefits were available to employees of your home child care service or this centre?
Select all that apply.
Flow condition: If "Centre-based" is selected in Q2, go to Q41. Otherwise go to Q46.
41. On the last pay period of January 2026, were employees of this centre that provide direct care to children unionized?
42. Report the number of employees hired by this centre from January 1 to December 31 2025.
A hire is any addition or returning child care employee to this centre’s payroll from January 1 to December 31 2025.
Include transfers from other locations.
Exclude:
43. Report the number of employee departures this centre had from January 1 to December 31 2025.
Exclude transfers within this location, employees on strike, employees of temporary help agencies, volunteers or co-op students and employees that departed and were rehired within the reference period.
Include voluntary departures under employees that quit.
Other departures include dismissals, permanent layoffs, temporary layoffs and transfers to other locations.
44. Report the total number of vacancies this centre had on February 17, 2026.
Include full-time, part-time, temporary, permanent and seasonal vacant positions.
A job is vacant if it meets all three conditions:
Exclude:
Flow condition: If "Centre-based" is selected in Q2, go to Q45. Otherwise go to Q46.
45. Which of the following difficulties has this centre faced when trying to fill vacant positions?
Select all that apply.
Flow condition: If "Home-based" is selected in Q2, go to Q46. Otherwise go to Q48.
46. Recognizing that there may be many reasons, what is the primary reason you have chosen to be a home child care provider?
47. Do you intend to continue providing child care services in this home three years from now?
48. On February 17, 2026, did this child care service have accommodations or supports in place to serve the needs of children with a long-term condition or disability?
An accommodation refers to any characteristic of the child care environment, curriculum, or equipment that was purposely designed, built, or altered to remove potential barriers and encourage or promote the full participation of children with a disability in daily activities, e.g., focus and sensory aids, learning aids, wheelchair ramps.
Support may refer to assisting children in compensating for intellectual, physical or behavioral challenges.
Include accommodations or supports in place regardless of whether or not children with a long-term condition or disability were enrolled at this child care service.
Flow condition: If "Centre-based" is selected in Q2, go to Q49. Otherwise go to Q51.
49. Which of the following best describes the type of building in which this centre is currently located?
50. Over the last year, has this centre expanded by increasing its physical space?
Flow condition: If “Home-based” is selected in Q2 and “Approved or registered by a child care agency, association or coordinating office” or “Not licensed by the provincial or territorial or local government directly and not approved or registered by a child care agency, association, or coordinating office” is selected in Q5, go to Q51. Otherwise go to next condition.
If “Centre-based” is selected in Q2, go to Q51. Otherwise go to Q53.
51. In January 2026, what percentage of your home child care service’s or this centre’s revenue came from each of the following sources?
Exclude capital funding and start-up funding.
Percent of revenue received from government in other forms includes grants, operating funding and wage enhancement funding.
Please provide best estimates.
52. In January 2026, what percentage of your home child care service’s or this centre’s operating budget was spent in the following categories?
Please provide best estimates.
Flow condition: If province is Quebec, go to Q54. Otherwise go to next condition.
If “Home-based” is selected in Q2 and “Approved or registered by a child care agency, association or coordinating office” or “Not licensed by the provincial or territorial or local government directly and not approved or registered by a child care agency, association, or coordinating office” is selected in Q5, go to Q53. Otherwise go to next condition.
If “Centre-based” is selected in Q2, go to Q53. Otherwise go to Q54.
53.
Newfoundland and Labrador:
Is this centre or licensed home part of the Operating Grant Program to reduce fees for parents?
Prince Edward Island:
Is this centre or licensed home an Early Years Centre (EYC), a probationary EYC or a Family Home Centre (FHC) that provides child care for $10-a-day?
Nova Scotia:
Does this centre or licensed home have an active funding agreement with the Government of Nova Scotia to receive funding for fee reductions for parents?
New Brunswick:
Is this centre or licensed home a designated Early Learning and Child Care centre or home?
Ontario:
Is this centre or licensed home part of the Canada-Wide Early Learning and Child Care system (CWELCC system)?
Manitoba:
Does this centre or licensed home receive an operating grant to reduce parent fees to $10-a-day?
Saskatchewan:
Has this centre or licensed home significantly reduced parent fees in recent years, particularly following the implementation of the Canada-Wide Early Learning and Child Care (CWELCC) agreement in 2021?
Alberta:
Does this centre or licensed home have an affordability grant agreement with the Government of Alberta?
British Columbia:
Is this centre or licensed home a $10-a-day centre, an Aboriginal Head Start centre, or a child care service that received funding from the Child Care Fee Reduction Initiative (CCFRI)?
Yukon:
Is this centre or licensed home part of the Government of Yukon’s universal child care model that ensures families can access affordable child care options?
Northwest Territories:
Does this centre or licensed home receive any government funding to reduce parental fees?
For centre-based programs, this would be through the Dedicated or Flexible funding. For family day homes, this would be through the Child Care Fee Reduction Subsidy.
Nunavut:
Has this centre or licensed home significantly reduced parent fees in recent years, particularly following the implementation of the Canada-Wide Early Learning and Child Care (CWELCC) agreement in 2021, for example with a Parent Fee Subsidy?
Flow condition: If province is Quebec and if “Home-based” is selected in Q2 and “Approved or registered by a child care agency, association or coordinating office” or “Not licensed by the provincial or territorial or local government directly and not approved or registered by a child care agency, association, or coordinating office” is selected in Q5, go to Q54. Otherwise go to next condition.
If province is Quebec and if “Centre-based” is selected in Q2, go to Q54. Otherwise go to Q55.
54. On February 17, 2026, did your home child care service or this centre offer child care services subsidized by the Québec Reduced Contribution Program?
Flow condition: If "Home-based" is selected in Q2, go to Q55. Otherwise go to end of survey.
The groups identified within the following questions are included in order to gain a better understanding of child care businesses owned by members of various communities across Canada.
55. What is the gender of the owner or operator of this home child care service?
Gender refers to current gender which may be different from sex assigned at birth and may be different from what is indicated on legal documents.
56. Is the owner or operator of this home child care service First Nations, Métis, or Inuk (Inuit)?
First Nations (North American Indian) includes Status and Non-Status Indians.
57. Is the owner or operator of this home child care service a landed immigrant to Canada in the last 10 years?
A landed immigrant (permanent resident) is a person who has been granted the right to live in Canada permanently by immigration authorities.
58. Is the owner or operator of this home child care service a person with a disability?
Include visible and non-visible disabilities.
| Month | Sales of goods manufactured | Raw materials and components inventories | Goods / work in process inventories | Finished goods manufactured inventories | Unfilled Orders |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | |||||
| December 2024 | 0.63 | 1.06 | 1.89 | 1.26 | 1.45 |
| January 2025 | 0.67 | 1.11 | 1.71 | 1.25 | 1.45 |
| February 2025 | 0.72 | 1.14 | 1.85 | 1.33 | 1.46 |
| March 2025 | 0.72 | 1.18 | 1.77 | 1.38 | 1.49 |
| April 2025 | 0.75 | 1.16 | 1.78 | 1.41 | 1.52 |
| May 2025 | 0.78 | 1.20 | 1.87 | 1.45 | 1.51 |
| June 2025 | 0.81 | 1.19 | 1.77 | 1.43 | 1.43 |
| July 2025 | 0.74 | 1.21 | 1.82 | 1.41 | 1.42 |
| August 2025 | 0.77 | 1.24 | 1.83 | 1.37 | 1.39 |
| September 2025 | 0.78 | 1.30 | 1.89 | 1.47 | 1.32 |
| October 2025 | 0.75 | 1.25 | 1.82 | 1.45 | 1.37 |
| November 2025 | 0.71 | 1.26 | 1.83 | 1.39 | 1.48 |
| December 2025 | 0.70 | 1.26 | 1.97 | 1.54 | 1.37 |
This survey collects the main financial and operational data from the Canadian Level I air carriers needed to measure the growth and the performance of the airline industry. The information is also used by Statistics Canada as input to the Canadian System of National Accounts.
Your information may also be used by Statistics Canada for other statistical and research purposes.
Your participation in this survey is required under the authority of the Statistics Act.
Authorization to collect this information
Data are collected under the authority of the Statistics Act, Revised Statutes of Canada, 1985, Chapter S-19.
Confidentiality
By law, Statistics Canada is prohibited from releasing any information it collects that could identify any person, business or organization, unless consent has been given by the respondent, or as permitted by the Statistics Act. Statistics Canada will use the information from this survey for statistical purposes only.
Record linkages
To enhance the data from this survey and to reduce the response burden, Statistics Canada may combine the acquired data with information from other surveys or from administrative sources.
Data-sharing agreements
To reduce the response burden, Statistics Canada has entered into data sharing agreements with provincial and territorial statistical agencies and other government organizations, which have agreed to keep the data confidential and use them only for statistical purposes. Statistics Canada will only share data from this survey with those organizations that have demonstrated a requirement to use the data.
Section 12 of the Statistics Act provides for the sharing of information with federal, provincial or territorial government organizations. For this survey, there are Section 12 agreements with Transport Canada and the Canadian Transportation Agency.
Under Section 12, you may refuse to share your information with the Canadian Transportation Agency by writing a letter of objection to the Chief Statistician, and mailing it to the following address:
Chief Statistician of Canada
Statistics Canada
Attention of Director, Enterprise Statistics Division
150 Tunney's Pasture Driveway
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0T6
You may also contact us by email at infostats or by fax at 1-514-496-4879.
Note that there is no right of refusal with respect to sharing of data with Transport Canada. Transport Canada has the legislative authority to collect this information on a mandatory basis pursuant to the Canada Transportation Act (CTA) and the Transportation Information Regulations. Transport Canada will use the information obtained in accordance with the provisions of its Act and Regulations.
1. Verify or provide the business or organization's legal and operating name, and correct information if needed.
Note: Legal name should only be modified to correct a spelling error or typo.
Legal name
The legal name is one recognized by law, thus it is the name liable for pursuit or for debts incurred by the business or organization. In the case of a corporation, it is the legal name as fixed by its charter or the statute by which the corporation was created.
Modifications to the legal name should only be done to correct a spelling error or typo.
To indicate a legal name of another legal entity you should instead indicate it in question 3 by selecting "Not currently operational" and then choosing the applicable reason and providing the legal name of this other entity along with any other requested information.
Operating name
The operating name is a name the business or organization is commonly known as if different from its legal name. The operating name is synonymous with trade name.
2. Verify or provide the contact information for the designated contact person for the business or organization, and correct information if needed.
Note: The designated contact person is the person who should receive this questionnaire. The designated contact person may not always be the one who actually completes the questionnaire.
3. Verify or provide the current operational status of the business or organization identified by the legal and operating name above.
4. Verify or provide the current main activity of the business or organization identified by the legal and operating name above.
Note: The described activity was assigned using the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS).
This question verifies the business or organization's current main activity as classified by the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). The NAICS is an industry classification system developed by the statistical agencies of Canada, Mexico and the United States. Created against the background of the North American Free Trade Agreement, it is designed to provide common definitions of the industrial structure of the three countries and a common statistical framework to facilitate the analysis of the three economies. NAICS is based on supply-side or production-oriented principles, to ensure that industrial data, classified to NAICS, are suitable for the analysis of production-related issues such as industrial performance.
The target entity for which NAICS is designed are businesses and other organizations engaged in the production of goods and services. They include farms, incorporated and unincorporated businesses and government business enterprises. They also include government institutions and agencies engaged in the production of marketed and non-marketed services, as well as organizations such as professional associations and unions and charitable or non-profit organizations and the employees of households.
The associated NAICS should reflect those activities conducted by the business or organizational units targeted by this questionnaire only, as identified in the "Answering this questionnaire" section and which can be identified by the specified legal and operating name. The main activity is the activity which most defines the targeted business or organization's main purpose or reason for existence. For a business or organization that is for-profit, it is normally the activity that generates the majority of the revenue for the entity.
The NAICS classification contains a limited number of activity classes; the associated classification might be applicable for this business or organization even if it is not exactly how you would describe this business or organization's main activity.
Please note that any modifications to the main activity through your response to this question might not necessarily be reflected prior to the transmitting of subsequent questionnaires and as a result they may not contain this updated information.
The following is the detailed description including any applicable examples or exclusions for the classification currently associated with this business or organization.
Description and examples
Provide a brief but precise description of this business or organization's main activity.
e.g., breakfast cereal manufacturing, shoe store, software development
5. You indicated that _ is not the current main activity. Was this business or organization's main activity ever classified as _ ?
When did the main activity change?
1. Please provide the details of this business's scheduled services by sector of operation during this reporting period.
Sector of operation
Refers to the regions where carriers provide transportation services. There are three breakdowns - domestic, transborder (Canada-US) and other international.
Domestic
Includes operations between points in Canada.
Transborder (Canada- US )
Includes operations between points in Canada and points in the United States (including Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico).
Other international
Includes all other operations (including between points outside of Canada).
Scheduled services
Transportation of passengers or goods, or both, by an aircraft provided by an air carrier that operates the air service and that, directly or indirectly, sells some or all of its seats or part or all of its cargo space to the public on a price per seat, price per unit of mass or price per volume of cargo basis.
Enplaned passengers
Refers to revenue passengers Footnote 1 who board aircraft and surrender one or more flight coupons or other documents good for transportation over the itinerary specified in these coupons or documents.
Passenger-kilometres
Represents the carriage of one revenue passenger on each flight stage multiplied by the number of kilometres flown on that stage. Passenger-kilometres are obtained by totalling the number of kilometres flown by all passengers.
Let's take an example with two flight stages, where:
Flight stage A to B
Number of passengers = 5
Distance between points (km) = 161
Passenger-kilometres = 805
Flight stage B to C
Number of passengers = 4
Distance between points (km) = 322
Passenger-kilometres = 1,288
The total number of passenger-kilometres for the flights covering A to B and B to C is 2,093.
Conversion factor
To convert nautical miles (6 080 feet) into kilometres (km), multiply by 1.852.
To convert statute miles (5 280 feet) into kilometres (km), multiply by 1.609344.
Available seat-kilometres
Represents the aircraft kilometres flown on each flight stage multiplied by the number of seats available for use on that stage. This represents the total passenger carrying capacity offered. Seats not actually available for the carriage of passengers should be excluded.
Enplaned goods
Refers to all types of non-passenger traffic. It includes priority freight, freight, mail and excess baggage for which revenue is obtained. Enplaned goods should be reported to the nearest kilogram.
Conversion factor
To convert pounds (lbs.) into kilograms (kg), multiply by 0.453592.
Goods tonne-kilometres
Represents the carriage of one tonne of goods on each flight stage multiplied by the number of kilometres flown on that stage. Goods tonne-kilometres are obtained by totalling the number of kilometres flown with all tonnes of goods.
Let's take an example with two flight stages, where:
Flight stage A to B
Tonnes of goods = 5
Distance between points (km) = 161
Goods tonne-kilometres = 805
Flight stage B to C
Tonnes of goods = 4
Distance between points (km) = 322
Goods tonne-kilometres = 1,288
The total number of goods tonne-kilometres for the flights covering A to B and B to C is 2,093.
Conversion factor
To convert nautical miles (6 080 feet) into kilometres (km), multiply by 1.852.
To convert statute miles (5 280 feet) into kilometres (km), multiply by 1.609344.
Available tonne-kilometres
Represents the aircraft kilometres flown on each flight stage multiplied by the usable weight capacity of the aircraft. This represents the load carrying capacity offered for passengers and/or goods.
| Domestic | Transborder (Canada- US ) |
Other international |
Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scheduled services | ||||
| a. Number of enplaned passengers | ||||
| b. Number of passenger-kilometres | ||||
| c. Number of available seat-kilometres | ||||
| d. Enplaned goods (kilograms) |
||||
| e. Goods tonne-kilometres (tonne-kilometres) |
||||
| f. Available tonne-kilometres (tonne-kilometres) |
2. Please provide the details of this business's charter services during this reporting period.
Charter services
Transportation of passengers or goods, or both, by aircraft pursuant to a contract under which a person, other than the air carrier that operates the air service, or its agent, reserves a block of seats or part of the cargo space of an aircraft for the person's use or for resale to the public.
Include air ambulance service and the movement of people and goods to logging or heli-logging sites.
Exclude firefighting and heli-logging activities and the movement of people and goods to a firefighting site. The former Transport Canada TP 8880 document “Starting a Commercial Air Service” outlining a list of activities which are specialty has been replaced with a new document TP 4711 “Air Operator Certification Manual” as of December 2020. PDF version of volumes of this manual can be requested at: Air Operator Certification Manual – TP 4711.
Enplaned passengers
Refers to revenue passengers Footnote 1 who board aircraft and surrender one or more flight coupons or other documents good for transportation over the itinerary specified in these coupons or documents.
Passenger-kilometres
Represents the carriage of one revenue passenger on each flight stage multiplied by the number of kilometres flown on that stage. Passenger-kilometres are obtained by totalling the number of kilometres flown by all passengers.
Let's take an example with two flight stages, where:
Flight stage A to B
Number of passengers = 5
Distance between points (km) = 161
Passenger-kilometres = 805
Flight stage B to C
Number of passengers = 4
Distance between points (km) = 322
Passenger-kilometres = 1,288
The total number of passenger-kilometres for the flights covering A to B and B to C is 2,093.
Conversion factor
To convert nautical miles (6 080 feet) into kilometres (km), multiply by 1.852.
To convert statute miles (5 280 feet) into kilometres (km), multiply by 1.609344.
Available seat-kilometres
Represents the aircraft kilometres flown on each flight stage multiplied by the number of seats available for use on that stage. This represents the total passenger carrying capacity offered. Seats not actually available for the carriage of passengers should be excluded.
| Total | |
|---|---|
| Charter services | |
| a. Number of enplaned passengers | |
| b. Number of passenger-kilometres | |
| c. Number of available seat-kilometres |
3. What were the hours flown and the fuel consumed by this business during this reporting period?
Hours flown
Represents the block hours, in other words, the number of hours which elapsed between the time the aircraft started to move to commence a flight and the time the aircraft came to its final stop after the conclusion of a flight. Report the total number of block hours flown to the nearest hour.
Turbo fuel consumed
Include fuel used in both turboprop and jet aircraft.
Provide the quantity of turbo fuel consumed. Turbo fuel includes the turbine fuel uplifted for all aircraft in the carrier's fleet. Fuel uplift can be determined based on delivery notes or invoices, aircraft onboard measurement systems or, if the fuel was supplied by a customer, estimated based on hours flown. Include fuel consumed for all scheduled and/or charter operations, regardless of where purchased. Report the quantity of turbo fuel consumed in litres.
Conversion factor
To convert gallons (imperial) into litres (l), multiply by 4.546092.
| Total | |
|---|---|
| All services - scheduled and charter services | |
| a. Number of hours flown | |
| b. Quantity of turbo fuel consumed (litres) Include fuel used in both turboprop and jet aircraft. |
4. What was the total operating revenue earned by this business during this reporting period?
Include revenue from air transportation services and all other sources.
Report this amount in thousands of Canadian dollars.
Total operating revenue
Include revenue from air transportation services (for example, transportation of passengers, transportation of goods and other flight-related revenue) and all other sources.
Total operating revenue
5. Any revisions to previous submissions can be added to this questionnaire. Please attach the files that provide the information required for this survey.
To attach files
Note:
6. Indicate any changes or events that affected the reported values for this business or organization compared with the last reporting period.
Select all that apply.
7. Statistics Canada may need to contact the person who completed this questionnaire for further information. Is the Provided Given Name, Provided Family Name the best person to contact?
Who is the best person to contact about this questionnaire?
8. How long did it take to complete this questionnaire?
Include the time spent gathering the necessary information.
9. Do you have any comments about this questionnaire?
Enter your comments
This survey is conducted by Statistics Canada in order to collect the necessary information to support the Integrated Business Statistics Program (IBSP). This program combines various survey and administrative data to develop comprehensive measures of the Canadian economy.
The statistical information from the IBSP serves many purposes, including:
Your information may also be used by Statistics Canada for other statistical and research purposes.
Your participation in this survey is required under the authority of the Statistics Act.
Data are collected under the authority of the Statistics Act, Revised Statutes of Canada, 1985, Chapter S-19.
By law, Statistics Canada is prohibited from releasing any information it collects that could identify any person, business, or organization, unless consent has been given by the respondent, or as permitted by the Statistics Act. Statistics Canada will use the information from this survey for statistical purposes only.
To enhance the data from this survey and to reduce the reporting burden, Statistics Canada may combine the acquired data with information from other surveys or from administrative sources.
To reduce respondent burden, Statistics Canada has entered into data-sharing agreements with provincial and territorial statistical agencies and other government organizations, which have agreed to keep the data confidential and use them only for statistical purposes. Statistics Canada will only share data from this survey with those organizations that have demonstrated a requirement to use the data.
Section 11 of the Statistics Act provides for the sharing of information with provincial and territorial statistical agencies that meet certain conditions. These agencies must have the legislative authority to collect the same information, on a mandatory basis, and the legislation must provide substantially the same provisions for confidentiality and penalties for disclosure of confidential information as the Statistics Act. Because these agencies have the legal authority to compel businesses to provide the same information, consent is not requested and businesses may not object to the sharing of the data.
For this survey, there are Section 11 agreements with the provincial and territorial statistical agencies of Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Québec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British Columbia and the Yukon. The shared data will be limited to information pertaining to business establishments located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.
Section 12 of the Statistics Act provides for the sharing of information with federal, provincial or territorial government organizations.
Under Section 12, you may refuse to share your information with any of these organizations by writing a letter of objection to the Chief Statistician, specifying the organizations with which you do not want Statistics Canada to share your data and mailing it to the following address:
Chief Statistician of Canada
Statistics Canada
Attention of Director, Enterprise Statistics Division
150 Tunney's Pasture Driveway
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0T6
You may also contact us by email at statcan.esdhelpdesk-dsebureaudedepannage.statcan@statcan.gc.ca or by fax at 613-951-6583
For this survey, there are Section 12 agreements with the statistical agencies of Prince Edward Island, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut, as well as with the provincial and territorial government ministries responsible for the energy sector, the Ministère des Finances du Québec, the Canada Energy Regulator, Natural Resources Canada and Environment and Climate Change Canada.
For agreements with provincial and territorial government organizations, the shared data will be limited to information pertaining to business establishments located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.
1. Verify or provide the business or organization's legal and operating name and correct information if needed.
Note: Legal name modifications should only be done to correct a spelling error or typo.
Note: Press the help button (?) for additional information.
Legal Name
The legal name is one recognized by law, thus it is the name liable for pursuit or for debts incurred by the business or organization. In the case of a corporation, it is the legal name as fixed by its charter or the statute by which the corporation was created.
Modifications to the legal name should only be done to correct a spelling error or typo.
To indicate a legal name of another legal entity you should instead indicate it in question 3 by selecting 'Not currently operational' and then choosing the applicable reason and providing the legal name of this other entity along with any other requested information.
Operating Name
The operating name is a name the business or organization is commonly known as if different from its legal name. The operating name is synonymous with trade name.
2.Verify or provide the contact information for the designated contact person for the business or organization and correct information if needed.
Note: The designated contact person is the person who should receive this questionnaire. The designated contact person may not always be the one who actually completes the questionnaire.
3. Verify or provide the current operational status of the business or organization identified by the legal and operating name above.
4. Verify or provide the current main activity of the business or organization identified by the legal and operating name above.
Note: The described activity was assigned using the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS).
Note: Press the help button (?) for additional information, including a detailed description of this activity with example activities and any applicable exclusions.
This question verifies the business or organization's current main activity as classified by the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). The NAICS is an industry classification system developed by the statistical agencies of Canada, Mexico and the United States. Created against the background of the North American Free Trade Agreement, it is designed to provide common definitions of the industrial structure of the three countries and a common statistical framework to facilitate the analysis of the three economies. NAICS is based on supply-side or production-oriented principles, to ensure that industrial data, classified to NAICS, are suitable for the analysis of production-related issues such as industrial performance.
The target entity for which NAICS is designed are businesses and other organizations engaged in the production of goods and services. They include farms, incorporated and unincorporated businesses and government business enterprises. They also include government institutions and agencies engaged in the production of marketed and non-marketed services, as well as organizations such as professional associations and unions and charitable or non-profit organizations and the employees of households.
The associated NAICS should reflect those activities conducted by the business or organizational units targeted by this questionnaire only, as identified in the 'Answering this questionnaire' section and which can be identified by the specified legal and operating name. The main activity is the activity which most defines the targeted business or organization's main purpose or reason for existence. For a business or organization that is for-profit, it is normally the activity that generates the majority of the revenue for the entity.
The NAICS classification contains a limited number of activity classes; the associated classification might be applicable for this business or organization even if it is not exactly how you would describe this business or organization's main activity.
Please note that any modifications to the main activity through your response to this question might not necessarily be reflected prior to the transmitting of subsequent questionnaires and as a result they may not contain this updated information.
The following is the detailed description including any applicable examples or exclusions for the classification currently associated with this business or organization.
Description and examples
5. You indicated that is not the current main activity.
Was this business or organization's main activity ever classified as: ?
6. Search and select the industry activity classification that best corresponds to this business or organization's main activity.
How to search:
Select this business or organization's activity sector (optional)
7. You have indicated that the current main activity of this business or organization is:
Main activity
Are there any other activities that contribute significantly (at least 10%) to this business or organization's revenue?
8. Approximately what percentage of this business or organization's revenue is generated by each of the following activities?
When precise figures are not available, provide your best estimates.
| Percentage of revenue | |
|---|---|
| Main activity | |
| Secondary activity | |
| All other activities | |
| Total percentage |
1. Indicate whether you will be answering the remaining questions or attaching files with the required information.
2. Please attach the files that will provide the information required for the Annual Survey of Electric Power Thermal Generating Station Fuel Consumption (EPTG).
To attach files
Note:
1. Does this business produce electricity, for own use and/or for sale?
2. Are the reported fuels consumed for the purpose of electricity generation only?
The purpose of this question is to ascertain whether the respondent is reporting fuels whose sole use was the generation of electricity or whether the fuels reported were used for other purposes (producing thermal energy for building heating, producing thermal energy for industrial drying purposes, etc.) in addition to the generation of electricity.
3. What is the percentage of the actual electrical generator efficiency?
Percentage
4. What percentage of the portion of steam is used to produce electricity?
Portion of steam used to produce electricity: In the process of generating electricity, utilities may use steam completely towards the production of electricity, however an industry may use the steam for other purposes in their manufacturing and generate electricity as a side product.
Enter '0' if steam was not used to produce electricity.
Do not report negative values.
Percentage
5. What is the percentage of the actual turbine efficiency?
Percentage
6. Does this business generate both heat and electricity simultaneously from the same energy source at this location?
Cogeneration: a highly efficient means of generating heat and electric power at the same time from the same energy source. Cogeneration can also make use of the excess thermal heat, usually in the form of relatively low-temperature steam exhausted from the power generation turbines towards another purpose.
Useful thermal energy produced: The amount of energy, in the form of heat, that is produced as a by-product of the generation of electricity and that is used for another application in a productive manner (e.g., the heating of industrial, commercial or residential space; steam used in an industrial process; etc.)
Heat energy is defined as a primary product generated for the purpose of this business' own use or for sale. It does not include heat by-products, such as waste heat.
7. What is the primary purpose of the cogeneration?
Primary purpose Electricity own use: Electricity which is used only for own use purposes.
Electricity external: Electricity which is sold / supplied to another company.
Heat energy for own use: Heat energy used towards own use purposes that do not contribute towards the generation of electricity (i.e., steam for drying paper or space heating).
Heat energy external: Heat Energy which is sold / supplied to another company.
8. How much heat was generated from the cogeneration process?
Heat energy (primary product) is defined as a product generated for the purpose of this business's own use or for sale. It does not include heat by-products, such as waste heat.
Quantity in Gigajoules (GJ)
9. How much of the generated heat was used for the business's own use?
Quantity in Gigajoules (GJ)
10. What is the primary purpose for generating electricity?
Primary purpose
Electricity own use: Electricity which is used only for own use purposes.
Electricity external: Electricity which is sold / supplied to another company.
Primary purpose
Sub-type for electricity generation
11. What sub-type method was used to generate electricity?
Sub-Types
Combined cycle: burns fuel in a gas turbine or engine to generate electricity. The exhaust from the turbine or engine can provide usable heat or go to a heat recovery system to generate steam which then may drive a secondary steam turbine.
Steam turbine: burns fuel to produce steam, which generates power through a steam turbine. Exhaust (left over steam) can be used as low-pressure steam to heat water.
Combustion engine: rely solely on heat and pressure created by the engine in its compression process for ignition. The compression that occurs is usually twice or more higher than a gasoline engine. Combustion engines will take in air only, and shortly before peak compression, a small quantity of fuel is sprayed into the cylinder via a fuel injector that allows the fuel to instantly ignite.
Combustion turbine: involves a gas or liquid fired turbine, which runs a generator to produce electricity. The exhaust gas flows through a heat recovery boiler, which can convert the exhaust energy into steam or usable heat.
Select all that apply.
Sub-type for electricity generation
12. Which of the following sub-type methods were used for the cogeneration process?
Sub-Types
Combined cycle: burns fuel in a gas turbine or engine to generate electricity. The exhaust from the turbine or engine can provide usable heat or go to a heat recovery system to generate steam which then may drive a secondary steam turbine.
Steam turbine: burns fuel to produce steam, which generates power through a steam turbine. Exhaust (left over steam) can be used as low-pressure steam to heat water.
Combustion engine: rely solely on heat and pressure created by the engine in its compression process for ignition. The compression that occurs is usually twice or more higher than a gasoline engine. Combustion engines will take in air only, and shortly before peak compression, a small quantity of fuel is sprayed into the cylinder via a fuel injector that allows the fuel to instantly ignite.
Combustion turbine: involves a gas or liquid fired turbine, which runs a generator to produce electricity. The exhaust gas flows through a heat recovery boiler, which can convert the exhaust energy into steam or usable heat.
Select all that apply.
Fuel used by generation method — Combined cycle
13. This business indicated that Combined cycle was used to generate electricity.
Which types of fuels were used to generate this electricity?
Select all that apply.
Fuel selection breakdown — Combined cycle
14. This business indicated that Combined cycle was used to generate electricity.
Which types of Solid fuels were used to generate this electricity?
Solid Fuel types used to generate electricity
Any energy form consumed not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Bituminous coal: A dense, black coal, often with well-defined bands of bright and dull material with a moisture content usually less than 20%. Used primarily for generating electricity, making coke and space heating.
Sub-bituminous coal: A black coal used primarily for thermal generation, with moisture content between 15% and 30%. (Canadian/Foreign) - It is important to distinguish between Canadian versus imported sub-bituminous as each carries a different content, depending on the location of the coal mine.
Lignite: A brownish-black coal of low rank containing 30% to 40% moisture and volatile matter. Used almost exclusively for electric power generation.
Wood (Report for "Dry" method): Wood and wood energy used as fuel, including round wood (cord wood), lignin, wood scraps from furniture and window frame manufacturing, wood chips, bark, sawdust, forest residues, charcoal and pulp waste.
Petroleum coke: (often abbreviated petcoke) is a carbonaceous solid derived from oil refinery coker units or other cracking processes. Other coke has traditionally been derived from coal.
Agriculture biomass: includes animal manure, cellulosic crop residue, fruit and vegetable culls and food-processing effluent. Potential energy crops include high-yielding, high-carbohydrate crops such as switchgrass and vegetable-oil crops such as canola and sunflower, and hydrocarbon plants such as milkweed and gumweed.
Other biomass: (food processing) can include residues that are produced during the processing of a product, such as cheese whey, canning factory residues, fruit pits, apple pomice and coffee grounds.
Other biomass: (type unknown) any other type of biomass not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Municipal and other waste: can include residues that are produced during the processing of a product, such as paper, cardboard, rubber, leather, natural textiles, wood, brush, grass clippings, kitchen wastes and sewage sludge.
Select all that apply.
15. This business indicated that Combined cycle was used to generate electricity.
Which types of Liquids were used to generate this electricity?
Liquid Fuel types used to generate electricity
Any energy form consumed not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Biodiesel: refers to a non-petroleum-based diesel fuel consisting of short chain alkyl (methyl or ethyl) esters, made by transesterification of vegetable oil or animal fat (tallow), which can be used (alone, or blended with conventional petrodiesel) in unmodified diesel-engine vehicles.
Ethanol: (ethanol fuel) the same type of alcohol found in alcoholic beverages. It can be used as a fuel, mainly as a biofuel alternative to gasoline. It can be made from very common crops such as sugar cane and corn, it is an increasingly common alternative to gasoline in some parts of the world.
Other biofuel: any other type of biofuel not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Light fuel oil (LFO): all distillate type fuels for power burners, fuel oil no.1, fuel oil no.2 (heating oil no.2), fuel oil no.3 (heating oil no.3), furnace fuel oil, gas oils and light industrial fuel.
Heavy fuel oil (HFO): all grades of residual type fuels including low sulphur. Usually used for steam and electric power generation and diesel motors. Includes fuel oil nos. 4, 5 and 6. (Canadian/Foreign) – it is important to distinguish between Canadian versus imported Heavy Fuel Oil as each carries a different energy content, and is used to validate the integrity of Canada's Energy Balances.
Propane: is a three-carbon alkane, normally a gas, but compressible to a transportable liquid. It is derived from other petroleum products during oil or natural gas processing. It is commonly used as a fuel for engines, barbeques and home heating systems.
Diesel: all grades of distillate fuel used for diesel engines including low sulphur content (lower than 0.05%). Does not include diesel used for transportation off the plant site.
Spent pulping liquor: A by-product in the paper making process, containing carbohydrate and lignin decomposition products. Also known as "black liquor".
Orimulsion: is a registered trademark name for a bitumen-based fuel that was developed for industrial use. Bitumen is a mixture of organic liquids that are highly viscous, black, sticky and entirely soluble in carbon disulfide and composed primarily of highly condensed polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Currently orimulsion is used as a commercial boiler fuel in power plants worldwide.
Select all that apply.
16. This business indicated that Combined cycle was used to generate electricity.
Which types of Gaseous fuels were used to generate this electricity?
Gaseous Fuel types used to generate electricity
Any energy form consumed not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Waste gasification: the process of waste gasification involves converting the organic material within the waste into synthetic natural gas (syngas), which is a mixture of carbon monoxide and hydrogen gas. The syngas is used to produce electricity in the same way that natural gas is combusted for energy production-in combined-cycle mode.
Gasification: uses high temperatures in the presence of oxygen to convert solid biomass into gas (known as producer gas) to fuel a turbine to generate electricity.
Natural gas: a mixture of hydrocarbons (principally methane) and small quantities of various hydrocarbons existing in the gaseous phase or in solution with crude oil in underground reservoirs.
Coke oven gas: is obtained as a by-product of the manufacture of coke oven coke for the production of iron and steel.
Biogas: Landfill gas, or gas from anaerobic digestors using organic matter like manure, crop waste, food waste, sewage, etc..
Refinery fuel gas: a gaseous mixture of methane, light hydrocarbons, hydrogen, and other miscellaneous species (nitrogen, carbon dioxide, hydrogen sulphide, etc.) that is produced in the refining of crude oil and/or petrochemical processes and that is separated for use as a fuel in boilers and process heaters throughout the refinery.
Select all that apply.
17. This business indicated that Combined cycle was used to generate electricity.
What Other fuels were used to generate this electricity?
If you are reporting for electricity generated using Waste heat, do not complete boiler efficiency, average heat content, quantity, or total cost.
Other Fuel types used to generate electricity
Steam from waste heat: The amount of electricity generated when waste heat is recaptured to run a steam generator.
Fuel used by generation method — Steam turbine
18. This business indicated that Steam turbine was used to generate electricity.
Which types of fuels were used to generate this electricity?
Select all that apply.
Fuel selection breakdown — Steam turbine
19. This business indicated that Steam turbine was used to generate electricity.
Which types of Solid fuels were used to generate this electricity?
Solid Fuel types used to generate electricity
Any energy form consumed not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Bituminous coal: A dense, black coal, often with well-defined bands of bright and dull material with a moisture content usually less than 20%. Used primarily for generating electricity, making coke and space heating.
Sub-bituminous coal: A black coal used primarily for thermal generation, with moisture content between 15% and 30%. (Canadian/Foreign) - It is important to distinguish between Canadian versus imported sub-bituminous as each carries a different content, depending on the location of the coal mine.
Lignite: A brownish-black coal of low rank containing 30% to 40% moisture and volatile matter. Used almost exclusively for electric power generation.
Wood (Report for "Dry" method): Wood and wood energy used as fuel, including round wood (cord wood), lignin, wood scraps from furniture and window frame manufacturing, wood chips, bark, sawdust, forest residues, charcoal and pulp waste.
Petroleum coke: (often abbreviated petcoke) is a carbonaceous solid derived from oil refinery coker units or other cracking processes. Other coke has traditionally been derived from coal.
Agriculture biomass: includes animal manure, cellulosic crop residue, fruit and vegetable culls and food-processing effluent. Potential energy crops include high-yielding, high-carbohydrate crops such as switchgrass and vegetable-oil crops such as canola and sunflower, and hydrocarbon plants such as milkweed and gumweed.
Other biomass: (food processing) can include residues that are produced during the processing of a product, such as cheese whey, canning factory residues, fruit pits, apple pomice and coffee grounds.
Other biomass: (type unknown) any other type of biomass not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Municipal and other waste: can include residues that are produced during the processing of a product, such as paper, cardboard, rubber, leather, natural textiles, wood, brush, grass clippings, kitchen wastes and sewage sludge.
Select all that apply.
20. This business indicated that Steam turbine was used to generate electricity.
Which types of Liquids were used to generate this electricity?
Liquid Fuel types used to generate electricity
Any energy form consumed not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Biodiesel: refers to a non-petroleum-based diesel fuel consisting of short chain alkyl (methyl or ethyl) esters, made by transesterification of vegetable oil or animal fat (tallow), which can be used (alone, or blended with conventional petrodiesel) in unmodified diesel-engine vehicles.
Ethanol: (ethanol fuel) the same type of alcohol found in alcoholic beverages. It can be used as a fuel, mainly as a biofuel alternative to gasoline. It can be made from very common crops such as sugar cane and corn, it is an increasingly common alternative to gasoline in some parts of the world.
Other biofuel: any other type of biofuel not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Light fuel oil (LFO): all distillate type fuels for power burners, fuel oil no.1, fuel oil no.2 (heating oil no.2), fuel oil no.3 (heating oil no.3), furnace fuel oil, gas oils and light industrial fuel.
Heavy fuel oil (HFO): all grades of residual type fuels including low sulphur. Usually used for steam and electric power generation and diesel motors. Includes fuel oil nos. 4, 5 and 6. (Canadian/Foreign) – it is important to distinguish between Canadian versus imported Heavy Fuel Oil as each carries a different energy content, and is used to validate the integrity of Canada's Energy Balances.
Propane: is a three-carbon alkane, normally a gas, but compressible to a transportable liquid. It is derived from other petroleum products during oil or natural gas processing. It is commonly used as a fuel for engines, barbeques and home heating systems.
Diesel: all grades of distillate fuel used for diesel engines including low sulphur content (lower than 0.05%). Does not include diesel used for transportation off the plant site.
Spent pulping liquor: A by-product in the paper making process, containing carbohydrate and lignin decomposition products. Also known as "black liquor".
Orimulsion: is a registered trademark name for a bitumen-based fuel that was developed for industrial use. Bitumen is a mixture of organic liquids that are highly viscous, black, sticky and entirely soluble in carbon disulfide and composed primarily of highly condensed polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Currently orimulsion is used as a commercial boiler fuel in power plants worldwide.
Select all that apply.
21. This business indicated that Steam turbine was used to generate electricity.
Which types of Gaseous fuels were used to generate this electricity?
Select all that apply.
22. This business indicated that Steam turbine was used to generate electricity.
What Other fuels were used to generate this electricity?
Other Fuel types used to generate electricity
Steam from waste heat: The amount of electricity generated when waste heat is recaptured to run a steam generator.
If you are reporting for electricity generated using Waste heat, do not complete boiler efficiency, average heat content, quantity, or total cost.
Fuel used by generation method — Combustion engine
23. This business indicated that Combustion engine was used to generate electricity.
Which types of fuels were used to generate this electricity?
Select all that apply.
Fuel selection breakdown — Combustion engine
24. This business indicated that Combustion engine was used to generate electricity.
Which types of Solid fuels were used to generate this electricity?
Solid Fuel types used to generate electricity
Any energy form consumed not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Bituminous coal: A dense, black coal, often with well-defined bands of bright and dull material with a moisture content usually less than 20%. Used primarily for generating electricity, making coke and space heating.
Sub-bituminous coal: A black coal used primarily for thermal generation, with moisture content between 15% and 30%. (Canadian/Foreign) - It is important to distinguish between Canadian versus imported sub-bituminous as each carries a different content, depending on the location of the coal mine.
Lignite: A brownish-black coal of low rank containing 30% to 40% moisture and volatile matter. Used almost exclusively for electric power generation.
Wood (Report for "Dry" method): Wood and wood energy used as fuel, including round wood (cord wood), lignin, wood scraps from furniture and window frame manufacturing, wood chips, bark, sawdust, forest residues, charcoal and pulp waste.
Petroleum coke: (often abbreviated petcoke) is a carbonaceous solid derived from oil refinery coker units or other cracking processes. Other coke has traditionally been derived from coal.
Agriculture biomass: includes animal manure, cellulosic crop residue, fruit and vegetable culls and food-processing effluent. Potential energy crops include high-yielding, high-carbohydrate crops such as switchgrass and vegetable-oil crops such as canola and sunflower, and hydrocarbon plants such as milkweed and gumweed.
Other biomass: (food processing) can include residues that are produced during the processing of a product, such as cheese whey, canning factory residues, fruit pits, apple pomice and coffee grounds.
Other biomass: (type unknown) any other type of biomass not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Municipal and other waste: can include residues that are produced during the processing of a product, such as paper, cardboard, rubber, leather, natural textiles, wood, brush, grass clippings, kitchen wastes and sewage sludge.
Select all that apply.
25. This business indicated that Combustion engine was used to generate electricity.
Which types of Liquids were used to generate this electricity?
Liquid Fuel types used to generate electricity
Any energy form consumed not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Biodiesel: refers to a non-petroleum-based diesel fuel consisting of short chain alkyl (methyl or ethyl) esters, made by transesterification of vegetable oil or animal fat (tallow), which can be used (alone, or blended with conventional petrodiesel) in unmodified diesel-engine vehicles.
Ethanol: (ethanol fuel) the same type of alcohol found in alcoholic beverages. It can be used as a fuel, mainly as a biofuel alternative to gasoline. It can be made from very common crops such as sugar cane and corn, it is an increasingly common alternative to gasoline in some parts of the world.
Other biofuel: any other type of biofuel not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Light fuel oil (LFO): all distillate type fuels for power burners, fuel oil no.1, fuel oil no.2 (heating oil no.2), fuel oil no.3 (heating oil no.3), furnace fuel oil, gas oils and light industrial fuel.
Heavy fuel oil (HFO): all grades of residual type fuels including low sulphur. Usually used for steam and electric power generation and diesel motors. Includes fuel oil nos. 4, 5 and 6. (Canadian/Foreign) – it is important to distinguish between Canadian versus imported Heavy Fuel Oil as each carries a different energy content, and is used to validate the integrity of Canada's Energy Balances.
Propane: is a three-carbon alkane, normally a gas, but compressible to a transportable liquid. It is derived from other petroleum products during oil or natural gas processing. It is commonly used as a fuel for engines, barbeques and home heating systems.
Diesel: all grades of distillate fuel used for diesel engines including low sulphur content (lower than 0.05%). Does not include diesel used for transportation off the plant site.
Spent pulping liquor: A by-product in the paper making process, containing carbohydrate and lignin decomposition products. Also known as "black liquor".
Orimulsion: is a registered trademark name for a bitumen-based fuel that was developed for industrial use. Bitumen is a mixture of organic liquids that are highly viscous, black, sticky and entirely soluble in carbon disulfide and composed primarily of highly condensed polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Currently orimulsion is used as a commercial boiler fuel in power plants worldwide.
Select all that apply.
26. This business indicated that Combustion engine was used to generate electricity.
Which types of Gaseous fuels were used to generate this electricity?
Gaseous Fuel types used to generate electricity
Any energy form consumed not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Waste gasification: the process of waste gasification involves converting the organic material within the waste into synthetic natural gas (syngas), which is a mixture of carbon monoxide and hydrogen gas. The syngas is used to produce electricity in the same way that natural gas is combusted for energy production-in combined-cycle mode.
Gasification: uses high temperatures in the presence of oxygen to convert solid biomass into gas (known as producer gas) to fuel a turbine to generate electricity.
Natural gas: a mixture of hydrocarbons (principally methane) and small quantities of various hydrocarbons existing in the gaseous phase or in solution with crude oil in underground reservoirs.
Coke oven gas: is obtained as a by-product of the manufacture of coke oven coke for the production of iron and steel.
Biogas: Landfill gas, or gas from anaerobic digestors using organic matter like manure, crop waste, food waste, sewage, etc..
Refinery fuel gas: a gaseous mixture of methane, light hydrocarbons, hydrogen, and other miscellaneous species (nitrogen, carbon dioxide, hydrogen sulphide, etc.) that is produced in the refining of crude oil and/or petrochemical processes and that is separated for use as a fuel in boilers and process heaters throughout the refinery.
Select all that apply.
27. This business indicated that Combustion engine was used to generate electricity. What Other fuels were used to generate this electricity?
Other Fuel types used to generate electricity
Steam from waste heat: The amount of electricity generated when waste heat is recaptured to run a steam generator.
If you are reporting for electricity generated using Waste heat, do not complete boiler efficiency, average heat content, quantity, or total cost.
Fuel used by generation method — Combustion turbine
28. This business indicated that Combustion turbine was used to generate electricity.
Which types of fuels were used to generate this electricity?
Select all that apply.
Fuel selection breakdown — Combustion turbine
29. This business indicated that Combustion turbine was used to generate electricity.
Which types of Solid fuels were used to generate this electricity?
Solid Fuel types used to generate electricity
Any energy form consumed not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Bituminous coal: A dense, black coal, often with well-defined bands of bright and dull material with a moisture content usually less than 20%. Used primarily for generating electricity, making coke and space heating.
Sub-bituminous coal: A black coal used primarily for thermal generation, with moisture content between 15% and 30%. (Canadian/Foreign) - It is important to distinguish between Canadian versus imported sub-bituminous as each carries a different content, depending on the location of the coal mine.
Lignite: A brownish-black coal of low rank containing 30% to 40% moisture and volatile matter. Used almost exclusively for electric power generation.
Wood (Report for "Dry" method): Wood and wood energy used as fuel, including round wood (cord wood), lignin, wood scraps from furniture and window frame manufacturing, wood chips, bark, sawdust, forest residues, charcoal and pulp waste.
Petroleum coke: (often abbreviated petcoke) is a carbonaceous solid derived from oil refinery coker units or other cracking processes. Other coke has traditionally been derived from coal.
Agriculture biomass: includes animal manure, cellulosic crop residue, fruit and vegetable culls and food-processing effluent. Potential energy crops include high-yielding, high-carbohydrate crops such as switchgrass and vegetable-oil crops such as canola and sunflower, and hydrocarbon plants such as milkweed and gumweed.
Other biomass: (food processing) can include residues that are produced during the processing of a product, such as cheese whey, canning factory residues, fruit pits, apple pomice and coffee grounds.
Other biomass: (type unknown) any other type of biomass not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Municipal and other waste: can include residues that are produced during the processing of a product, such as paper, cardboard, rubber, leather, natural textiles, wood, brush, grass clippings, kitchen wastes and sewage sludge.
Select all that apply.
30. This business indicated that Combustion turbine was used to generate electricity.
Which types of Liquids were used to generate this electricity?
Liquid Fuel types used to generate electricity
Any energy form consumed not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Biodiesel: refers to a non-petroleum-based diesel fuel consisting of short chain alkyl (methyl or ethyl) esters, made by transesterification of vegetable oil or animal fat (tallow), which can be used (alone, or blended with conventional petrodiesel) in unmodified diesel-engine vehicles.
Ethanol: (ethanol fuel) the same type of alcohol found in alcoholic beverages. It can be used as a fuel, mainly as a biofuel alternative to gasoline. It can be made from very common crops such as sugar cane and corn, it is an increasingly common alternative to gasoline in some parts of the world.
Other biofuel: any other type of biofuel not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Light fuel oil (LFO): all distillate type fuels for power burners, fuel oil no.1, fuel oil no.2 (heating oil no.2), fuel oil no.3 (heating oil no.3), furnace fuel oil, gas oils and light industrial fuel.
Heavy fuel oil (HFO): all grades of residual type fuels including low sulphur. Usually used for steam and electric power generation and diesel motors. Includes fuel oil nos. 4, 5 and 6. (Canadian/Foreign) – it is important to distinguish between Canadian versus imported Heavy Fuel Oil as each carries a different energy content, and is used to validate the integrity of Canada's Energy Balances.
Propane: is a three-carbon alkane, normally a gas, but compressible to a transportable liquid. It is derived from other petroleum products during oil or natural gas processing. It is commonly used as a fuel for engines, barbeques and home heating systems.
Diesel: all grades of distillate fuel used for diesel engines including low sulphur content (lower than 0.05%). Does not include diesel used for transportation off the plant site.
Spent pulping liquor: A by-product in the paper making process, containing carbohydrate and lignin decomposition products. Also known as "black liquor".
Orimulsion: is a registered trademark name for a bitumen-based fuel that was developed for industrial use. Bitumen is a mixture of organic liquids that are highly viscous, black, sticky and entirely soluble in carbon disulfide and composed primarily of highly condensed polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Currently orimulsion is used as a commercial boiler fuel in power plants worldwide.
Select all that apply.
31. This business indicated that Combustion turbine was used to generate electricity.
Which types of Gaseous fuels were used to generate this electricity?
Gaseous Fuel types used to generate electricity
Any energy form consumed not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the spaces provided.
Waste gasification: the process of waste gasification involves converting the organic material within the waste into synthetic natural gas (syngas), which is a mixture of carbon monoxide and hydrogen gas. The syngas is used to produce electricity in the same way that natural gas is combusted for energy production-in combined-cycle mode.
Gasification: uses high temperatures in the presence of oxygen to convert solid biomass into gas (known as producer gas) to fuel a turbine to generate electricity.
Natural gas: a mixture of hydrocarbons (principally methane) and small quantities of various hydrocarbons existing in the gaseous phase or in solution with crude oil in underground reservoirs.
Coke oven gas: is obtained as a by-product of the manufacture of coke oven coke for the production of iron and steel.
Biogas: Landfill gas, or gas from anaerobic digestors using organic matter like manure, crop waste, food waste, sewage, etc..
Refinery fuel gas: a gaseous mixture of methane, light hydrocarbons, hydrogen, and other miscellaneous species (nitrogen, carbon dioxide, hydrogen sulphide, etc.) that is produced in the refining of crude oil and/or petrochemical processes and that is separated for use as a fuel in boilers and process heaters throughout the refinery.
Select all that apply.
32. This business indicated that Combustion turbine was used to generate electricity.
What Other fuels were used to generate this electricity?
Other Fuel types used to generate electricity
Steam from waste heat: The amount of electricity generated when waste heat is recaptured to run a steam generator.
If you are reporting for electricity generated using Waste heat, do not complete boiler efficiency, average heat content, quantity, or total cost.
Questions for selected fuel types — Combined cycle
33. This business indicated that Combined cycle was used to generate electricity.
Please answer the following for the selected fuel types:
What percentage was the efficiency of the boiler?
Heat output (kJ)/Total Energy Content of the Fuel (kJ).
The proportion of useful heat produced to the total potential energy available by burning the fuel.
| Percentage (%) | |
|---|---|
| a. Bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| b. Bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| c. Sub-bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| d. Sub-bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| e. Lignite | |
| f. Wood | |
| g. Petroleum coke | |
| h. Agriculture biomass | |
| i. Other biomass | |
| j. Other biomass - type unknown | |
| k. Municipal and other waste | |
| l. [Other] | |
| m. Biodiesel | |
| n. Ethanol | |
| o. Other biofuel | |
| p. Light fuel oil | |
| q. Heavy fuel oil purchased from Canadian companies | |
| r. Heavy fuel oil imported from foreign countries | |
| s. Propane | |
| t. Diesel | |
| u. Orimulsion | |
| v. Spent pulping liquor | |
| w. [Other] | |
| x. Natural gas | |
| y. Coke oven gas | |
| z. Biogas | |
| aa. Refinery fuel gas | |
| ab. [Other] | |
| ac. [Other] |
If you are reporting for electricity generated using Waste heat, do not complete boiler efficiency, average heat content, quantity, or total cost.
Questions for selected fuel types — Combined cycle
34. This business indicated that Combined cycle was used to generate electricity. Please answer the following for the selected fuel types:
What was the average heat content?
Solid fuels: report in kJ/kg
Liquids fuels: report in kJ/L
Gaseous fuels: report in kJ/m3
Other fuels: report in kJ/kg
| Average heat content | |
|---|---|
| a. Bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| b. Bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| c. Sub-bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| d. Sub-bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| e. Lignite | |
| f. Wood | |
| g. Petroleum coke | |
| h. Agriculture biomass | |
| i. Other biomass | |
| j. Other biomass - type unknown | |
| k. Municipal and other waste | |
| l. [Other] | |
| m. Biodiesel | |
| n. Ethanol | |
| o. Other biofuel | |
| p. Light fuel oil | |
| q. Heavy fuel oil purchased from Canadian companies | |
| r. Heavy fuel oil imported from foreign countries | |
| s. Propane | |
| t. Diesel | |
| u. Orimulsion | |
| v. Spent pulping liquor | |
| w. [Other liquid fuel] | |
| x. Natural gas | |
| y. Coke oven gas | |
| z. Methane (land fill) | |
| aa. Refinery fuel gas | |
| ab. [Other gaseous fuel] | |
| ac. [Other type of fuel] |
35. This business indicated that Combined cycle was used to generate electricity. Please answer the following for the selected fuel types:
What was the quantity/volume used and the total cost?
| Unit of measure | Quantity/volume used | CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| a. Bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |||
| b. Bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |||
| c. Sub-bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |||
| d. Sub-bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |||
| e. Lignite | |||
| f. Wood | |||
| g. Petroleum coke | |||
| h. Agriculture biomass | |||
| i. Other biomass | |||
| j. Other biomass — type unknown | |||
| k. Municipal and other waste | |||
| l. [Other] | |||
| m. Biodiesel | |||
| n. Ethanol | |||
| o. Other biofuel | |||
| p. Light fuel oil | |||
| q. Heavy fuel oil purchased from Canadian companies | |||
| r. Heavy fuel oil imported from foreign countries | |||
| s. Propane | |||
| t. Diesel | |||
| u. Orimulsion | |||
| v. Spent pulping liquor | |||
| w. [Other] | |||
| x. Natural gas | |||
| y. Coke oven gas | |||
| z. Biogas | |||
| aa. Refinery fuel gas | |||
| ab. [Other gaseous fuel] | |||
| ac. [Other type of fuel] |
Please report electricity generation values as gross electricity generation values.
36. This business indicated that Combined cycle was used to generate electricity. Please answer the following for the selected fuel types:
What was the quantity of electricity generated in megawatt-hours (MWh)?
Gross electricity generation is the total amount of electricity generated by the power plant during the reporting period.
Gross electricity generation = Net electricity generation + Own use consumption.
(Net electricity generation is the amount of electricity generated by the power plant that is delivered to the electricity grid during the reporting period).
| Quantity in MWh | |
|---|---|
| a. Bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| b. Bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| c. Sub-bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| d. Sub-bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| e. Lignite | |
| f. Wood | |
| g. Petroleum coke | |
| h. Agriculture biomass | |
| i. Other biomass | |
| j. Other biomass - type unknown | |
| k. Municipal and other waste | |
| l. [Other] | |
| m. Biodiesel | |
| n. Ethanol | |
| o. Other biofuel | |
| p. Light fuel oil | |
| q. Heavy fuel oil purchased from Canadian companies | |
| r. Heavy fuel oil imported from foreign countries | |
| s. Propane | |
| t. Diesel | |
| u. Orimulsion | |
| v. Spent pulping liquor | |
| w. [Other liquid fuel] | |
| x. Natural gas | |
| y. Coke oven gas | |
| z. Biogaz | |
| aa. Refinery fuel gas | |
| ab. [Other gaseous fuel] | |
| ac. [Other type of fuel] |
37. For Combined cycle, the total gross generation of electricity is:
Please review the values and if needed, press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Quantity in MWh | |
|---|---|
| Total gross generation of electricity using Combined cycle |
Questions for selected fuel types — Steam turbine
38. This business indicated that Steam turbine was used to generate electricity. Please answer the following for the selected fuel types:
What percentage was the efficiency of the boiler?
Heat output (kJ)/Total Energy Content of the Fuel (kJ).
The proportion of useful heat produced to the total potential energy available by burning the fuel.
| Percentage (%) | |
|---|---|
| a. Bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| b. Bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| c. Sub-bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| d. Sub-bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| e. Lignite | |
| f. Wood | |
| g. Petroleum coke | |
| h. Agriculture biomass | |
| i. Other biomass | |
| j. Other biomass - type unknown | |
| k. Municipal and other waste | |
| l. [Other] | |
| m. Biodiesel | |
| n. Ethanol | |
| o. Other biofuel | |
| p. Light fuel oil | |
| q. Heavy fuel oil purchased from Canadian companies | |
| r. Heavy fuel oil imported from foreign countries | |
| s. Propane | |
| t. Diesel | |
| u. Orimulsion | |
| v. Spent pulping liquor | |
| w. [Other] | |
| x. Natural gas | |
| y. Coke oven gas | |
| z. Biogas | |
| aa. Refinery fuel gas | |
| ab. [Other] | |
| ac. [Other] |
If you are reporting for electricity generated using Waste heat, do not complete boiler efficiency, average heat content, quantity, or total cost.
39. This business indicated that Steam turbine was used to generate electricity. Please answer the following for the selected fuel types:,
What was the average heat content?
| Average heat content | |
|---|---|
| a. Bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| b. Bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| c. Sub-bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| d. Sub-bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| e. Lignite | |
| f. Wood | |
| g. Petroleum coke | |
| h. Agriculture biomass | |
| i. Other biomass | |
| j. Other biomass - type unknown | |
| k. Municipal and other waste | |
| l. [Other solid fuel] | |
| m. Biodiesel | |
| n. Ethanol | |
| o. Other biofuel | |
| p. Light fuel oil | |
| q. Heavy fuel oil purchased from Canadian companies | |
| r. Heavy fuel oil imported from foreign countries | |
| s. Propane | |
| t. Diesel | |
| u. Orimulsion | |
| v. Spent pulping liquor | |
| w. [Other liquid fuel] | |
| x. Natural gas | |
| y. Coke oven gas | |
| z. Biogas | |
| aa. Refinery fuel gas | |
| ab. [Other gaseous fuel] | |
| ac. [Other type of fuel] |
If you are reporting for electricity generated using Waste heat, do not complete boiler efficiency, average heat content, quantity, or total cost.
40. This business indicated that Steam turbine was used to generate electricity. Please answer the following for the selected fuel types:
| Unit of measure | Quantity/volume used | CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| a. Bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |||
| b. Bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |||
| c. Sub-bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |||
| d. Sub-bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |||
| e. Lignite | |||
| f. Wood | |||
| g. Petroleum coke | |||
| h. Agriculture biomass | |||
| i. Other biomass | |||
| j. Other biomass — type unknown | |||
| k. Municipal and other waste | |||
| l. [Other] | |||
| m. Biodiesel | |||
| n. Ethanol | |||
| o. Other biofuel | |||
| p. Light fuel oil | |||
| q. Heavy fuel oil purchased from Canadian companies | |||
| r. Heavy fuel oil imported from foreign countries | |||
| s. Propane | |||
| t. Diesel | |||
| u. Orimulsion | |||
| v. Spent pulping liquor | |||
| w. [Other] | |||
| x. Natural gas | |||
| y. Coke oven gas | |||
| z. Biogas | |||
| aa. Refinery fuel gas | |||
| ab. [Other] | |||
| ac. [Other type of fuel] |
If you are reporting for electricity generated using Waste heat, do not complete boiler efficiency, average heat content, quantity, or total cost.
41. This business indicated that Steam turbine was used to generate electricity. Please answer the following for the selected fuel types:
Please report electricity generation values as gross electricity generation values.
What was the quantity of electricity generated in megawatt-hours (MWh)?.
Gross electricity generation is the total amount of electricity generated by the power plant during the reporting period.
Gross electricity generation = Net electricity generation + Own use consumption.
(Net electricity generation is the amount of electricity generated by the power plant that is delivered to the electricity grid during the reporting period).
| Quantity in MWh | |
|---|---|
| a. Bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| b. Bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| c. Sub-bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| d. Sub-bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| e. Lignite | |
| f. Wood | |
| g. Petroleum coke | |
| h. Agriculture biomass | |
| i. Other biomass | |
| j. Other biomass - type unknown | |
| k. Municipal and other waste | |
| l. [Other solid fuel] | |
| m. Biodiesel | |
| n. Ethanol | |
| o. Other biofuel | |
| p. Light fuel oil | |
| q. Heavy fuel oil purchased from Canadian companies | |
| r. Heavy fuel oil imported from foreign countries | |
| s. Propane | |
| t. Diesel | |
| u. Orimulsion | |
| v. Spent pulping liquor | |
| w. [Other] | |
| x. Natural gas | |
| y. Coke oven gas | |
| z. Biogas | |
| aa. Refinery fuel gas | |
| ab. [Other gaseous fuel] | |
| ac. [Other type of fuel] |
42. For Steam turbine, the total gross generation of electricity is:
Please review the values and if needed, press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Quantity in MWh | |
|---|---|
| Total gross generation of electricity using Steam turbine |
Questions for selected fuel types — Combustion engine
43. This business indicated that Combustion engine was used to generate electricity. Please answer the following for the selected fuel types:
What percentage was the efficiency of the boiler?
Heat output (kJ)/Total Energy Content of the Fuel (kJ).
The proportion of useful heat produced to the total potential energy available by burning the fuel.
| Percentage (%) | |
|---|---|
| a. Bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| b. Bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| c. Sub-bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| d. Sub-bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| e. Lignite | |
| f. Wood | |
| g. Petroleum coke | |
| h. Agriculture biomass | |
| i. Other biomass | |
| j. Other biomass - type unknown | |
| k. Municipal and other waste | |
| l. [Other solid fuel] | |
| m. Biodiesel | |
| n. Ethanol | |
| o. Other biofuel | |
| p. Light fuel oil | |
| q. Heavy fuel oil purchased from Canadian companies | |
| r. Heavy fuel oil imported from foreign countries | |
| s. Propane | |
| t. Diesel | |
| u. Orimulsion | |
| v. Spent pulping liquor | |
| w. [Other liquid fuel] | |
| x. Natural gas | |
| y. Coke oven gas | |
| z. Biogas | |
| aa. Refinery fuel gas | |
| ab. [Other] | |
| ac. [Other] |
If you are reporting for electricity generated using Waste heat, do not complete boiler efficiency, average heat content, quantity, or total cost.
44. This business indicated that Combustion engine was used to generate electricity. Please answer the following for the selected fuel types:
What was the average heat content?
| Average heat content | |
|---|---|
| a. Bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| b. Bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| c. Sub-bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| d. Sub-bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| e. Lignite | |
| f. Wood | |
| g. Petroleum coke | |
| h. Agriculture biomass | |
| i. Other biomass | |
| j. Other biomass - type unknown | |
| k. Municipal and other waste | |
| l. [Other] | |
| m. Biodiesel | |
| n. Ethanol | |
| o. Other biofuel | |
| p. Light fuel oil | |
| q. Heavy fuel oil purchased from Canadian companies | |
| r. Heavy fuel oil imported from foreign countries | |
| s. Propane | |
| t. Diesel | |
| u. Orimulsion | |
| v. Spent pulping liquor | |
| w. [Other] | |
| x. Natural gas | |
| y. Coke oven gas | |
| z. Biogas | |
| aa. Refinery fuel gas | |
| ab. [Other] | |
| ac. [Other] |
If you are reporting for electricity generated using Waste heat, do not complete boiler efficiency, average heat content, quantity, or total cost.
45. This business indicated that Combustion engine was used to generate electricity. Please answer the following for the selected fuel types:
| Unit of measure | Quantity/volume used | CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| a. Bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |||
| b. Bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |||
| c. Sub-bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |||
| d. Sub-bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |||
| e. Lignite | |||
| f. Wood | |||
| g. Petroleum coke | |||
| h. Agriculture biomass | |||
| i. Other biomass | |||
| j. Other biomass — type unknown | |||
| k. Municipal and other waste | |||
| l. [Other] | |||
| m. Biodiesel | |||
| n. Ethanol | |||
| o. Other biofuel | |||
| p. Light fuel oil | |||
| q. Heavy fuel oil purchased from Canadian companies | |||
| r. Heavy fuel oil imported from foreign countries | |||
| s. Propane | |||
| t. Diesel | |||
| u. Orimulsion | |||
| v. Spent pulping liquor | |||
| w. [Other] | |||
| x. Natural gas | |||
| y. Coke oven gas | |||
| z. Biogas | |||
| aa. Refinery fuel gas | |||
| ab. [Other] | |||
| ac. [Other] |
If you are reporting for electricity generated using Waste heat, do not complete boiler efficiency, average heat content, quantity, or total cost.
46. This business indicated that Combustion engine was used to generate electricity. Please answer the following for the selected fuel types:
What was the quantity of electricity generated in megawatt-hours (MWh)?
Gross electricity generation is the total amount of electricity generated by the power plant during the reporting period.
Gross electricity generation = Net electricity generation + Own use consumption
Net electricity generation is the amount of electricity generated by the power plant that is delivered to the electricity grid during the reporting period.
| Quantity in MWh | |
|---|---|
| a. Bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| b. Bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| c. Sub-bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| d. Sub-bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| e. Lignite | |
| f. Wood | |
| g. Petroleum coke | |
| h. Agriculture biomass | |
| i. Other biomass | |
| j. Other biomass - type unknown | |
| k. Municipal and other waste | |
| l. [Other] | |
| m. Biodiesel | |
| n. Ethanol | |
| o. Other biofuel | |
| p. Light fuel oil | |
| q. Heavy fuel oil purchased from Canadian companies | |
| r. Heavy fuel oil imported from foreign countries | |
| s. Propane | |
| t. Diesel | |
| u. Orimulsion | |
| v. Spent pulping liquor | |
| w. [Other] | |
| x. Natural gas | |
| y. Coke oven gas | |
| z. Biogas | |
| aa. Refinery fuel gas | |
| ab. [Other] | |
| ac. [Other] |
47. For Combustion engine, the total gross generation of electricity is:
Please review the values and if needed, press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Quantity in MWh | |
|---|---|
| Total gross generation of electricity using Combustion engine |
Questions for selected fuel types — Combustion turbine
48. This business indicated that Combustion turbine was used to generate electricity. Please answer the following for the selected fuel types:
What percentage was the efficiency of the boiler?
Heat output (kJ)/Total Energy Content of the Fuel (kJ).
The proportion of useful heat produced to the total potential energy available by burning the fuel.
| Percentage (%) | |
|---|---|
| a. Bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| b. Bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| c. Sub-bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| d. Sub-bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| e. Lignite | |
| f. Wood | |
| g. Petroleum coke | |
| h. Agriculture biomass | |
| i. Other biomass | |
| j. Other biomass - type unknown | |
| k. Municipal and other waste | |
| l. [Other solid fuel] | |
| m. Biodiesel | |
| n. Ethanol | |
| o. Other biofuel | |
| p. Light fuel oil | |
| q. Heavy fuel oil purchased from Canadian companies | |
| r. Heavy fuel oil imported from foreign countries | |
| s. Propane | |
| t. Diesel | |
| u. Orimulsion | |
| v. Spent pulping liquor | |
| w. [Other] | |
| x. Natural gas | |
| y. Coke oven gas | |
| z. Biogas | |
| aa. Refinery fuel gas | |
| ab. [Other] | |
| ac. [Other] |
If you are reporting for electricity generated using Waste heat, do not complete boiler efficiency, average heat content, quantity, or total cost.
49. This business indicated that Combustion turbine was used to generate electricity. Please answer the following for the selected fuel types:
What was the average heat content?
| Average heat content | |
|---|---|
| a. Bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| b. Bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| c. Sub-bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| d. Sub-bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| e. Lignite | |
| f. Wood | |
| g. Petroleum coke | |
| h. Agriculture biomass | |
| i. Other biomass | |
| j. Other biomass - type unknown | |
| k. Municipal and other waste | |
| l. [Other] | |
| m. Biodiesel | |
| n. Ethanol | |
| o. Other biofuel | |
| p. Light fuel oil | |
| q. Heavy fuel oil purchased from Canadian companies | |
| r. Heavy fuel oil imported from foreign countries | |
| s. Propane | |
| t. Diesel | |
| u. Orimulsion | |
| v. Spent pulping liquor | |
| w. [Other liquid fuel] | |
| x. Natural gas | |
| y. Coke oven gas | |
| z. Biogas | |
| aa. Refinery fuel gas | |
| ab. [Other] | |
| ac. [Other] |
If you are reporting for electricity generated using Waste heat, do not complete boiler efficiency, average heat content, quantity, or total cost.
50. This business indicated that Combustion turbine was used to generate electricity. Please answer the following for the selected fuel types:
| Unit of measure | Quantity/volume used | CAN$ '000 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| a. Bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |||
| b. Bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |||
| c. Sub-bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |||
| d. Sub-bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |||
| e. Lignite | |||
| f. Wood | |||
| g. Petroleum coke | |||
| h. Agriculture biomass | |||
| i. Other biomass | |||
| j. Other biomass — type unknown | |||
| k. Municipal and other waste | |||
| l. [Other] | |||
| m. Biodiesel | |||
| n. Ethanol | |||
| o. Other biofuel | |||
| p. Light fuel oil | |||
| q. Heavy fuel oil purchased from Canadian companies | |||
| r. Heavy fuel oil imported from foreign countries | |||
| s. Propane | |||
| t. Diesel | |||
| u. Orimulsion | |||
| v. Spent pulping liquor | |||
| w. [Other] | |||
| x. Natural gas | |||
| y. Coke oven gas | |||
| z. Biogas | |||
| aa. Refinery fuel gas | |||
| ab. [Other] | |||
| ac. [Other] |
If you are reporting for electricity generated using Waste heat, do not complete boiler efficiency, average heat content, quantity, or total cost.
51. This business indicated that Combustion turbine was used to generate electricity. Please answer the following for the selected fuel types:
Please report electricity generation values as gross electricity generation values.
What was the quantity of electricity generated in megawatt-hours (MWh)?
Gross electricity generation is the total amount of electricity generated by the power plant during the reporting period.
Gross electricity generation = Net electricity generation + Own use consumption
(Net electricity generation is the amount of electricity generated by the power plant that is delivered to the electricity grid during the reporting period).
| Quantity in MWh | |
|---|---|
| a. Bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| b. Bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| c. Sub-bituminous coal purchased from Canadian companies | |
| d. Sub-bituminous coal imported from foreign countries | |
| e. Lignite | |
| f. Wood | |
| g. Petroleum coke | |
| h. Agriculture biomass | |
| i. Other biomass | |
| j. Other biomass - type unknown | |
| k. Municipal and other waste | |
| l. [Other] | |
| m. Biodiesel | |
| n. Ethanol | |
| o. Other biofuel | |
| p. Light fuel oil | |
| q. Heavy fuel oil purchased from Canadian companies | |
| r. Heavy fuel oil imported from foreign countries | |
| s. Propane | |
| t. Diesel | |
| u. Orimulsion | |
| v. Spent pulping liquor | |
| w. [Other] | |
| x. Natural gas | |
| y. Coke oven gas | |
| z. Biogas | |
| aa. Refinery fuel gas | |
| ab. [Other] | |
| ac. [Other] |
52. For Combustion turbine, the total gross generation of electricity is:
Please review the values and if needed, press the Previous button at the bottom of the page to navigate to the previous pages to make any modifications.
| Quantity in MWh | |
|---|---|
| Total gross generation of electricity using Combustion turbine |
Useful thermal energy — Combined cycle
53. This business indicated that it uses Combined cycle cogeneration process.
What was the useful thermal energy produced from this business for own use and sale?
Useful thermal energy produced: The amount of energy in the form of heat that is produced as a by-product of the generation of electricity and that is used for another application in a productive manner (e.g., the heating of industrial, commercial or residential space; steam used in an industrial process; etc.).
Own use consumption refers to consumption of self-generated thermal energy (excluding purchased) for the direct support of the plant or business itself during the reporting period.
Useful thermal energy — Steam turbine
54. This business indicated that it uses Steam turbine cogeneration process.
What was the useful thermal energy produced from this business for own use and sale?
Cogeneration: A highly efficient means of generating heat and electric power at the same time from the same energy source. Cogeneration makes use of the excess heat, usually in the form of relatively low-temperature steam exhausted from the power generation turbines towards another purpose.
Useful thermal energy produced: The amount of energy in the form of heat that is produced as a by-product of the generation of electricity and that is used for another application in a productive manner (e.g., the heating of industrial, commercial or residential space; steam used in an industrial process; etc.).
Own use consumption refers to consumption of self-generated thermal energy (excluding purchased) for the direct support of the plant or business itself during the reporting period.
Useful thermal energy — Combustion engine
55. This business indicated that it uses Combustion engine cogeneration process.
What was the useful thermal energy produced from this business for own use and sale?
Cogeneration: A highly efficient means of generating heat and electric power at the same time from the same energy source. Cogeneration makes use of the excess heat, usually in the form of relatively low-temperature steam exhausted from the power generation turbines towards another purpose.
Useful thermal energy produced: The amount of energy, in the form of heat, that is produced as a by-product of the generation of electricity and that is used for another application in a productive manner (e.g., the heating of industrial, commercial or residential space; steam used in an industrial process; etc.).
Own use consumption refers to consumption of self-generated thermal energy (excluding purchased) for the direct support of the plant or business itself during the reporting period.
Useful thermal energy — Combustion turbine
56. This business indicated that it uses Combustion turbine cogeneration process.
What was the useful thermal energy produced from this business for own use and sale?
Useful thermal energy produced: The amount of energy in the form of heat that is produced as a by-product of the generation of electricity and that is used for another application in a productive manner (e.g., the heating of industrial, commercial or residential space; steam used in an industrial process; etc.).
Own use consumption refers to consumption of self-generated thermal energy (excluding purchased) for the direct support of the plant or business itself during the reporting period.
Uranium
57. What was the average heat content in gigajoules per metric tonne (Gj/MT) of Uranium?
Nuclear: is any nuclear technology designed to extract usable energy from atomic nuclei via controlled nuclear reactions. The most common method today is through nuclear fission, though other methods include nuclear fusion and radioactive decay.
Gigajoules per metric tonne (Gj/MT)
58. What quantity of Uranium was used and the total cost?
Nuclear: is any nuclear technology designed to extract usable energy from atomic nuclei via controlled nuclear reactions. The most common method today is through nuclear fission, though other methods include nuclear fusion and radioactive decay.
Unit of measure
Quantity
Total cost
59. What was the total gross quantity of electricity generated in megawatt-hours (MWh)?
Nuclear: is any nuclear technology designed to extract usable energy from atomic nuclei via controlled nuclear reactions. The most common method today is through nuclear fission, though other methods include nuclear fusion and radioactive decay.
Gross electricity generation is the total amount of electricity generated by the power plant that is delivered to the electricity grid during the reporting period.
Gross electricity generation = Net electricity generation + Own use consumption.
(Net electricity generation is the amount of electricity generated by the power plant that is delivered to the electricity grid during the reporting period).
MWh
Changes or events
60. Indicate any changes or events that affected the reported values for this business or organization, compared with the last reporting period.
Select all that apply.
Specify the other changes or events:
Contact person
61. Statistics Canada may need to contact the person who completed this questionnaire for further information.
Is the provided given names and the provided family name the best person to contact?
Who is the best person to contact about this questionnaire?
Feedback
62. How long did it take to complete this questionnaire?
Include the time spent gathering the necessary information.
63. Do you have any comments about this questionnaire?