[Japan] Mitsubishi Heavy Industries’ Turboden will Deliver an Organic Rankine Cycle Power Generation System to the Meadow Lake Tribal Council in Saskatchewan, Canada

On February 10, 2020, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries’ (MHI) subsidiary Turboden, a manufacturer based in Bersica, Italy that specializes in Organic Rankine Cycle (ORC) systems that produce electric and thermal power[1], announced that it would deliver an 8MW ORC power generation system to the Meadow Lake Tribal Council (MLTC) in Saskatchewan, Canada. The system will be fueled by sawmill residual wood biomass.

MTLC is a tribal council representing nine First Nation band governments in Saskatchewan. Multiple native inhabitant groups reside in the tribal area which is located near Meadow Lake in the northwestern area of the province. The ORC system will be funded by both the Canadian federal government and the Saskatchewan government as a part of the MLTC’s local development program. Approximately 5,000 households in the region will be supplied with a total of 6.6 MW of carbon neutral baseload electricity. In addition to electricity, the heat generated by this system will be supplied to NorSask sawmill’s lumber dry kiln and buildings, which is expected to reduce natural gas consumption. The NorSask Sawmill is Canada’s largest sawmill.

Although it was originally established in 1980 by professors at the Polytechnic University of Milan, Turboden was acquired by MHI in 2013. In 2016, Turboden signed a contract with Daiichi Jitsugyo (Headquarter: Tokyo, Japan), a general machinery trading company[2], to promote the marketing of its products. Since then, Daiichi Jitsugyo has become its sales distributor in Japan.[3]


[1] https://www.turboden.com/company/1058/about-us

[2] https://www.djk.co.jp/company/outline.html

[3] https://www.mhi.com/jp/news/story/200210.html