Category:
Connecticut
Significant New England Energy Alliance Survey Results
April 26, 2007 by New England Energy Alliance Press Release in Earth Times
April 26, 2007 by New England Energy Alliance Press Release in Earth Times
New England Energy Alliance Survey Finds Consumer Concern about Future Electricity Supplies, Desire to Choose Electricity Supplier and Support for Addressing Global Warming
The New England Council and the New England Energy Alliance Outline Support for Nuclear Power in New England
April 11, 2006 in Business Wire
April 11, 2006 in Business Wire
If New England's nuclear energy plants had to be replaced by other non-emitting sources of electricity to meet the RGGI goals, the region would be looking at large-scale wind projects, with weather-dependent output, spread over some 650,000 acres of land or water at a cost of more than $10 billion.
This is the perfect feel-good legislation for lawmakers, and they get double green stamps for this one because it also seems to gin up their environmental credentials. But as a practical matter, no state prisons are in Litchfield County where the U.S. Department of Energy says Connecticut's best breezes blow. To be sure, the wind is fierce at times in Cheshire, but conditions can be deathly still in the dog days of summer, when turbines would be reduced to gigantic lawn ornaments and expensive lightning rods.
Also filed under [
General]
Energy efficiency is by no means a permanent solution, but it should be a permanent part of the solution. Sensible energy use, combined with new power resources, is the only workable answer for New England.
WORCESTER— Absent interest in lower-priced fuels, New Englanders should brace for continued high electricity prices, the byproduct of a regional system heavily dependent on oil, natural gas and coal, the head of the region’s power grid said yesterday.
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Bigger states balk at chipping in for N.H. transmission lines
August 1, 2008 by Chris Dornin in New Hampshire Business Review
August 1, 2008 by Chris Dornin in New Hampshire Business Review
Governors of the six New England states met July 9 for their New England Governors Conference meeting in Boston to discuss energy and try to forge, among other things, an agreement on funding new transmission lines to bring electricity from remote wind and biomass power plants in Vermont, Maine and New Hampshire to the urban centers on the Eastern Seaboard.
The state chief executives met in private for what was reported to be some free and candid bargaining, but participants later confirmed that New Hampshire will likely have to go it alone if it wants expand transmission capability in Coos County in order to make renewable energy projects with a total of between 300 and 400 megawatts a reality.
The Optiwind company cleared what was likely its biggest hurdle toward the eventual construction of a 199-foot wind turbine Wednesday night as the city's Planning and Zoning Commission granted it a special zoning exception.
The proposal was unanimously approved with little discussion from the commission and no public comment.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
BRIDGEPORT - Planned developments around the city, such as the $1.2 billion redesign of the Steel Point peninsula, may include new energy efficient technologies. During a meeting Monday in City Hall Annex, officials - including Mayor John M. Fabrizi and state Sen. Bill Finch, D-Bridgeport - heard about energy efficient and environmentally friendly options and resources from several sources. Rina Bakalar, Bridgeport's director of central grants, said the city is planning to pursue the use of "green" technology.
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General|
Zoning/Planning]
The city on Thursday announced it is taking legal action against Southern California Edison in order to prevent tall wind power lines from cutting through the city.
The announcement was made at a press conference and rally held by the city and CARE (Citizens for the Alternate Routing of Electricity) ..."Under the existing agreements, the proposed power lines are too large and violate the agreements. Plain and simple - we do not believe that Southern California Edison has the legal right to place 198 foot transmission poles within a 150-foot right-of-way. We are suing Southern California Edison to prove this point."
Also filed under [
General]
NEW YORK, Oct 6 (Reuters) - Connecticut Light and Power Co. this week issued a request for proposals to purchase additional power for its customers for parts of 2007 through 2009.
CL&P, a subsidiary of Northeast Utilities (NU.N: Quote, Profile, Research), of Berlin, Connecticut, said in a release it expected to pre-qualify the bidders by Oct. 16, with bids due Oct. 30.
State utility regulators want to announce the new rates for 2007 on Dec. 1.
As required by state law, winning suppliers must deliver 7.5 percent of their supply from renewable sources, such as solar, wind or biomass in 2007.
Also filed under [
General]
Comments to FERC by the New England Conference of Public Utility Commissions and the Vermont Department of Public Service
After briefly wavering, Governor M. Jodi Rell of Connecticut yesterday agreed to sign onto a multistate greenhouse gas pact that Massachusetts and Rhode Island rejected Wednesday.
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Energy Policy|
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...the MEA Report can be used to estimate the value (avoided emissions) of Renewable Energy Certificates (REC) by providing both REC suppliers and stakeholders with information that can be used to communicate the environmental benefits of RECs and works to enhance the overall REC marketplace.
Editor's Note: As noted below under Methodology [emphasis added], this report appears to substantiate the point that wind energy would not backdown "baseload" generation.
Editor's Note: As noted below under Methodology [emphasis added], this report appears to substantiate the point that wind energy would not backdown "baseload" generation.
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Emissions, regulation, siting among legislative priorities in Northeast
July 6, 2007 by Corina Rivera in SNLi
July 6, 2007 by Corina Rivera in SNLi
Legislators in the Northeast and mid-Atlantic passed a number of bills applying to the electric power industry, with several states committing to emissions reductions through the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative and other states making broad organizational changes to their regulatory processes.
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Energy Policy|
Delaware|
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Energy challenges on horizon regarding demand and supply
May 12, 2008 in Worcester Telegram and Gazette
May 12, 2008 in Worcester Telegram and Gazette
The [New England] region's power system has had a long history of dependability, but electricity costs have been an issue for businesses and residents for decades. As the region plans ahead, New England's policymakers face a series of decisions that will have an abiding impact on our energy future. ...Economic, reliability and environmental goals are not always perfectly aligned when it comes to electricity generation and transmission. Whatever path policymakers choose to take will require trade-offs. How New England officials balance these sometimes conflicting goals will demonstrate our priorities, impact the regional economy and determine which objectives we can realistically achieve.
Energy officials: Supply looks good Flurry of power plant plans may ease crunch
October 1, 2006 by Mark Jewell, Associated Press in Concord Monitor
October 1, 2006 by Mark Jewell, Associated Press in Concord Monitor
Under the agreement, ISO New England will project regional power needs three years in advance and hold annual auctions to buy power resources, including new and existing power plants. Incentives would encourage private operators to respond to power system emergencies, and operators that don't make extra capacity available would face penalties.
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Energy Policy|
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New Hampshire|
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Vermont]
Flurry of power plant proposals offers hope
September 25, 2006 by Peter J. Howe, Globe Staff in Boston Globe
September 25, 2006 by Peter J. Howe, Globe Staff in Boston Globe
After years of warning that New England's electric grid was on the brink of having to impose Third World-style rolling blackouts, top power officials now cautiously predict the region may have enough power for the near future.
Since February, thanks to recent policy changes, proposals for 21 new power plants that could deliver enough electricity for about 3 million homes have come before regional power grid administrators. Those include a $1.5 billion NRG Energy Inc. plan for multiple new generators in Connecticut and a single generator that would burn methane gas from a dump in Westminster, near Fitchburg.
The Holyoke -based organization that runs the six-state power grid and wholesale markets, Independent System Operator New England, plans to discuss the projects in a two-day Boston conference starting today .
Fresh Breeze For Wind Project - Bush Gives Momentum To Alternative Energy
February 4, 2006 by David Funkhouser, Staff Writer in Hartford Current
February 4, 2006 by David Funkhouser, Staff Writer in Hartford Current
NEW HAVEN -- The head of Cape Wind Associates, the company that wants to plant the first offshore wind farm in the United States in Nantucket Sound, hopes his project will get a boost from President Bush's remarks promoting alternative energy in his State of the Union speech this week.
A proposed wind turbine on the grounds of the Woodridge Lake sewage treatment plant on Brush Hill Road might get a second wind, as the application is scheduled to be resubmitted to the Planning and Zoning Commission Tuesday.
The turbine is being proposed by Optiwind, a Torrington company that bills its wind-energy equipment as "smaller, cheaper and more aesthetically pleasing" than typical three- pronged turbines used on large wind farms in states like California and Texas.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
The Goshen Planning and Zoning Commission heard comments regarding the application by Optiwind, a Torrington based company, to erect the turbine on Brushy Hill Road. Optiwind was turned down previously, with the commission citing the lack of information relating to the impact of the turbine on area home values and the absence of noise data for the proposed structure.
Optiwind presented testimony from experts and company officials in support of its application.
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Zoning/Planning]
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