Category:
Connecticut
``The problem we're having with all these wind farms is . . . they're proposing to put them in all the worst places," said Thomas W. French , assistant director of the Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife. ``If they could do what the Russell Biomass plant did, which is to find a preexisting, historical industrial district, we'd be applauding them." As part of the ongoing state permitting process for the plant, French's division worked with its developers to reroute proposed power lines to reduce their impact on wildlife.
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Power usage expected to break records, but supply adequate
August 2, 2006 by Gordon Fraser in Eagle Tribune
August 2, 2006 by Gordon Fraser in Eagle Tribune
The New England power grid will have 30,345 megawatts available today - use is expected to peak at a record 28,030 megawatts, even after energy companies have put out a call for people to voluntarily reduce power consumption, she said.
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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New England sets record for energy demand as heat wave continues
July 19, 2006 by Chelsea Phua, Associated Press Writer | in Boston Globe
July 19, 2006 by Chelsea Phua, Associated Press Writer | in Boston Globe
New England recorded its highest power usage in history Tuesday, according to Ken McDonnell, a spokesman for ISO New England, manager of the region's power grid. The peak, reached Tuesday afternoon, was 27,374 megawatts of power, eclipsing the previous record set on July 27, 2005, when usage reached 26,885 megawatts.
Maine's largest energy provider is forecasting record-breaking electricity use this summer, as well as a need for additional supply lines to feed an ever-increasing demand.
But a solution planned by ISO New England -- which manages electricity distribution in Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont -- is being met with skepticism by Maine officials, who question the proposal's need and fairness.
Regional leaders discuss energy at governors, premiers conference
May 13, 2006 by Eric Tucker, Associated Press in The Standard Times
May 13, 2006 by Eric Tucker, Associated Press in The Standard Times
Lee also warned that renewable energy sources, though desirable, were not a "silver bullet" solution. "It does leave an environmental footprint," Lee said, noting that wind energy and solar energy take up large areas of land, making it difficult to find a place to put them, especially in densely populated parts of the world.
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Northeast could see shocking rise in electric rates
May 5, 2006 by Evan Lehmann, Transcript Washington Bureau in The Transcript
May 5, 2006 by Evan Lehmann, Transcript Washington Bureau in The Transcript
WASHINGTON — Electricity rates threaten to follow the path of gas prices: Up.
ISO New England, the region's grid operator, is gaining support for a plan to raise electricity rates by $5 billion over four years, beginning in December. Rates would continue to rise at an undetermined click after that.
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.
NEW LONDON, Conn. - Is the answer to the world´s energy issues blowing in the wind? Representatives of three energy groups will try to answer that question at a panel discussion Wednesday, April 19, at Connecticut College.
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The president of Connecticut Light & Power Co. urged lawmakers Tuesday to partially reverse the state's deregulation of the power industry, saying consumers will get better rates if his company is again allowed to run some of its own generating plants.
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When it comes to energy, town wants a clean fight
February 9, 2006 by Caroline D. Porter in Record-Journal
February 9, 2006 by Caroline D. Porter in Record-Journal
CHESHIRE — The town may compete with the town of Bethany, just to the west, in an effort to spur residents to commit to using at least some electricity from renewable sources.
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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.
MIT team analyzes wind energy potential in Northeast
December 21, 2005 by Nancy Stauffer, Laboratory for Energy and the Environment in MIT News Office
December 21, 2005 by Nancy Stauffer, Laboratory for Energy and the Environment in MIT News Office
There's more to determining the value of wind power than knowing which way the wind blows -- or even how hard.
MIT researchers studying winds off the Northeast coast have found that estimating the potential environmental benefits from wind and other renewables requires a detailed understanding of the dynamics of both renewable resources and conventional power generation.
Data show that wind-energy facilities would generate far more electricity in winter, because that's when winds are strongest. But the need for electricity is greatest in summer, when air conditioners are going full blast.
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Seven U.S. states sign CO2 plan in break with Bush
December 21, 2005 by Timothy Gardner, Reuters in The Union Tribune
December 21, 2005 by Timothy Gardner, Reuters in The Union Tribune
NEW YORK – Seven northeastern U.S. states have signed the country's first plan to create a market for heat-trapping carbon dioxide by curbing emissions at power plants, New York Gov. George Pataki said Tuesday.
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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KeySpan vows there'll be no shortages of gas for heat
December 3, 2005 by Peter J. Howe, Globe Staff in The Boston Globe
December 3, 2005 by Peter J. Howe, Globe Staff in The Boston Globe
The head of New England's biggest natural gas utility promised yesterday that homes and businesses across the region will face no shortage of gas for heating this winter.
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New England is possessed of much talent but looses a considerable portion of it to other states due to the regions relative weakness in providing for a reasonable priced cost of living even though taxes do not appear to be a competitive disadvantage to New England.
New England Energy Alliance Report Cites Major Challenges in All Parts of New England Energy Infrastructure; Diverse Coalition of Companies and Organizations Form Regional Energy Alliance
November 9, 2005 in home.businesswire.com
November 9, 2005 in home.businesswire.com
New England faces major near-term challenges in all parts of its energy infrastructure including natural gas facilities, electric transmission lines and electric power generation, according to a report released today by the New England Energy Alliance.
Memo from the Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities Chairman, Paul Hibbard, to the ISO New England. Chairman Hibbard expresses his concerns over the push to regionalize costs for building expensive transmission lines to service renewable projects (wind) built far from load centers. Current FERC rules are unclear on how to justify distribution of the costs across all ratepayers within the region unless it can be shown such transmission is needed to ensure the reliability and integrity of the grid.
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