Category:
Delaware
Bluewater Wind launches research ship; vessel to study impact on birds
March 29, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
March 29, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
Bluewater officials showed off the company's million-dollar investment today, chartering a vessel that will head out to sea this week.
The vessel will start a 75-day study of bird activity in the area 11.7 miles off Rehoboth Beach, where the company's wind farm would be built. The studies will help determine the possible impact of 150 turbines on avian life. ...Delmarva has contended it doesn't need the power from the wind farm, and that a combination of transmission and conservation can ensure the area's electricity future. The company says offshore wind technology would result in higher rates for its customers.
Delmarva also says it can satisfy state renewable power purchase rules by buying less expensive onshore wind power
Also filed under [
General|
Impact on Birds]
Delaware Electric Cooperative customers could soon be buying wind power.
The cooperative, and its Virginia-based supplier, announced Tuesday they were joining Delmarva Power in its quest for land-based wind power.
It's unclear how much wind power the cooperative, which serves 72,000 member-customers, would purchase. Unlike Delmarva, the cooperative is not required by state law to buy renewable power. ...Land-based wind power can be competitive on price with traditional fuels once a federal production tax credit is taken into account, said Brian Yerger, a Wilmington-based alternative-energy research analyst at Jesup & Lamont Securities.
But Yerger added that it costs more to transmit that wind power from afar.
Also filed under [
General|
Energy Policy]
They ran tight on time, but the House Energy and Natural Resources Committee, on Wednesday, March 12, approved a resolution that could get the ball rolling again for Bluewater Wind's stalled wind farm project. ...Another resolution regarding the wind farm also cleared the committee. House Concurrent Resolution 40, sponsored by Hocker, would have the cost of the project spread across all electricity rate users in the state.
"Delmarva Power cannot support House Concurrent Resolution 38 because it unfairly singles out Delmarva Power customers only for both the benefits and the significant cost of this project, which we believe all of Delaware should support. "We do support House Concurrent Resolution 40 ..."
Also filed under [
Energy Policy]
House has next say on wind farm; Panel seeks to spread power costs
March 13, 2008 by Jeff Montgomery in The News Journal
March 13, 2008 by Jeff Montgomery in The News Journal
Legislation to force the state to approve a proposed offshore wind farm to generate electricity was sent to the full House late Wednesday, after a committee hearing dominated by supporters of a 150-turbine project east of Rehoboth Beach.
But the Energy and Natural Resources Committee also approved a measure calling for another bill that would spread Bluewater Wind's electricity costs beyond Delmarva Power's customers to all state electricity customers, a provision many believe would kill Bluewater's project.
Prospects for quick action on either measure, House Concurrent Resolution 38 or HCR 4, was unclear. A Senate committee has been holding its own hearings on costs and alternatives to Bluewater's project since February, with a report expected in April.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
Zoning/Planning]
Regional pollution plan lags; Del. facing June 30 deadline for legislation
March 12, 2008 by Jeff Montgomery in The News Journal
March 12, 2008 by Jeff Montgomery in The News Journal
Whirling debate over a proposed offshore wind farm helped to chop up hopes Monday for broad agreement on Delaware's version of a multistate greenhouse gas control plan.
Although rarely mentioned directly, the push for wind turbines off Delaware's coast plainly figured in disputes over how to invest an estimated $53 million to $209 million in proceeds by 2014 from the sale of power plant "allowances" for carbon dioxide emissions.
Delaware agreed in 2005 to join the 10-state Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, a program to cap and then reduce the amount of heat-trapping pollution released by large electricity generators across the Northeast.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy]
The House Energy and Natural Resources Committee voted to release House Concurrent Resolutions 38 & 40 to the full House for a vote.
Last December Controller Russ Larson, who represents the General Assembly, lead the vote to table a decision on the proposed wind farm project that would sit 11.5 miles off the coast of Rehoboth Beach. HCR 38, if passed by the full House, would direct Larson to approve the project on their behalf.
HCR 40 would spread the $1.6 billion cost of the wind farm to all Delaware energy users
Also filed under [
Energy Policy]
Bluewater: Wind farm will cut use of fossil fuels
March 8, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
March 8, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
A physics argument broke out at Friday's hearing on the Bluewater Wind contract. When a wind farm powers up, which plants power down?
Bluewater Wind officials said Friday that in the congested Delmarva Peninsula, it will be area fossil-fuel plants. Area residents will realize a direct environmental and health benefit, they said.
But Delmarva Power officials said the benefits will be diluted throughout the 13-state PJM electrical grid, and would have its biggest impact on oil-burning plants, not generators that use the notoriously dirty-burning coal. ...Citing a PJM Interconnection official who spoke at the hearings, they contended environmental benefits of an offshore wind farm would be spread throughout the grid. It wouldn't be coal that would go first, but more-expensive fossil fuels such as oil, said company spokesman Bill Yingling.
Also filed under [
Technology|
Energy Policy]
Senator calls wind hearings a sham; Bluewater supporters see setup to kill project
March 7, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
March 7, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
A Senate committee chairman faced criticism Thursday for surprising Public Service Commission representatives with a grilling by a Washington lawyer over the Bluewater Wind contract.
The Senate Energy and Transit Committee, led by Sen. Harris B. McDowell III, D-Wilmington North, held a hearing Wednesday at Legislative Hall over a long-term contract for Delmarva Power to buy offshore wind power from Bluewater Wind. McDowell has generally been critical of the project.
But instead of lawmakers asking most of the questions, McDowell's committee hired attorney Randall Speck, who asked detailed questions of PSC officials for more than 2 1/2 hours. McDowell was authorized by the Democratic leadership to spend up to $35,000 on legal fees.
Also filed under [
General]
The attorney, Randall Speck, was hired by the Senate Energy and Transit Committee, led by Sen. Harris B. McDowell III, D-Wilmington, who has been holding hearings to examine whether there are lower-cost ways for the state to buy renewable power. Wednesday's hearing was the first to deal specifically with the Bluewater Wind contract, of which McDowell has generally been critical.
Speck, whose résumé includes helping states with electrical deregulation and its after-effects, veered into familiar lines of questioning from critics of the offshore wind power contract.
Also filed under [
General]
N.J. utility weighs offshore wind farm; Bids may complicate similar plan in Del.
March 5, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
March 5, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
New Jersey's largest power supplier is competing with Bluewater Wind and a group of commercial fishing companies for the right to build a wind farm off the coast of the Garden State.
PSEG announced this week that its renewable generation division, and a partner company, Winergy Power Holdings, has bid to build a 96-turbine wind farm off the coast of Cape May and Atlantic counties. The company said it would be 16 miles offshore. ...The results of the bidding competition could have implications for the proposed wind farm off the Delaware coast. Bluewater proposed building a regional hub for offshore wind turbine construction in Delaware, but if a different company wins the New Jersey bidding, the hub may lose out on that business.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
New Jersey]
No action likely on wind farm until April; Lawmakers want results of hearing before vote
February 15, 2008 by Jeff Montgomery in The News Journal
February 15, 2008 by Jeff Montgomery in The News Journal
A House Democratic appeal for faster action on a proposed $1.6 billion offshore wind farm got little traction Thursday, with House Republicans terming any concrete action unlikely before springtime.
"I think some of them are waiting until Harris McDowell has finished up his hearings" in March, said House Speaker Terry R. Spence, R-Stratford.
Senate Energy & Transit Committee Chairman Harris B. McDowell III, D-Wilmington North, began a series of hearings on Bluewater Wind LLC's proposed 150-turbine wind project east of Rehoboth Beach this month, with a report due in early April. ...Estimates say the project may initially add $13 to $14 per month to Delmarva's standard-offer customer bills, but could decline to break even with current rates after 2025 if natural gas prices increase significantly. Spreading the cost to other Delmarva or state electricity customers could lower rate impacts to $7 extra monthly in early years.
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
Energy Policy]
In the meantime, Bluewater Wind continues to make promises to Delaware Lt. Governor, John Carney, who met with company officials recently says, they have an idea for pumping 150-grand into Delaware Tech. "They want to set-up a regional training program here for wind turbine technicians here in Delaware. The commitment to build the regional hub here for installation of the wind farms as well as the training program to provide training for workers to operate and maintain the turbines once they are installed is contingent upon approval of the project."
Also filed under [
Impact on Economy]
A stalled plan for a $1.6 billion offshore wind farm drew more than 100 people to a Senate hearing in Dover on Thursday, with some branding the process a brazen effort to derail the venture and others dismissing wind turbines as a costly mistake.
The comments came during the first of five public hearings on Bluewater Wind LLC's proposal that are scheduled through early March by Senate Energy and Transit Committee Chairman Harris B. McDowell III, D-Wilmington North. ...University of Delaware engineering professor Charles Boncelet said in contrast that offshore wind turbines would still require conventional fuel backup and would drive up consumer costs. A report issued last year estimated that the project could increase Delmarva Power's "standard offer" customer rates by $14 a month at first and more than $6 per month over the long term. Costs could be lower if spread to other Delmarva and Delaware customers.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy]
A stalled plan for a $1.6 billion offshore wind farm drew more than 100 people to a Senate hearing in Dover on Thursday, with some branding the process a brazen effort to derail the venture and others dismissing wind turbines as a costly mistake. ...University of Delaware engineering professor Charles Boncelet said in contrast that offshore wind turbines would still require conventional fuel backup and would drive up consumer costs. A report issued last year estimated that the project could increase Delmarva Power's "standard offer" customer rates by $14 a month at first and more than $6 per month over the long term. Costs could be lower if spread to other Delmarva and Delaware customers.
"Wind power does not help us reduce our dependence on foreign oil, does not reduce our need to build conventional power plants, does not reduce pollution and is more expensive than other choices," Boncelet said.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy]
Hearing on wind power tonight; Critics say gatherings aren't helpful
February 7, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
February 7, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
A controversial set of Senate hearings begins tonight in Dover probing whether other forms of green energy are cheaper than the Bluewater Wind project.
But critics say the organizer, Sen. Harris McDowell III, D-Wilmington, is trying to change the subject after Bluewater was the only renewable energy provider to respond to a state request for proposals last year.
McDowell's Senate Energy and Transit Committee will begin the first of five hearings on renewable energy options tonight at 6:30 in Legislative Hall. Representatives of environmental groups were invited and are expected to speak. ...Sen. Robert Venables, D-Laurel, speaking during vacation in Florida, said he plans to send an assistant to tonight's hearing. He said when Bluewater dropped its price, he wondered whether "there was a lot of money that was stuck on that shouldn't have been stuck on to start with."
"I don't think he's trying to slow it down," Venables said of McDowell. "We consider him more up on these energy issues than anyone else. He's considered one of the experts across the country."
Also filed under [
General|
Energy Policy]
The Senate Energy and Transit Committee will be holding a series of hearings aimed at answering questions that have gone unaddressed during the request-for-proposals process that led to the now-tabled contract between Bluewater Wind and Delmarva Power for an offshore wind farm.
Five hearings are scheduled.
Also filed under [
General]
Pending Delmarva deal, Bluewater pledges Del. center; Facilities would create job opportunities
February 1, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
February 1, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
Bluewater Wind's parent company has pledged to make Delaware the hub of its mid-Atlantic offshore operations if the state approves a long-term wind electricity contract with Delmarva Power. ...Sen. Charles Copeland, R-West Farms, a skeptic of the wind contract, said it was a positive development for a state losing its manufacturing jobs, and a wise move for Bluewater.
Copeland wondered whether Babcock would have decided to make Delaware its center of offshore operations anyway, without the pledge, "but it does solidify it some. ...It's always good during an election year when politicians actually do what the voter is requesting of them," Copeland said.
But he said the announcement was short on specifics, and still doesn't make the project any more affordable for low-income Delaware ratepayers.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
Zoning/Planning]
Delaware would be hub under Bluewater Wind plan
January 31, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
January 31, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
Bluewater Wind's parent company has pledged to make Delaware the hub of its Mid-Atlantic offshore operations if the state approves a long-term wind power contract with Delmarva Power.
Lt. Gov. John Carney requested the promise from Babcock and Brown, an Australia-based global energy and investment company that acquired Bluewater last year. Carney announced today the company had agreed to the pledge.
Also filed under [
General]
Hearings set to see if wind power is the 'greenest' way
January 26, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
January 26, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
A Senate committee is set to start hearings next month on whether Delaware can do better than the Bluewater Wind offshore wind power project.
Bluewater supporters called the hearings a delay tactic. ...McDowell said the purpose of the meetings were "informational."
"These hearings are going to be fair, above board and impartial," McDowell said. "We'll be calling on all parties interested in green energy, including Bluewater Wind, to discuss their ideas." ...Meanwhile, a University of Delaware professor has filed a complaint seeking to halt Delmarva's effort to seek land-based wind power resources. ...Firestone, assistant professor of marine policy at the University of Delaware, said Delmarva should have to wait until after the Bluewater matter is settled before seeking wind power resources for that time period. Firestone said Delmarva President Gary Stockbridge is seeking the on-shore resources as a way to attack the state-mandated process that led to the Bluewater contract.
Also filed under [
General|
Energy Policy]
With a proposed contract for off-shore wind through BlueWater Wind tabled pending more state senate hearings, officials with Delmarva Power and Light (DPL) on Tuesday announced that they will take advantage of the time to explore other options for renewable energy - particularly, on-shore wind energy.
DPL President Gary Stockbridge announced Jan. 22 that the company would begin "reaching out to developers" that day, "asking for a range of options for renewable energy" for a bid period ranging from five to 25 years - that outside date being the term for the proposed contract with BlueWater Wind.
"To date, the only option that has been explored has been the off-shore proposal," Stockbridge said. He referenced a state staff report that indicated the off-shore option would come would a 45 to 55 percent cost premium when compared to on-shore wind-power options.
"Having those options in hand is important before we decide what's best for our customers," he said. "It's our duty to provide the lowest costs for our customers."
Also filed under [
General]
| << Connecticut | Florida >> |
- Options :
- View Archives