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Impact on Economy and Montana
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Energy projects move ahead despite downturn
October 19, 2008 by Matthew Brown in Great Falls Tribune
October 19, 2008 by Matthew Brown in Great Falls Tribune
Financing prospects for large-scale energy projects in Montana have dimmed with the crisis on Wall Street, but some that already are under way should proceed as planned, state officials and developers said. ...Gov. Brian Schweitzer told The Associated Press in a recent interview that several companies assured him their projects will not be derailed by the downturn. Still, he cautioned that the recent heady pace of development could end if the economic outlook remains grim and banks stay reluctant — or unable — to make large loans.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy]
County Road Dept. to receive $100,000 from wind farm impact fees payment
August 19, 2008 by LeAnne Kavanagh in Glacial Reporter
August 19, 2008 by LeAnne Kavanagh in Glacial Reporter
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies]
Glacier County Commissioners are discussing how to use nearly $190,000 in impact fees from a planned wind farm near Cut Bank.
Commissioners were supposed to approve allocation of the fees June 9, but a decision was tabled until Glacier County attorney Larry Epstein could attend the meeting, according to the Cut Bank Pioneer Press.
Lighting up Montana with wind power is easier said than done
April 1, 2007 by Jan Falstad in Billings Gazette
April 1, 2007 by Jan Falstad in Billings Gazette
Because NorthWestern operates the transmission lines, the utility must meet federal reliability standards. That means keeping the power entering the system balanced with the demand, or electricity leaving the system.
You might imagine wind power as a child playing with a light switch: On. Off. On. Off.
That means NorthWestern must quickly dump or add power to balance its transmission lines.
When the turbines at Judith Gap produce too much power, NorthWestern sells it back mainly to Idaho Power, sometimes below cost, according to former Royal Johnson, a Billings businessman, a former state senator and a member of The Gazette editorial board.
When there isn't enough wind, NorthWestern may have to pay a premium, Johnson said, of up to $130 per megawatt hour. .........Montana has tons of proposed power projects cued up, Gates said, but one project depends on the other.
"They need transmission built, and the question is which gets built first," Gates said. "So it's the chicken-and-the-egg thing."
Another note of caution was sounded by Bill Drummond, who heads the Western Montana Generation and Transmission. His customers buy wholesale power from BPA, but those contracts run out in four years. Drought and rising demand is tapping the hydropower resources, so BPA is keeping its supply for its closest customers.
Right now there are few sellers of electricity to back up wind power, Drummond said.
"Faith-based power marketing is a dangerous thing," he said.
Also filed under [
General|
Energy Policy]
Jan Falstad said that wind had gone from being "technologically challenged and too expensive - to being a popular and mandated goal." Perhaps more accurately, it should have read, "Wind has gone from being technically challenged and too expensive - to being technically challenged, mandated and taxpayer subsidized."
Also filed under [
General|
Tax Breaks & Subsidies]
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