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Meanwhile, lawmakers are trying to pass House Bill 1273 and the bill says that money given by wind energy farms to wealthy districts need to be part of "Robin Hood." "Robin Hood" will then distribute the money through out other districts.
Now some school districts in the Big Country can be heavily affected if House Bill 1273 passes.
Also filed under [
Texas]
'Is it worth it?' Experts eye economics of wind power
August 17, 2009 by Tom Morton in Casper Start-Tribune
August 17, 2009 by Tom Morton in Casper Start-Tribune
Transmitting electricity over hundreds of miles to market constrains wind energy development, speakers told 600 participants at a conference at the University of Wyoming last week.
So do local, state and federal regulation; and taxation issues, they said.
But Laura Ladd, energy economics advisor to Gov. Dave Freudenthal, noted a major omission to that list.
"Nowhere in here did we hear of economics as a constraint," Ladd said.
Also filed under [
Wyoming]
Billions of dollars in upgrades to Alberta's power transmission network will hit consumers in the pocketbook.
The province's electrical operator says the average consumer will see power bills go up by $8 a month to pay for the first phase of projects, which have an estimated price tag of $8.1 billion.
Also filed under [
Canada]
Bluewater Wind says a deal on wind farm is reached
September 13, 2007 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
September 13, 2007 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
Bluewater Wind will build 150 energy-producing turbines off the coast of Rehoboth Beach by about 2014 at an estimated cost of $1.6 billion, according to a statement released this afternoon by Bluewater. ...Bluewater spokesman Jim Lanard put it more bluntly: "Our biggest concern is that Delmarva has a secret black box they may use to try to blow up the process."
Delmarva would pay 10.59 cents per kilowatt hour for the wind energy, McGonigle wrote. That's 1.05 cents higher than Bluewater's original bid.
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
Delaware]
BPU rates lowest in Kansas thanks to coal energy
January 19, 2008 by Anne Hassler in The McPherson Sentinel
January 19, 2008 by Anne Hassler in The McPherson Sentinel
Wind energy and coal plants are two buzz phrases seeing plenty of play in Kansas newspapers lately. The perception seems to be wind and solar power are the cleaner alternative over coal, but coal, according BPU General Manager Rick Anderson, is what makes BPU's rates the lowest in Kansas.
"BPU has a contractual arrangement with Westar Energy to provide electricity from our turbine generators and in turn Westar provides us with our energy," Anderson said.
The arrangement has kept BPU's average rates to 3.8 cents per kWh, well below the average of 8.1 cents for nationally publicly owned utilities and 7.6 for Kansas publicly owned utilities. ...House of Representatives Speaker Melvin Neufeld touched on the need for a sound energy policy in his 2008 Republican Legislative Vision speech.
"Alternative energies like wind and solar power can play an important role in our state's energy portfolio, but the simple fact is wind turbines and sunshine alone cannot meet our growing demand for electricity," Neufeld said.
Also filed under [
Kansas]
The government's new plans to get power from sustainable sources are being slammed by some business leaders.
The government says it wants "wind and water power" rather than coal and gas energy but the business leaders say it is not necessarily the cheaper option. ...
"Sometimes frankly it doesn't rain and the wind doesn't blow and if that's going to be the case what are going to do to keep the lights on come 2025," O'Reilly says.
And despite the government's claims renewable energy will be cheaper for all of us in the long term, the cost of a carbon emissions trading scheme alone is likely to increase power bills and there's no hard evidence windfarms can combat that.
Also filed under [
Australia / New Zealand]
California renewables push could drive up prices in Oregon
September 15, 2009 by Ted Sickinger in The Oregonian
September 15, 2009 by Ted Sickinger in The Oregonian
California's push to supersize its renewable energy standards could drive electricity rates higher for Northwest consumers, strain the west's transmission and hydroelectric systems, and create a host of thorny policy issues.
The California Assembly passed a pair of bills Friday to create the nation's most aggressive renewable energy mandate. It would require utilities to meet one third of their customers' needs with green energy such as wind, solar and geothermal by 2020.
Also filed under [
California|
Oregon]
Challenges emerge for wind power
July 12, 2006 by Chris Mulick, Herald Olympia bureau in Tri-City Herald
July 12, 2006 by Chris Mulick, Herald Olympia bureau in Tri-City Herald
A series of factors -- including increasing demand for wind farms, rising costs for materials and the weakening U.S. dollar -- have driven up construction prices.
At the same time, Northwest dams don't have enough remaining flexibility to supplement and smooth the up and down generation patterns of new wind farms.
European power companies are making billions of euros in excess profits in the European Union's battle to beat global warming by cutting emissions of carbon gases, and consumers are paying for it, economists say.
The electricity generators are given, free of charge, permits to emit millions of tonnes of carbon dioxide which are currently worth around 20 euros a tonne, but are then charging consumers as if they had been made to pay for the permits.
Michael Grubb, Chief Economist at the Carbon Trust and Director of Climate Strategies, calculates that this practice which he says is economically justifiable gives the industry windfall profits of some 20 billion euros ($27.14 billion) a year.
"It is free money," he told Reuters. "It's how you'd expect companies to behave, but politically and morally it is going to be hard to justify making so much money out of a scheme designed to reduce emissions - with consumers footing the bill."
Coalition of Citizens File Anti-Trust Complaint With the Department Of Justice Against the Wind Energy Industry
April 25, 2007 by Bradley E, Jones in IWA
April 25, 2007 by Bradley E, Jones in IWA
A grass roots coalition of nearly 100 citizens from New York, Vermont, and other states have filed a federal Anti-Trust Complaint alleging that an international cartel comprised of foreign and domestic business entities have conspired to eliminate competition in the newly emerging U.S. wind energy sector.
"Our analysis finds that there are no insurmountable legal, economic or technical barriers to withdrawing from ISO-NE," he said. "Viable alternatives to ISO-NE now exist, such as the formation of a Maine independent transmission company or the creation of a Maine-Canadian Maritimes market."
Adams said the MPUC continues to study both options and will make its recommendations in a final report to the Legislature in January 2008. The preliminary report indicates that the final report will focus on "opportunities" with Canada's Maritime provinces.
Cost works against alternative and renewable energy sources in time of recession
March 28, 2009 by Matthew L. Wald in New York Times
March 28, 2009 by Matthew L. Wald in New York Times
Windmills and solar panel arrays have become symbols of America's growing interest in alternative energy. Yet as Congress begins debating new rules to restrict carbon dioxide emissions and promote electricity produced from renewable sources, an underlying question is how much more Americans will be willing to pay to harness the wind and the sun.
Also filed under [
USA]
Credit crunch, lower natural gas, transmission congestion put brakes on wind power
November 17, 2008 by Jim Fuquay in Star-Telegram
November 17, 2008 by Jim Fuquay in Star-Telegram
When investor Boone Pickens put a hold on a huge wind power project in the Texas Panhandle that he had announced in the spring, he wasn't alone.
A number of wind power developers and researchers say the ongoing credit crisis, together with transmission congestion in West Texas and falling natural gas prices, will slow the state's breakneck expansion of wind capacity. ...But there also is a peculiar wrinkle in wind power's finance that makes the current environment doubly challenging.
"Most wind projects in the U.S. are funded by investors with an appetite for tax benefits," said David Groberg, vice president of Invenergy Wind, a Chicago-based company with 690 megawatts of wind capacity in Texas.
Also filed under [
Texas]
An energy plan that would draw electricity from a natural gas-powered plant and an offshore wind farm in Sussex County could be a net loss for consumers, critics said Thursday.
The proposal, issued by the Public Service Commission on Wednesday, would bring the nation's first offshore wind farm to the coast of Delaware. But it also calls for construction of a 177-megawatt natural gas turbine in Sussex County at a site east of Bridgeville to help balance erratic transmissions from the wind farm.
And that, said Sen. Harris B. McDowell III, D-Wilmington North, is a costly combination.
Critics say DWP risks lockout in looming green energy grab
October 19, 2008 by Kerry Cavanaugh in Contra Costa Times
October 19, 2008 by Kerry Cavanaugh in Contra Costa Times
Unless the DWP moves quickly to lock in contracts with alternative energy providers, it risks paying exponentially higher rates for green power to meet a 2010 deadline to double its renewable energy supply.
Despite assurances from the Department of Water and Power, some city leaders are skeptical the utility will be able to meet and sustain the 20 percent renewable energy mandate set by Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. ...customers are already paying more to cover the transition to green power. The DWP can and has tacked on a surcharge of as much as 4 percent a year to customer bills to cover renewable energy and natural gas expenses.
Also filed under [
California]
Data to show likely costs of wind farm; Consumer price analysis to take longer
September 13, 2007 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
September 13, 2007 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
Friday is the deadline for Delmarva Power to release details of agreements with three power companies to provide stable-priced electricity for the next 25 years. Homeowners, environmentalists and state officials are awaiting data to see if the wind farm will offer a competitive price, as well as whether the wind farm will be big enough to make a sizable contribution to the state's electricity supply. ...
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
Delaware]
A draft utility industry analysis of comprehensive climate change legislation awaiting Senate floor action concludes that the bill would sharply raise electricity prices, force many utilities to switch from coal-fired generation to natural gas, and impose an average cost of $1,500 on every U.S. household beginning in 2015. ...Fuel-switching by 2020 would increase natural gas wellhead prices by 22% above projected levels, while prices for coal, which now produces roughly half of all electricity, would fall to 30% by that year as more than 37% of existing coal-fired generation would be retired, CRA said.
Also filed under [
USA]
Electric customers to pay 24¢ on bill for wind projects
August 15, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
August 15, 2008 by Aaron Nathans in The News Journal
A Delmarva Power consultant estimates that three land-based wind contracts will cost residential customers the equivalent of 24 cents more a month over the life of the contracts.
The estimate was part of a package of financial information Delmarva has submitted to the Public Service Commission, which will consider approval of the company's land-based wind power contracts in the coming months.
Also filed under [
Delaware]
EnBW says windmill owners to follow Babcock's lead and sell
April 8, 2009 by Nicholas Comfort in Bloomberg News
April 8, 2009 by Nicholas Comfort in Bloomberg News
Energie Baden-Wuerttemberg AG, Germany's third-biggest utility, says financial investors in the country's wind parks will follow a move by Babcock & Brown Ltd. and begin selling assets this year.
"Investors are coming together to force sales," Dirk Guesewell, managing director at the utility's renewable energy unit, said in an interview in Frankfurt yesterday. "The small guys are saying ‘just get out'."