News
Category:
Colorado
Lights out? State faces energy crisis by 2025; Colorado Energy Forum seeking solutions to transmission, generating issues
December 16, 2008 by Forrest Hershberger in Journal-Advocate
December 16, 2008 by Forrest Hershberger in Journal-Advocate
The state needs to come up with nearly 5,000 megawatts of electricity to satisfy the needs of the state by 2025 ...Northeast Colorado has been rightly billed as a wind energy mecca. The problem is wind energy cannot be the end-all, according to Sonnenberg. Supporting a statement made earlier by CREA Executive Director Ray Clifton, Sonnenberg said wind energy resources are available only 10 to 35 percent of the time.
"Even if we estimate liberally, we still will not meet the 4,500 megawatts by 2025," he said.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy]
Anschutz moving ahead, Pickens' plan delayed
December 5, 2008 by Cathy Proctor in Denver Business Journal
December 5, 2008 by Cathy Proctor in Denver Business Journal
Despite the recession, Denver oilman Philip Anschutz is moving ahead with his Wyoming wind farm project. ..."Nothing has really changed. We're still pursuing the transmission line and the wind farm," said Jim Monaghan, an Anschutz spokesman. "There's no change in our plans."
Also filed under [
General]
Xcel Energy has asked regulators to increase the amount it can charge consumers to help recover the cost of renewable-energy generation. ...If approved, the increase would take effect Jan. 1 and increase typical residential bills by 33 cents a month.
Also filed under [
Impact on Economy]
A Sunday morning leak in a paint thinner pipe at the Vestas Blades paint building allowed about 20 to 30 gallons of the flammable material to be spilled. ...The spill is believed to be the first of its kind at the $60 million wind turbine blade manufacturing plant located on an 80-acre site in the Great Western Industrial Park.
Also filed under [
Safety]
Grand County planners consider height limits for wind turbines
November 6, 2008 by Tonya Bina in Ski-Hi Daily News
November 6, 2008 by Tonya Bina in Ski-Hi Daily News
Colorado ranks fourth nationwide when it comes to solar and geothermal resources and 11th in terms of wind power generation potential, according to online Renewable Energy World.
It also has untapped hydroelectric and biomass resources. ...The Grand County planning commission is reviewing the allowable height of wind turbine towers.
Currently, the county height restriction allows for a tower of 35 feet.
Guy Larson of the Granby-based alternative energy solutions company Simply Efficient said "the taller the better," when it comes to harnessing wind power.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Details about Colorado State University's proposed wind farm should surface soon as the university proceeds toward applying for the necessary county permits early next year.
That wind farm could include as many as 100 turbines constructed in or near CSU's 9,000-acre Maxwell Ranch property some 25 miles northwest of Fort Collins near the Colorado-Wyoming border.
Also filed under [
General]
Wind turbine environmental impacts will be investigated
September 18, 2008 by Curtis Wackerle in Aspen Daily News
September 18, 2008 by Curtis Wackerle in Aspen Daily News
Bats, not birds, might be more at risk from a wind tower at the top of the Snowmass ski area, according to a local forest service official.
The blades of three potential turbines the Aspen Skiing Co. and the Forest Service are considering placing up from the Big Burn chairlift could be more deadly to bats if the agencies are required to place a light on the tower for aviation purposes, according to Jim Stark, winter recreation supervisor for the White River National Forest. The light could attract insects and therefore bats, he said.
Also filed under [
General]
PSC officials detail upcoming alternative energy line
August 29, 2008 by Adam Goldstein in The Aurora Sentinel
August 29, 2008 by Adam Goldstein in The Aurora Sentinel
Representatives from the Public Service Company of Colorado updated the city's Planning, Economic Development and Redevelopment Policy Committee Aug. 28 on plans for the Pawnee/Smoky Hill Transmission Line, a channel that would enter Aurora from the east just south of Quincy Avenue and end at the Smoky Hill power substation near south Gun Club Road. ...The proposed 345-kilovolt line would replace the current 230-kilovolt line and would originate in rural northeast Colorado, drawing on wind and solar energy sources.
Also filed under [
General]
An experiment to gauge the viability of wind turbines at the top of Snowmass Ski Area is expected to begin by the end of August, according to the U.S. Forest Service.
A 164-foot tower equipped with four anemometers is en route to Snowmass Village and will be placed at the top of the Big Burn to start gathering data on wind speeds ...Nearly everyone agrees that visual impacts should be minimized and that a full-blown wind farm with multiple turbines wouldn't be appropriate. Forest officials also want to keep turbines away from land designated as wilderness, where permanent human presence isn't allowed.
Also filed under [
General]
The wind turbine erected in Wray in February contained a lemon of a power converter that hasn't been able to deliver the promised kilowatts, says Ron Howard, the superintendent of the town's school district that had the clean-energy windmill installed. ...The turbine was praised at a news conference in April featuring House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the congresswoman from San Francisco, and Leah Daughtry, chief executive of the Democratic National Convention Committee, as an example of what carbon credits purchase.
Also filed under [
General]
The eastern Colorado wind turbine tapped for the Democratic National Convention's carbon-offset program has one problem: It doesn't generate any electricity. Convention organizers are now being questioned for their eagerness to market those credits to delegates. ...Despite the fact the wind turbine does not produce energy, that hasn't stopped the district from cashing in on the project. In addition to the carbon credits sold to the DNC and others through NativeEnergy, Howard says the district receives downtime compensation from Americas Wind Energy, Inc., the firm that built the apparatus. "The money that we're making isn't necessarily coming from production," he said.
Also filed under [
General]
Several years ago the Aspen Skiing Co. examined its four ski mountains and concluded that winds on top are just too gusty for wind turbines. Wind is best for producing electricity when it's strong but steady.
But turbines are now strong enough to withstand blasts of 120 mph. If gusts that are even stronger arrive, new designs allow blades to fold.
And so a 165-foot tower with a propeller is soon to be erected atop Snowmass, to better measure the wind potential there.
Also filed under [
General]
Colorado has lost out on a bid for a Vestas Wind Systems research center.
Vestas, which opened a major blade-manufacturing plant earlier this year in Windsor, announced Monday it will locate the research facility in Houston.
Colorado was the other finalist, according to Tom Clark, executive vice president of the Metro Denver Economic Development Corp.
FPL Energy: More to come; Company hosts appreciation banquet for landowners
May 24, 2008 by Carol Barrett in Journal Advocate
May 24, 2008 by Carol Barrett in Journal Advocate
FPL had invited all the landowners with which they currently have leases.
"We just wanted to let people know we haven't forgotten them," said Mary Wells, communications specialist for FPL Energy.
Each guest was given a sheet of paper and asked to write their name and address. At the bottom of the paper was space for comments. Company officials encouraged people to write down their comments, whether good or bad. They were assured that every single comment will be read and considered.
Also filed under [
General]
Windmills that Vail Resorts recently proposed to put at Eagle's Nest atop Vail Mountain are little more than "toys," one energy expert said.
"They would have trouble running a 10th Mountain hut," said Randy Udall, former director of Aspen's Community Office for Resource Efficiency, in an e-mail, referring to the backcountry cabins near Vail. The new proposal significantly downsizes a 2003 plan that would have put four 100-foot-tall, 100-kilowatt windmills on Ptarmigan Ridge above the Back Bowls, creating enough power to run four chairlifts. ...The $400,000 windmills proposed in 2003 would have powered four chairlifts and paid for themselves within a decade, Vail Associates said.
But the company withdrew the proposal shortly after it was proposed. The reasons are unclear, although the Division of Wildlife expressed concerns about dangers to birds. The project would have needed approval from the U.S. Forest Service, which owns most of Vail Mountain.
"We decided not to pursue the 2003 wind turbine proposal for a variety of reasons that seemed relevant and practical at the time," ...
Also filed under [
General]
Wind is in as an alternative energy source, and Larimer County is making provision for those hoping to harness it.
The first step will come on May 12 when the county commissioners consider adopting amendments to the land-use code governing smaller-scale wind generators.
Then in August a separate set of amendments is expected to come before the commissioners, applying to electric transmission lines and power plants. Any larger-scale wind farms also would fall under that broad definition.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
The coal burning power plant at Rawhide constructed 25 years ago provides PRPA with 70 percent of its energy needs.
Of the remaining gap, 17 percent is generated through hydro projects in scattered locations with the remaining 13 percent gained by natural gas, wind and power purchases made from surrounding utilities.
Pending federal carbon tax legislation could make coal plant operations increasingly more costly forcing many utilities, including PRPA, to turn to cleaner, albeit more expensive, energy forms suc wind.
Historically, PRPA has bolstered its renewable portfolio through the purchase of renewable energy credits, or RECs, that allow it to invest in wind farms owned by others who pay for main-tenance and repairs.
If a carbon tax were instituted, PRPA would not get credit for RECs and would only see benefit from its homegrown Medicine Bow wind project built nearly a decade ago. Last year, wind power generated 1 percent of PRPA's total energy, Moeck said. ..."Basically we're becoming more dependent on electricity every day,
Troxell said. "It's not simply the plasma screens and air conditioners, either. We live in a digital world that is powered by electricity ..."
Also filed under [
General|
Energy Policy]
Wind broker Clean and Green goes belly up; Owner closes one business, registers two more
April 13, 2008 by Laura Snider in Daily Camera
April 13, 2008 by Laura Snider in Daily Camera
The company, owned by local Gerry Dameron, has sold renewable energy credits to individuals and businesses across Boulder County ...to allow the companies to offset their electricity use with clean renewable energy. ...Because it's difficult for a customer to know if the money they pay companies like Clean and Green actually make it back to the wind farms, most reputable brokers are certified by a third party.
Dameron decided last fall not to renew third-party certification for his company's wind credits or file the proper annual paperwork with the Colorado Department of State. ...Besides acting as president of Clean and Green, Dameron is also president of Patriot Wind, another local company with the goal to "deliver 50+ successful wind-energy projects to progressive communities in the U.S. over the coming 10 years," according to the company's Web site.
On Friday, the answering machine at Patriot Wind answered, "Hello, you've reached Village Power."
Also filed under [
General]
Working on an object nearly 30 stories high can be a harrowing experience for anyone. For the crews that maintain the wind turbines in southeastern Colorado maintaining a safe working environment is paramount. ...He said one of the prevailing themes from the tour was the necessity of emergency personnel to be in top physical condition when attempting a rescue from a turbine tower. Cook said the rescue personnel have to climb over two hundred feet of stairs with equipment to reach the top of the towers, an exercise that can tire many rescuers and potentially detract from their ability to adequately perform their duties.
Also filed under [
Safety]
Green-e, the company hired by PRPA to track renewable energy credits, said it can't guarantee PRPA funds are actually going to targeted renewable projects.
Renewable Energy Credits are essentially tradable certificates of proof that one kWh of electricity has been generated by a renewable source.
Green-e, owned by the Center for Resource Solutions, audits the sale of renewable energy credits, ensuring that the value green electricity has on the environment is only purchased once through the sale of credits.
But the company cannot verify money going to the owners of renewable energy projects such as Shell is actually being invested in the energy project and not going into the general fund.
Also filed under [
General|
Tax Breaks & Subsidies]
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