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The owner of Montana's largest operating wind farm, near Judith Gap, has proposed adding 35 turbines, which would increase its power-production capacity nearly 40 percent, officials at NorthWestern Energy confirmed.
Invenergy, based in Chicago, has pitched the expansion to NorthWestern, the utility buying the electricity currently produced by the wind farm north of Harlowton in central Montana.
NorthWestern should decide soon whether it wants to buy power that would be produced by the additional turbines, said John Hines, chief supply officer for NorthWestern.
"We're evaluating their offer and looking at it (versus) other electricity portfolio alternatives," he said Thursday.
DEQ approves upgrade of power line between Great Falls, Havre
April 1, 2008 by Karl Puckett in Great Falls Tribune
April 1, 2008 by Karl Puckett in Great Falls Tribune
Major improvements are planned along a deteriorating 74-year-old electricity transmission line between Great Falls and Havre, state and federal officials said Monday.
"It'll keep the lights on," Tom Ring of the state Department of Environmental Quality, said of the upgrades.
A secondary benefit of the upgrade is it could increase capacity for future wind development, said Sam Miller of the Western Area Power Administration, which owns the line. ...The larger line could serve as an interconnect for wind developers seeking access to the federal high-voltage transmission system, he said.
Wind farm developers say their plans are constrained because there's not enough room on existing power lines.
Public Service Commissioner Brad Molnar kicked off his re-election campaign Tuesday in typically feisty fashion, saying he will be battling well-funded opponents who want to "silence" his voice against special interests.
Molnar, a Laurel Republican representing the PSC's southeastern Montana district, said he has spent four years fighting - and sometimes losing - battles on behalf of consumers, voting against actions he says have raised electric and gas rates. ...When asked which "high-ranking politicians" he has exposed as raising utility rates and taxes, Molnar pointed to the federal tax credit for wind power producers. The credit could go to wind power developers in northern Montana that plan to sell power to Canada, thereby using federal tax credits to subsidize power consumed by Canadians, he said.
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies]
PSC to decide on wind charge; Project developers object to NWE's integration costs
March 7, 2008 by Mike Dennison in Billings Gazette
March 7, 2008 by Mike Dennison in Billings Gazette
Small wind power producers in Montana said Thursday that NorthWestern Energy wants to overcharge them for adding their power to the system that serves NorthWestern electricity customers.
Small power project developers said that if the state Public Service Commission doesn't force NorthWestern to come up with a more realistic charge, wind power producers likely will take their business to other states.
"I'm not going to be around, because the free market is going to tell me to go to Idaho," said Russ Doty of Billings, chief executive officer of New World WindPower.
Doty spoke at a PSC hearing Thursday in Helena, where Two Dot Wind of Billings is asking the commission to reject NorthWestern's proposed cost of "integrating" power from Two Dot's wind turbines near Martinsdale and Livingston.
Chamber and CBDC recruiting riders for bus to MATL hearing
March 5, 2008 by LeAnne Kavanagh in Cut Bank Pioneer Press
March 5, 2008 by LeAnne Kavanagh in Cut Bank Pioneer Press
The Cut Bank Development Corporation, Cut Bank Area Chamber of Commerce, Shelby Chamber of Commerce and Pondera County Port Authority have one goal in mind this week. They are all working to recruit enough concerned community members to travel to Great Falls to show their support for the Montana Alberta Tie transmission line.
Together they are organizing buses that will leave from their communities on Tuesday afternoon, March 11, and arrive in Great Falls for the public hearing at 6 p.m. Public hearings on the proposed line are also scheduled in Cut Bank and Conrad on March 12 and March 13.
Proposed Glasgow-area project goes down in size once again
February 24, 2008 by Karl Puckett in Great Falls Tribune
February 24, 2008 by Karl Puckett in Great Falls Tribune
A wind farm proposed in Valley County in northeastern Montana keeps getting smaller, but the developer insists the project isn't dead.
Stephen Wiley of Texas-based GreenHunter Wind Energy LLC, said the company now hopes to construct a 10-megawatt wind farm entirely on private land.
The initial proposal was for a 500-megawatt facility covering 20,000 acres of publicly and privately owned property.
Conservation interests raised concerns because the project was located so close the Bitter Creek Wilderness study area, which is known for its views and wildlife.
GreenHunter scaled its plans back to 170 megawatts and then to 50.
This week, Wiley said the opposition made the larger plans too risky, prompting the third reduction in size to 10 megawatts.
MATL hearings scheduled, Rep. Jones urges supporters to be seen & heard
February 20, 2008 by LeAnne Kavanagh in Cut Bank Pioneer Press
February 20, 2008 by LeAnne Kavanagh in Cut Bank Pioneer Press
Last week, the Montana Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) and U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced they will conduct public hearings on the Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) for the proposed MATL transmission line in Great Falls on March 11, Cut Bank on March 12 and Conrad on March 13.
Jones is hoping to pack the public hearings with people who are supportive of the transmission line and wind energy industry, which he believes, has the potential to infuse millions, if not billions, of dollars into the sagging Hi-Line economy.
The DEQ and DOE are currently taking written comments on the document, which was released to the public Feb. 11, and will continue to do so until March 31.
Impact study released for Montana Alberta Tie
February 12, 2008 by Karl Puckett in Great Falls Tribune
February 12, 2008 by Karl Puckett in Great Falls Tribune
The impact of a proposed Great Falls-to-Alberta power transmission line on farmers and the environment are spelled out in a new study of the project, which state and federal regulators released Monday.
Montanans, concerned about both, had asked for more information.
"The cumulative impact analysis has been upgraded," said Tom Ring of the state Department of Environmental Quality.
Major developments in the regulatory review of what would be the first merchant transmission line between Lethbridge, Alberta, and Great Falls are occurring north and south of the border.
The Montana Alberta Tie Line, which is expected to spawn wind farms in northcentral Montana, would be owned by Tonbridge Corp., a Toronto-based energy firm.
State officials announced Friday that an environmental study of the project would be released for public review sometime next week.
Energy board approves power line between Montana and Lethbridge, Alta.
January 31, 2008 in The Canadian Press
January 31, 2008 in The Canadian Press
The Montana Alberta Tie-Line has been given conditional approval for the 230-kilovolt power line that will import and export electricity between Lethbridge, Alta., and Great Falls, Mont.
The Alberta Energy and Utility Board said in a news release late Thursday afternoon that the Montana company must hold discussions with affected landowners along the approved route "to address the mitigation of specific impacts" on them.
The board also ordered that Montana-Alberta Tie-Line must report back to them about this process by April 30.
The board says it will not issue a permit for the project "until it is satisfied that MATL has satisfied this requirement."
The $129 million project was approved by the National Energy Board last April and the Alberta board was the last step.
Also filed under [
Canada]
Companies vie to harness Norris Hill wind potential
January 10, 2008 by Jodi Hausen in Bozeman Daily Chronicle
January 10, 2008 by Jodi Hausen in Bozeman Daily Chronicle
One of those developers, Madison Valley Renewable Energy LLC, was recently chosen by Montana to use state school trust lands in Madison County for a wind power project, in exchange for a percentage of its gross revenues, said Mike Sullivan, a property management section supervisor with the state Department of Natural Resources and Conservation.
School trust lands, of which there are about 5 million acres in surface lands and more than 6 million in subsurface acres in Montana, are leased in a variety of ways to raise money for public schools. Sullivan oversees commercial leases of the trust lands, which is the smallest yet highest revenue-generating section, he said Wednesday. Other sections provide leases to farmers, ranchers, mineral prospectors and timber harvesters.
The agreement with the state provides the energy company with 4,000 acres in exchange for 3.1 percent of the wind farm's electrical generation revenues, Sullivan said.
"Utilities in Montana are not incentivized for risk. They strive for boring meetings," she quipped, but added that one of the biggest problems with wind energy is that one requires a "firming" source such as hydroelectric or natural gas generators to offset the variability of the wind generation.
NorthWestern buys reserve energy from Washington and Oregon to firm the energy it receives from the Judith Gap wind farm. "It's getting harder to get firming energy. It's a very real problem," she said, meaning that it will cost more in the future. ... She said NorthWestern is going forward with a 500 kv direct-current line, the Northern Lights project, that would be a "superhighway" to Nevada, although the regulatory process involved is time-consuming.
She said northcentral residents have a huge interest in the MATL line but she added that NorthWestern Energy, to which MATL would connect, requires that the wind energy must be firm before it interconnects. "It will be a wind race," she said, for a developer to complete all the requirements.
A wind farm southeast of here started generating power Saturday and could be fully operational by the end of the month. ...Providers of wind power must have a backup source, called "firming power," which MDU has from other sources, to keep transmission lines loaded and energy delivery consistent.
"Wind is a good supplemental, but it just can't be your base load because the wind doesn't always blow," Hanson said.
MDU has researched and tried to get into the wind power business for about 25 years, Hanson said. Those projects, which were to be built and owned by other companies, didn't come to fruition.
A top executive with the owner of the state's largest wind farm - in the area to meet with landowners about leasing land - said Tuesday that the company is planning to build four to six additional wind farms in Montana.
Three of the preferred sites are located between Great Falls and the Canadian border. ...Johan van't Hoff, the president of Tonbridge Power Inc., and Bob Williams of Montana Alberta Tie Ltd. also spoke at the meeting.
Tonbridge owns Montana Alberta Tie, which is developing a 210-mile, $150 million transmission line between Great Falls and Lethbridge, Alberta. Invenergy is one of three wind developers that purchased capacity on the proposed line with the intention of constructing wind farms.
An agreement that could make Valley County the site of one of the most advanced wind farms in the United States is awaiting approval by the Chinese government, according to The Glasgow Courier.
GreenHunter Energy Inc., a Grapevine, Texas-based developer, announced the pending acquisition of interest in People's Republic of China-based MingYang Wind Power, which will soon be one of the largest manufacturers of wind turbines in China, according to the report.
Representatives from Carbon and Albany counties have settled on how to distribute about $600,000 in impact assistance funding expected from a planned wind farm near Medicine Bow.
Most of the money would go to Carbon County, Medicine Bow and Hanna.
Tax credits add wealth to foreign wind firms
November 8, 2007 by Brad Molnar in The Billings Outpost
November 8, 2007 by Brad Molnar in The Billings Outpost
In a nutshell, if you have taxable income, it is reduced by $19 for every megawatt of wind electricity for every hour it is produced. For the top five wind farm owners listed above that comes to about $10 billion. Those $10 billion are not shifted to the deficit. They are shifted to regular taxpayers. Yup, even though none of the top five produce any electricity consumed in Montana, you still get to pay for it with your tax dollars.
And what did you get for your tax dollars? Not much. By and large, nothing got built. Existing generation was bought, and the tax incentives were activated, making you a conscripted investor in their acquisition schemes and dreams. Guess that's another loophole Congressman Rehberg can work on with Sens. Tester and Baucus. Of course, that $10 billion is gone with the wind.
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
USA]
Wind development in Glacier County
October, 2007 by Jasen R. Bronec in Glacial Electric Currents, November edition
October, 2007 by Jasen R. Bronec in Glacial Electric Currents, November edition
Currently, Glacier Electric is working with four developers who have requested interconnection or capacity on our transmission system. We are working closely with Northwestern Energy on these projects. Northwestern Energy is the Control Area Operator and is responsible for the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission process that outlines the handling of all transmission interconnection requests. ...Navitas Energy (MN), Invenergy (IL), Naturener USA (CA) and SnowBreeze Wind Development (FL) all hold respective queue positions for transmission capacity on Glacier Electric's transmission system.
Regulators gearing up for power line final reviews
October 10, 2007 by Nancy Thornton in Choteau Acantha
October 10, 2007 by Nancy Thornton in Choteau Acantha
After a summer of relative quiet on a proposal to build a transmission line between Montana and Alberta, the project is again generating news as it heads toward the backstretch of its final regulatory races.
Montana Alberta Tie Ltd. has sold to three wind farm developers its proposed power line's total capacity of 600 megawatts (300 mw in each direction) between Great Falls and Lethbridge, Alta., through eastern Teton County. The company, a subsidiary of Tonbridge Power of Toronto, Ont., reported on the Tonbridge Web site that it would have low costs while it yields $28.4 million in revenues the first year it is in operation.
Also filed under [
Canada]
The Alberta Energy and Utilities Board will begin hearings Oct. 16 on the Alberta portion of a proposed cross-border power transmission line connecting electric systems in the Canadian province and Montana. ...Landowners who oppose the plan will be part of the process, along with wind-farm developers who would benefit from construction of the new transmission line.
The proposed 215-mile, 230-kilovolt line would be a conduit for 600 megawatts of electricity ...Building the line is projected to cost about $120 million.