The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 

Transmission troubles

We're all about wind power — but do we have a way to harness green energy?
By DEIRDRE FULTON  |  February 11, 2009

090213_turbines_main
Late last month, Maine's second large commercial wind farm officially opened at Stetson Mountain in the eastern part of the state. The 38-turbine installation, which will produce power for the equivalent of 23,500 homes, was hailed by newspapers, businesspeople, and government officials as a step toward achieving the state's renewable-energy goals. Also at the end of January, a proposal to erect a wind-measurement device near the East End School on Munjoy Hill created some amount of Not-In-My-Backyard brouhaha right here in Portland.

Several additional projects and proposals are in the works, including ones in Aroostook County; University of Maine professors are at work developing offshore wind turbines that could be situated far into the ocean; and Maine was identified by the energy consulting firm AWS Truewind as having the most abundant wind-energy resources in New England. In other words, wind energy is booming business in Maine, where we are rich in both the physical resource, and the human capital to develop it.

But for all this potential, both in terms of the power source itself, and the brainpower behind it, Maine risks losing a lot of money — and, therefore, jobs — if the state can't figure out how to actually transport the power from the wind turbines to the electrical grid, and to our homes. Especially given that many large-scale wind projects are sited in rural areas, energy transmission is one of the biggest hurdles to renewable-energy development. And this isn't just a Maine issue. In The Economist last year, the American Wind Energy Association's policy director Rob Gramlich called transmission the "biggest long-term barrier" to national wind-energy expansion.

For evidence, look no further than the collapse, last week, of a major new transmission project in northern Maine. On Thursday, the Maine Public Utilities Commission sent back to the drawing board the Maine Power Connection (MPC) project, which would have connected Aroostook County power sources (such as wind farms) to the New England electrical grid via a new transmission line.

The rejection has negative implications for the 800-megawatt wind farm proposed by Aroostook Wind Energy, a subsidiary of the Texas-based Horizon Wind Energy company. Without the $625 million, 200-mile, 345-kilovolt MPC transmission line, the Aroostook wind farm will be a harder sell, says Brent Boyles, president of the Maine & Maritimes Corporation, which is the parent company of Maine Public Service Company, a partner in the project. Indeed, while Horizon Wind project development manager Tanuj Deora says the company remains "optimistic and hopeful" about the wind potential in northern Maine, he also admits that "we do have a bit of transmission hiccup," and "no project is a guarantee," meaning that the fate of the project is up in the air.

Watch for this to become a familiar refrain.

"They want to be here, but they don't have the access," Boyles says of prospective wind developers who balk at the lack of sufficient transmission infrastructure — lines that are too jammed to transport additional power, or else completely non-existent. (See sidebar.) Indeed, why would anyone want to invest in a project whose express goal is to create power — without a guarantee that said power will eventually end up helping someone turn on the lights? (And that's not an altruistic concern — if the power doesn't let someone turn on the lights, there's no money in the generation project.)

1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
  Topics: News Features , Barack Obama, Science and Technology, Brent Boyles,  More more >
| More


[ 05/21 ]   "The Ashes Series," photographs by Wafaa Bilal  @ David Winton Bell Gallery
[ 05/21 ]   "Rhode Island School of Design Graduate Thesis Exhibition 2013"  @ Rhode Island Convention Center
[ 05/21 ]   "The Festive City,"  @ RISD Museum
ARTICLES BY DEIRDRE FULTON
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   MAINE WOMEN’S FUND AWARDEES ARE BUILDING A NEW WORLD  |  May 16, 2013
    On the surface, they have little in common: An unassuming entrepreneur in her late 50s, an accomplished 38-year-old photojournalist, and a trio of energetic teenagers. But these women do exhibit several shared traits. They are plucky and passionate, clever and unpretentious. They are Mainers. And all five will be honored next Thursday, May 23, at the Maine Women's Fund's annual Leadership Luncheon, which honors those who are making life better for women and girls in this state and beyond.  
  •   UNION BATTLES CONTINUE  |  May 16, 2013
    An update on the state employees' union's dispute with the governor, plus union organizers' plans for medical-marijuana workers.
  •   LET IT GROW  |  May 09, 2013
    In addition to its ecological value, the abundant marine resource is also worth money — millions of pounds of rockweed are harvested every year.
  •   LEGISLATURE WADES THROUGH HUNDREDS OF PROPOSALS  |  May 09, 2013
    Want to know what your elected officials are mulling over? Here is a subjective selection of bills that piqued our interest.
  •   LABORERS MAY HAVE A BRIGHT FUTURE  |  May 03, 2013
    Even as the organized-labor movement continues to falter on the national level, union leaders here in Maine are optimistic about a potential resurgence — or if not that, at least a stanching of the bleeding and an opportunity to prove that pro-union policies are best for local workers and communities.  

 See all articles by: DEIRDRE FULTON



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2013 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group