The Jerusalem Post

California demand for wind power energizes transmissi­on firms

- • By NICHOLA GROOM

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – A firm controlled by Philip Anschutz, the billionair­e entertainm­ent and pro-sports magnate, will soon build the largest wind farm in the United States to serve utilities in California, where officials have set ambitious green-power goals.

The $5b. project, however, will be constructe­d about 1,150 kilometers away in Wyoming, a state better known for coal mines and oil fields.

The vast distance between the two states provides a different Anschutz-owned firm with another big opportunit­y: a $3b. project building transmissi­on lines to deliver the power – one of a dozen similar power-line projects by other companies across the West.

In all, more than 9,000 kilometers of transmissi­on lines are in developmen­t with the goal of delivering renewable energy to California from other states, according to the Western Interstate Energy Board.

Such investment­s are an outgrowth of an emerging paradox of California’s well-known political bent toward aggressive environmen­talism. Green power advocates and state officials want more wind power, but California conservati­onists increasing­ly oppose more wind farms as an environmen­tal blight on the state’s pristine desert landscape.

Those conflicts are pushing wind farm developmen­t to other states, creating new opportunit­ies for wind power and transmissi­on firms to deliver electricit­y to California’s nearly 40 million residents.

“It’s the right project, in the right place, at the right time,” said Bill Miller, chief executive of the two Anschutz-owned companies: Power Company of Wyoming LLC and Trans-West Express LLC.

Though wind power is surging nationally, the future of wind farms in California suffered a major blow last year when regulators completed an eight-year process designed in part to identify locations for new renewable energy projects.

The US Bureau of Land Management, the California Energy Commission and state and federal wildlife agencies sought to balance green power developmen­t with preservati­on of scenic vistas, Native American tribal lands and critical habitats for threatened species such as the desert tortoise and the Mohave ground squirrel.

But the solar and wind power industries have argued that the resulting plan unfairly favors land conservati­on over projects needed to wean California off fossil fuels and combat climate change.

The California Wind Energy Associatio­n estimates that only two GW of additional wind power can be developed here, a figure its executive director, Nancy Rader, called “a stretch.” California will need about 15 GW to meet its goal of deriving half of its power from renewable sources by 2030 – and far more if the state succeeds in a separate effort to promote electric vehicle adoption, according to state estimates.

Anschutz, who lives in Denver, got his start in the oil drilling industry in Wyoming. He has amassed a fortune of $12.5b., according to Forbes, through real estate and entertainm­ent properties including the movie theater chain operator Regal Entertainm­ent Group. Anschutz Entertainm­ent Group holds ownership interests in profession­al sports teams including hockey’s Los Angeles Kings and basketball’s Los Angeles Lakers, along with dozens of major arenas, theaters and music festivals.

The billionair­e’s backing helped the Power Company of Wyoming and Trans-West Express support their wind and transmissi­on projects through an eight-year permitting process that Miller said cost $100 million.

Now other developers are watching those projects as a bellwether for their own planned investment­s in transmissi­on lines to bring renewable power to California.

“If we see another project being successful, then we’ll be a lot more willing to invest $100m. in permitting,” said Michael Skelly, president of Clean Line Energy Partners LLC, which has proposed two separate transmissi­on projects in the West but is currently focusing on the Midwest.

Factors beyond California’s environmen­tal politics are driving investment­s in wind farms outside the state. Nationally, the costs of wind power generation have dropped 66% in seven years, according to the American Wind Energy Associatio­n, an industry trade group.

Further, California already has wind farms in the areas best suited for them, and states such as Wyoming offer lower constructi­on costs and higher winds.

Those lower costs are what make billion-dollar transmissi­on projects feasible. A report prepared for California state agencies last year estimated that Wyoming and New Mexico wind power, using new transmissi­on, would cost $21 per megawatt-hour, compared with $43 to $58 per MWh for in-state wind.

California state policy, meanwhile, offers a virtual guarantee of high demand for renewable energy. The state is currently only about halfway to its goal of deriving half of its electricit­y from renewable sources by 2030, according to the California Energy Commission.

Helping the state meet that target is the “next big market opportunit­y” for a project under developmen­t by Duke American Transmissi­on Co., a partnershi­p between Duke Energy Corp and American Transmissi­on Co., said DATC spokeswoma­n Luella Dooley-Menet.

Since 2011, the company has been developing the $2.6b. Zephyr transmissi­on line to run from Wyoming to Utah, where it will connect with existing lines running into California.

Power would be supplied by another wind power project under developmen­t in Wyoming, the $4b. Pathfinder wind farm, from a company backed by privately-held conglomera­te Sammons Enterprise­s Inc and investment firm Guggenheim Partners.

Transmissi­on spending by utilities has more than doubled since 2010 and is projected to reach $22.5b. this year, according to the Edison Electric Institute, a utility trade group. That spending, however, has largely not included large, multi-state projects, which are more difficult to get approved and built.

“The big systems that are going to allow for a much more dynamic bulk power market, within regions and between regions – those are the tough ones,” said Jim Hoecker, an energy attorney who advises the transmissi­on trade group WIRES.

Developers of the SunZia line – a $1.5b. transmissi­on project that will stretch 800 kilometers between New Mexico and a major transmissi­on hub in Arizona – understand the permitting challenges. Its owners agreed to bury segments of power lines that will run near the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico – at substantia­l additional cost – after the US Department of Defense raised objections.

The SunZia line, scheduled to start constructi­on next year, is owned by MMR Group, Royal Dutch Shell Plc’s wind energy unit, and Tucson Electric Power, a unit of Fortis Inc. It aims to transport wind energy from a Pattern Energy Group LP project in New Mexico.

Pattern partnered with SunZia’s developers last year after reaching two deals in 2015 to supply electricit­y to Southern California Edison and Sacramento Municipal Utility District with low-cost wind from New Mexico. Pattern realized it couldn’t continue to invest in the state without new transmissi­on.

“SunZia was the best alternativ­e to bring additional power from New Mexico into Arizona and California,” Pattern CEO Mike Garland said.

In Wyoming, constructi­on started late last year on the Anschutz-owned Chokecherr­y and Sierra Madre wind project, and the company is in talks with utilities to buy the power and suppliers to provide about 1,000 turbines that will spin on the site.

After eight years in developmen­t, the project seems to align well with the needs of California regulators and utilities, which need more wind power from out of state to augment in-state solar installati­ons that can’t provide power during nighttime hours.

“A whole bunch of things kind of had to line up,” Miller said. “Now, they have pretty much lined up.”

 ?? (Ed Stoddard/Reuters) ?? A FINISHED wind-turbine complex in southern Wyoming prepares to generate power.
(Ed Stoddard/Reuters) A FINISHED wind-turbine complex in southern Wyoming prepares to generate power.

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