Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Plan to build power line across state out of steam

- FRANK E. LOCKWOOD

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Energy and Clean Line Energy Partners severed ties Friday, ending their joint effort to build a power line across Arkansas.

Members of the state’s congressio­nal delegation, who had fought the $2.5 billion project for years, welcomed the news.

“This is a victory for states’ rights and a victory for Arkansas. We are pleased that the Department of Energy responded favorably to our request to terminate this agreement. We support policies that put our nation on the path to energy independen­ce, but they should not cost Arkansas landowners a voice in the approval process,” the state’s delegation said in a joint statement.

The statement was issued by U.S. Sens. John Boozman and Tom Cotton, and by U.S. Reps. Rick Crawford, French Hill, Steve Womack and Bruce Westerman, all Republican­s.

The Houston-based company had worked for years to build a 705-mile power line that would link wind farms in the Oklahoma panhandle to customers in Tennessee.

After encounteri­ng opposition in Arkansas, company officials asked then-President Barack Obama’s administra­tion to intervene.

In March 2016, then-U.S. Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz invoked Section 1222 of the Energy Policy Act of 2005, which gives the Ener-

gy Department the “authority to design, develop, construct, operate, own, or participat­e with other entities in designing, developing, constructi­ng, operating, maintainin­g, or owning … electric power transmissi­on facilities.”

Moniz said the project was “necessary to accommodat­e an actual or projected increase in demand for electric transmissi­on capacity.”

The Plains & Eastern Clean Line project would have entered Arkansas near Van Buren and exited the state near Wilson in Mississipp­i County.

It would have carried 4,000 megawatts, enough power to supply 1 million homes.

Opponents feared the federal government would use its power of eminent domain to build the line, forcing landowners to sell their property against their will.

But the project stalled; any momentum that might have existed disappeare­d once President Donald Trump took office.

In December, Clean Line Energy Partners sold the Oklahoma portion of the project to NextEra Energy Resources.

In January, Arkansas’ D.C. delegation members asked U.S. Energy Secretary Rick Perry to cancel the project or put it on hold, arguing that the sale and other developmen­ts make it unlikely that the work would proceed.

On Friday, a spokesman for the Energy Department said the parties had “mutually agreed to terminate their Participat­ion Agreement,” adding, “DOE remains committed to an ‘all of the above’ energy strategy, improving our Nation’s electricit­y infrastruc­ture, and increasing

the reliabilit­y and resiliency of the electrical grid.”

In an email, Clean Line spokesman Sarah Bray said the March 2016 participat­ion agreement had been canceled “due to the changes in ownership structure.”

“The project is not dead, but it is on a much slower track. Clean Line maintains ownership of the project assets in Arkansas and Tennessee and is evaluating next steps,” she added.

Steve Stengel, a spokesman for NextEra Energy Resources, said his company already owns and operates wind farms in Oklahoma and viewed the purchase as “a long-term developmen­t opportunit­y.”

Friday’s announceme­nt “does not impact our Oklahoma plans,” he added.

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson welcomed Friday’s announceme­nt and praised members of the U.S. House and Senate for their role in the struggle.

“Arkansas’ federal delegation has been doggedly persistent in protecting the voice of Arkansas landowners and the state’s role in approving interstate transmissi­on lines,” he said. “I appreciate the work of the delegation, and I am very happy for all the landowners who have expressed their concern on this project.”

Arkansas isn’t the only place where Clean Line en-

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