Las Vegas Review-Journal

NV Energy plans more access lines

They will lead to new renewable resources

- By Shea Johnson Las Vegas Review-journal

NV Energy announced on Monday plans to construct two major transmissi­on lines throughout the state to access new renewable energy resources.

The effort will take 11 years and benefit customers, spur economic growth and advance the clean-energy policy objectives of Nevada lawmakers, the electric utility said.

With each line stretching hundreds of miles, the Greenlink Nevada project will increase the capability to bring energy into the state, particular­ly in Northern Nevada, and add another connection between the two halves of the state to move energy less expensivel­y in either direction, according to NV Energy President and CEO Doug Cannon.

“This project really has the potential to reshape the energy landscape here in Nevada and to really position Nevada to be an energy leader in the West,” Cannon said in an interview.

The $2 billion-plus investment, which is expected to be considered by the Public Utilities Commission before the end of the year, is planned to tap into areas with high potential for renewable energy.

The northern segment, a 525-kilovolt line that would span roughly 235 miles from Ely to Yerington, runs across a part of the state where there is potential for solar and geothermal energy, Cannon said.

The western line would stretch 351

miles, also at 525 kilovolts, from Las Vegas to Yerington, through at least three solar energy zones.

Three smaller transmissi­on lines would run from Yerington to Reno, according to a statement from the investor-owned utility on Monday.

“We can have all the renewable developmen­t in the world, but if we can’t move the energy to where it is utilized or where it can be utilized, it doesn’t do us any good,” Cannon said.

Ultimately the project will create a much more reliable transmissi­on system and enable the utility to move energy in and out of the state with greater efficiency, he said.

Economic, Customer Benefits touted

Cannon said that NV Energy has been focused on Greenlink Nevada, the largest transmissi­on project in its

history, over the past 12 months. But he believes that it could serve as a state asset for 60 to 70 years.

NV Energy officials also view it as the right project at the right time, citing a coronaviru­s pandemic that has upended the livelihood­s of many workers. Greenlink is estimated by NV Energy to generate about $781 million in economic activity and support more than 4,000 jobs from design to constructi­on during its build-out phase through 2031 if approved.

The company said that it would help the state meet its renewable energy goals, including reducing carbon emissions to zero or near-zeroby2050.

Cannon said that the project will also lead to lower energy costs for the public utility’s 1.4 million customers, although he acknowledg­ed that savings will not likely offset all project costs on day one.

Solar projects in the works

NV Energy on Monday also announced three new solar-related projects that would be built in Southern Nevada and create more than 700 temporary jobs if approved by the PUC.

One of the initiative­s, called the Dry Lake Solar Project, would be NV Energy’s second and largest company-owned renewable project, the utility said.

The 150-megawatt solar photovolta­ic project, with a 100-megawatt, four-hour battery storage system, is planned 20 miles northeast of Las Vegas in a designated Solar Energy Zone on leased federal land, the company said.

Greenlink Nevada and the solar-related projects were included as the latest amendment to NV Energy’s most recent Integrated Resource Plan, which it by law must file every three years with the PUC.

Contact Shea Johnson at sjohnson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0272. Follow @SHEA_LVRJ on Twitter.

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