Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Politician­s’ hand cited in closing

- FRANK E. LOCKWOOD

After LM Wind Power announced plans Tuesday to close its Little Rock facility, Russell Gold, The Wall Street Journal’s senior energy reporter, noted the role state elected officials had played in derailing a large green-energy project.

Gold is the author of Superpower: One Man’s Quest to Transform American Energy, which highlighte­d efforts by Clean Line Energy CEO Michael Skelly to link Oklahoma wind power to the eastern U.S. power grid.

“Couple years back, Arkansas’ U.S. Senators fought tooth & nail against a transmissi­on line. If built, the line would’ve meant new wind farms. They helped defeat the line. This week, a wind turbine factory in Little Rock, Ark., closed. 470 jobs lost. Political decision were made. And now we have the consequenc­es. Well, 470 families in Little Rock are facing the consequenc­es,” Gold wrote in successive tweets.

Clean Line Energy Partners’ wanted to build a power line across Arkansas so that electricit­y could be generated in the windy Oklahoma panhandle and then shipped to Tennessee and points farther east.

The project faltered after landowners — and the entire Arkansas congressio­nal delegation, among others — objected to the power line, saying it would be an eyesore, lower property values, endanger migratory waterfowl and force landowners to sell property against their will.

Supporters portrayed it as good for the economy, as well as the environmen­t.

nes, he added.

Opposition from the state’s two Republican U.S. senators, John Boozman of Rogers and Tom Cotton of Dardanelle, played a major part in derailing the effort, Skelly said.

“They tried to pass a law in the United States Senate that would kill the project,” Skelly said. “That does have a chilling effect on a project and on customers for a project, more specifical­ly.”

Through his spokesman, Patrick Creamer, Boozman declined to comment Friday.

“Senator Boozman is too focused on the nation’s response to a pandemic to reply to the false comments of a company with a project the people of Arkansas overwhelmi­ngly rejected,” Creamer said.

Cotton could not be reached for comment.

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