The Denver Post

New Mexico wind energy project faces public hearing

- By The Associated Press

SANTA FE» A proposed eastern New Mexico wind energy project that will be the subject of a public hearing next week has a large group of backers but also faces a substantia­l number of opponents, including staff at the state’s utility regulation commission.

Hundreds of wind turbines would be erected near the town of Portales close to the Texas border under the proposal by Minnesota-based energy giant Xcel Energy, the Santa Fe New Mexican reported Sunday.

Xcel subsidiary Southweste­rn Public Service Co. has said the project would create hundreds of constructi­on jobs and more than two dozen permanent ones when it is completed.

It is backed by local town leaders, educators, state legislator­s, village councilors and county commission­ers who wrote to the state Public Regulation Commission this summer.

But the commission’s own staff has called the project “fraught with risk.” It is also opposed by conservati­onists who worry about its effect on the habitat of two birds: the lesser prairie chicken and the rare grasslands grouse.

A public hearing on the case is scheduled to begin next week and the commission will consider the proposal after that hearing.

Xcel said its wind farm will power more than 100,000 homes and that customers would save several billion dollars in coming decades.

Brooke Trammell of Southern Public service said the state and area would benefit from gross receipts taxes during constructi­on, Southweste­rn customers would save up to $2.8 billion in the next 25 to 30 years and the utility would earn savings from lowercost and clean power. But Southweste­rn is seeking to recover revenues and tax credits from the time the wind system is operationa­l to when it would be included in the rate base.

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