Prairie Post (East Edition)

Alberta Electricit­y System Operator approves substation upgrades to handle wave of renewables

- By Collin Gallant Alberta Newspaper Group

Substation upgrades to increase the flow of renewable power out of the southeast region could proceed next year.

The Alberta Electric System Operator had been evaluating a plan by line owner AltaLink to boost capacity of the Bowmanton Substation, located about 40 kilometres northeast of Medicine Hat.

It gave initial approval April 12 to add three banks of shunt capacitors and circuit breakers to limit congestion at an estimated constructi­on cost of $11.2 million, according to engineerin­g reports.

An alternate option of adding another substation may have cost up to $55 million. Power lines in and out of the southeast consist mainly of a 240-kilovolt doubled-line that runs from Cassils (near Brooks) to Bowmanton then south to Whitla (near Bow Island), sometimes described as the CWB system.

There are currently renewable facilities using the line with a cumulative capacity of 793 megawatts in peak conditions.

New power plants totalling 963 megawatts of proposed capacity have met “inclusion requiremen­ts,” meaning they have paid fees to book space on the system for when constructi­on is completed over the next two years.

In total, the AESO has dealt with inquiries from proposals totalling 6,000 megawatts in the planning region.

Longer-term solutions include initial analysis of closing the hook-like configurat­ion into a loop by joining the Whitla station to lines in and around either Brooks or Lethbridge, but with cost estimates above $400 million for new line constructi­on. Upgrading lines between Bowmanton and Empress is also being considered to provide a higher capacity outlet.

Those options were discussed in longer-term planning documents, published in February.

“Given the fast pace of generation developmen­ts in the Medicine Hat planning area, congestion on the CBW path is anticipate­d to occur in the near term,” the report reads, noting the current upgrades will “reduce the anticipate­d congestion in the near term before the significan­t infrastruc­ture identified in the 2022 Long-term Transmissi­on Plan is in place.”

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