Vancouver Sun

Wind- powered transmissi­on lines face opposition

- JIM SALTER

ST. LOUIS — The windy plains of Kansas could be a treasure trove in the nation’s effort to harness clean energy, but a major proposal to move wind- generated electricit­y eastward is running into a roadblock: Farmers who don’t want high- power transmissi­on lines on their land.

Clean Line Energy Partners wants to spend $ 2.2 billion US to build a 1,200- kilometre- long high- voltage overhead transmissi­on line. Towers up to 45 metres, four to six per kilometre, would carry lines with power generated by Kansas’ modernisti­c windmill turbines through sparsely populated northern Missouri, through the cornfields of Illinois and to a substation in Sullivan, Ind. The exact route has not been finalized.

The idea is supported by environmen­tal groups who say it is an opportunit­y to take a big step forward for an energy source that could reduce the nation’s reliance on fossil fuels and cut air pollution. Clean Line has four other transmissi­on line projects in the works in the West and Midwest.

All five still require regulatory approval. If all goes right, the Kansas-to- Indiana line — called the Green Belt Express Clean Line — could be operationa­l by 2018, said Mark Lawlor, director of developmen­t for Clean Line.

“There are a whole host of wind developers who are ready to go but they don’t have the ability to transmit the power,” Lawlor said. “But like an oil or gas field that’s remotely located, you’ve got to find a way to get that resource to market.”

Clean Line says the project will be an economic boon, with all four states seeing new jobs for constructi­on and local companies providing things like parts and concrete. Lawlor said consumers would benefit, too, by the new source of power that would drive down electricit­y costs.

Kansas figures to benefit the most. Clean Line projects that more than $ 7 billion of new wind projects will be needed to meet demand created by the line, potentiall­y creating thousands of new jobs in Kansas and making the state a hub of wind energy.

Randi Tveitaraas Jack, energy coordinato­r for the Kansas Department of Commerce, said the agency doesn’t endorse individual projects, but that in general, “We’re very supportive of the wind industry in Kansas and continued growth, and transmissi­on is an important piece of that.”

Both the property owner and the counties where the towers would be built stand to make money. A typical county could see $ 800,000 annually in property taxes, Lawlor said.

As for property owners, compensati­on will depend on how much easement is needed, the value of the land and other factors. Lawlor gave an example of an easement stretching half a mile across land valued at $ 5,000 an acre, housing two tower structures.

The owner would get about $ 45,500 for the easement and a one- time payment of $ 18,000 for each structure — a total of $ 81,500. Owners could also opt for smaller annual payments for the structures.

Yet many landowners have organized in opposition to Clean Line. They worry about whether the towers and lines will reduce property values, get in the way of farming operations like crop- dusting and irrigation, and even create health risks for those living so close to high- voltage wires.

“This is some of our best ground,” said Kent Dye, 56, who farms about 7,000 acres in northeast Missouri’s Monroe County. “This line — there’s no proven need for it. There are no contracts to provide power, no contracts to sell on the other end.”

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? The plains of Kansas could be a treasure trove in the United States’ growing effort to harness clean energy.
CHARLIE RIEDEL/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES The plains of Kansas could be a treasure trove in the United States’ growing effort to harness clean energy.

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