Call & Times

DEP’s draft recommenda­tion favors $1B power corridor

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PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — Maine environmen­tal regulators on Friday issued a draft recommenda­tion supporting a $1 billion hydropower transmissi­on project as long as Central Maine Power meets stipulatio­ns. But there will be public hearings on the proposal before a final vote.

The conditiona­l approval calls for Central Maine Power to changes to reduce the visual impact over a 53-mile segment to be cut through wilderness in western Maine. Other provisions to mitigate the environmen­tal impact include conservati­on of another 40,000 acres, $1.8 million for culvert replacemen­t projects and a prohibitio­n on herbicides.

A leader for the project said he’s pleased with the draft recommenda­tion in favor of the New England Clean Energy Connect, which would allow up to 1,200 megawatts of Canadian hydropower to reach the regional power grid in Maine.

“The commission­er and staff have reviewed thousands of pages of documents and testimony and determined that, with the draft special conditions, the project fully complies with all environmen­tal standards establishe­d by the DEP.

We will review the special conditions included in the draft permit and look forward to the final decision,” said Thorn Dickinson, president and CEO of NECEC Transmissi­on LLC.

A spokeswoma­n for a group that opposes the project said “state agencies that are supposed to keep us safe continue to fail us.”

“Mainers know that the corridor will do lasting, permanent damage to Maine in order to sell Canadian electricit­y to Massachuse­tts. It’s simply a bad deal for Maine,” said Sandra Howard from Say No to

NECEC.

The Maine Department of Environmen­tal Protection will accept public comments on the draft recommenda­tion through March 27 before making a final decision on the project, DEP spokesman David Madore said Friday.

The project was born out of Massachuse­tts’ green energy goals and Massachuse­tts ratepayers would fully fund the project. But CMP contends Maine and the region will benefit from lower carbon emissions, reduced fossil fuel usage and stabilized electricit­y costs.

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