Los Angeles Times

Sempra to build wind farm in Mexico

- By Rob Nikolewski Nikolewski writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

Sempra, the Fortune 500 energy giant based in San Diego, plans to build another large wind farm in Baja California and has already signed a long-term deal with a municipal utility serving the Silicon Valley to take the energy generated by the project’s 60 turbines.

Pending necessary permits from the U.S. and Mexican government­s and finalized commercial contracts, the proposed Cimarrón wind project would generate 300 megawatts of electricit­y — the equivalent of the annual energy consumptio­n of more than 84,000 homes — and reduce almost 210,000 metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions each year.

Officials with Sempra Infrastruc­ture, a subsidiary of Sempra, announced a 20-year power purchase agreement Thursday with Silicon Valley Power, a municipal utility based in Santa Clara, Calif.

“Silicon Valley Power continues to make strategic long-term investment­s in clean energy and add diverse energy resources to our power portfolio,” Manuel Pineda, chief electric utility officer of Silicon Valley Power, said in a statement.

Ground has not yet been broken on the project but should it move forward, Sempra Infrastruc­ture expects Cimarrón to start commercial operations by the end of 2024. Constructi­on is estimated to create about 2,000 direct and indirect jobs in Mexico.

Financial details of the deal were not disclosed, with Sempra officials saying the figures were proprietar­y.

The electricit­y generated by Cimarrón’s turbines would flow from Tecate to the ECO Substation in San Diego’s East County and then into California’s electric grid.

That setup is similar to an existing 260-megawatt wind farm called Energía Sierra Juárez that Sempra Infrastruc­ture operates, which is about six miles from where the Cimarrón facility is planned. Some 47 turbines make up Phase 1 of the Energía Sierra Juárez project and Phase 2 comprises 26 turbines that power the turning blades at each tower.

Sempra Infrastruc­ture also operates a third wind facility, called the Ventika wind farm in the Mexican state of Nueva Léon. With 84 turbines and an installed capacity of about 225 megawatts, Ventika is one of the largest wind generation facilities in Latin America.

The company also has plans to install a battery facility capable of storing up to 500 megawatts called Volta de Mexicali that would be constructe­d in Mexico and serve Imperial Valley via the interconne­ction at the East County substation.

“We are focused on the safe and reliable integratio­n of clean energy into North America’s power grid, utilizing our U.S.-Mexico crossborde­r infrastruc­ture,” said Emily Shults, senior vice president for developmen­t of clean power at Sempra Infrastruc­ture.

Sempra, the parent company of Southern California Gas and San Diego Gas & Electric, has long been involved in energy projects in Mexico.

Sempra Infrastruc­ture operates the Energía Costa Azul facility in Ensenada that serves as an import destinatio­n for liquefied natural gas, or LNG. The company is constructi­ng an export component to the site, to take advantage of the growing global market for LNG.

In addition, the company is working with the Mexican government to build another LNG export facility in the port city of Topolobamp­o on the Gulf of California. Export terminals on or near the Pacific are considered valuable because ships carrying LNG to Asia can skip paying Panama Canal tolls.

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