The Oklahoman

NextEra acquires rights of failed Olympia wind farm

Company plans to build 57 wind turbines in Panhandle; will use existing substation­s to move power onto grid

- Jack Money

GUYMON – NextEra Energy Resources plans to build 57 new wind turbines across part of Oklahoma's Panhandle as part of a project that will replace one owned by Olympia Renewable Platform LLC that was sanctioned by regulators for safety violations.

NextEra officials said this week the company closed on a deal to acquire Olympia's rights to harvest wind energy from an area between Guymon and Hardesty for an undisclose­d amount. The Public Utility Division of the Oklahoma Corporatio­n Commission took a closer look at Olympia's wind farm nearly a year ago after being notified about potential safety issues involving failed turbines at the location.

As part of the deal, the company is acquiring key transmissi­on substation­s previously built as part of the project and were owned by Olympia that will move power generated by NextEra turbines onto the Southwest Power Pool's grid.

Olympia is removing 60 turbines it owns as the company decommissi­ons its project, NextEra Energy Resources officials said.

Amanda Sech, director of corporate communicat­ions for NextEra Energy Resources, said the company expects to pay about $32 million in property taxes to local government entities and more than $30 million in royalty payments to landowners within the Olympia wind farm's old footprint during the next 35 years.

Sech and other NextEra officials added the transmissi­on substation­s being acquired made the deal more attractive because it saves NextEra Energy Resources the time and money it would have had to otherwise spend before it could get its project's energy onto the grid.

Olympia wasn't the original owner of the wind farm, having acquired the farm from its developer, DeWind (a subsidiary of South Korea's Daewoo Shipbuildi­ng and Marine Engineerin­g), a California-based company that later fell into bankruptcy and closed.

Because the turbines were built using equipment designed and built by the bankrupt developer, Olympia claimed to experience difficulties keeping the wind farm in good working order because its only options were to strip parts from other turbines or make replacemen­t parts from scratch.

The issue was so bad in 2020, a commission representa­tive who visited the farm reported hearing cracking sounds as large, broken turbine blades on towers blew first one direction and then another, including above open access roads that area residents use every day.

The fear was that blades could have potentiall­y dropped from towers and could have been carried as far as 50 feet away before hitting the ground when

Because the turbines were built using equipment designed and built by the bankrupt developer, Olympia claimed to experience difficulti­es keeping the wind farm in good working order because its only options were to strip parts from other turbines or make replacemen­t parts from scratch.

winds were blowing hard.

Commission­ers ordered Olympia to provide it with a site safety and security plan, as well as long-term steps it planned to take to protect the general public from its hazards.

They signed off on steps Olympia took to achieve those goals just over one month ago.

NextEra’s plan adds to other projects

While NextEra Energy Resources declined to provide specifics, its representa­tives said this week their project at Olympia’s old Texas County location is being executed as the company develops other projects along the Oklahoma-Texas state line.

When complete, its project between Guymon and Hardesty will have a nameplate capacity of 160 megawatts using production from 57 turbines, each topped by a 2.8 megawatt GE generator.

NextEra officials said they expect to begin building those turbines in May (provided necessary permits are obtained) with a workforce numbering about 200.

They said the company will employ either three or four people full-time to operate the project once it goes online by the end of this year.

Tricia Hale, NextEra Energy Resources’ developmen­t director in Oklahoma and Colorado, said plans for the Olympia site adds another location to the company’s portfolio of renewable projects inside the state.

Currently, NextEra operates 17 wind energy centers and one renewable-charged battery storage system within Oklahoma, and it has three other projects under developmen­t.

NextEra’s business portfolio is expansive and the company has business ventures in other energy sectors across the state and nation, including natural gas.

The company was paid $429 million by Oklahoma utilities during the February 2021 winter storm, according to data released by regulators. The company was paid for its role in providing natural gas to utility providers during the severe weather event.

NextEra received payments from Oklahoma Natural Gas and PSO, according to data released by regulators. ONG is seeking approval to pass storm costs on to consumers over the next 25 years, and PSO is seeking similar approval for a plan that will increase costs for 20 years.

Since 2003, the company says it invested $6.8 billion in renewable energy projects inside the state. It pays its Oklahoma employees $37.4 million, pays land owners $15 million and pays local government­al entities $14.1 million in property taxes every year, Hale and other officials said.

“We are always looking to expand the projects we have, and we have been involved in Oklahoma for a long time. When we saw the opportunit­y to add this project to our portfolio, that was pretty attractive to us,” Hale said.

Business Writer Jack Money covers Oklahoma’s energy and agricultur­al beats for the newspaper and Oklahoman.com. Contact him at jmoney@oklahoman.com. Please support his workand that of other Oklahoman journalist­s by subscribin­g to The Oklahoman.

 ?? CHRIS LANDSBERGE­R/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? Regulators were shocked to see damage like this to wind turbines on a failing wind farm owned by Olympia Renewable Platform LLC. in 2021. Olympia is removing all of its turbines as it decommissi­ons its project.
CHRIS LANDSBERGE­R/THE OKLAHOMAN Regulators were shocked to see damage like this to wind turbines on a failing wind farm owned by Olympia Renewable Platform LLC. in 2021. Olympia is removing all of its turbines as it decommissi­ons its project.

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