Engineer seeks
permit on second tidal power project
Jun 26, 2006 - Bangor Daily News, Maine
Author(s): Katherine Cassidy
Jun. 26--PERRY -- The Trescott engineer who has gained the attention
of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission with his proposal to build
both a tidal power dam and a liquefied natural gas facility on U.S. Navy
property in Cutler now has a third energy project to offer. Normand
Laberge wants to construct a second tidal power dam at Half Moon Cove on
Cobscook Bay in Perry. Last week he called the Half Moon Cove location
"the perfect site." "The Cutler tides are good, but the Half Moon Cove
tides are the best," he said in describing the development plan. Laberge
has asked FERC's Division of Hydropower Administration and Compliance
for a permit to conduct a study of the suitability of Half Moon Cove for
the power-generation proposal.
Now he will wait for the agency to review and accept it for a public
filing. FERC is the federal government's primary agency for reviewing
and granting permits for energy-related projects. Laberge applied for
the permit as Tidewalker Associates, a small group of partners. Two
other partners are still unnamed at this point. Laberge's proposed site
is between Eastport and Perry, once the location of a toll bridge
connecting Moose Island in Eastport to the mainland at Perry. The dam,
rock fill with a clay core, would be approximately 1,200 feet long.
Thirty years ago when he first moved Down East, Laberge, now 59, had
identified Half Moon Cove as a potential site for a tidal-powered dam.
He spent eight years trying to start the project before it fizzled
out. "I partially blame myself for my inexperience and not being a
salesman," he said. "At that age I was not aware of all the politics and
maneuvering that was necessary. I just wasn't ready." Today he has
dusted off that proposal, updated it, and now submitted it. For the past
14 years he has worked as the environmental compliance officer at the
Navy's communications facility in Cutler, where 45 antenna towers
stretch over a 2,500-acre peninsula. There are 85 other federal civilian
employees at the high-security site.
On June 12, Laberge received notice from FERC that his Cutler tidal
power proposal had been accepted for filing, with a 60-day window now
running for public comment. Laberge believes that Half Moon Cove could
be studied as an independent site, with the possibility of being linked
with his proposed site in Cutler. "In consideration of national
priorities for the development of local and renewable sources of
electricity, tidal power represents the opportunity for the
establishment of a power plant in a sparsely populated county of Maine,"
Laberge wrote in his application letter. "The power will enter the
existing utility grid as either intermittent power or dependable power
as linked with a second tidal power facility."
© Copyright 2006 NetContent, Inc. Duplication and
distribution restricted.Visit http://www.powermarketers.com/index.shtml
for excellent coverage on your energy news front.
|