Utility, wind farmer reach
deal: No $60 million upgrade required for wind farm
Jun 28, 2007 - Knight Ridder Tribune Business
News
Author(s): Matt Christensen
Jun. 28--HAGERMAN -- After nine months of back and forth, Idaho Power
Co. and a Magic Valley wind farmer have reached an agreement both say
could launch a fledgling wind industry in southern Idaho.
The deal involves a case dating back to September. Hagerman wind
farmer Jared Grover wanted to sell Idaho Power energy produced on his
wind farm, but the power company wanted Grover to spend $60 million on
transmission system upgrades it said was necess ry to incorporate the
wind energy. The agreement reached this month cuts Grover's bill to less
than $200,000, and Grover said it opens the door for more wind
development because many potential wind farmers were waiting to see what
happened in his case before starting their own wind farms
The power company agrees. "We hope this will serve as a template for
future contracts," said Dennis Lopez, a spokesman for Idaho Power.
Instead of the multimillion-dollar upgrades, the company will install a
device at Grover's farm that can limit the amount of power that enters
the system when there's an energy emergency, such as a system overload.
To pay for the device and other infrastructure-related costs the utility
will pay for 25 percent of the estimated $10 million project. Grover
will pay for 75 percent, with 50 percent of that refundable after the
system is up and running. Since the energy crisis of the 1970s, the
federal government has required utility companies to buy power produced
by alternative-energy suppliers, such as Grover.
The program, the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act, or PURPA,
says utilities must buy power from alternative producers at a rate equal
to what the utility would spend if it would have to generate the power
itself or buy it from another source. In Idaho, that rate is about $62
per megawatt hour. In Grover's case, the power company didn't dispute
that it had to buy his power. It said, though, that adding additional
energy to its grid would require a system upgrade, and it wanted Grover
to foot the bill. The case went before Idaho's Public Utilit es
Commission, the governing board for Idaho energy, which asked the
parties to try to reach a deal.
"We've been working on this a really long time," Grover said. "It
feels good to finally reach this agreement." Times-News staff writer
Matt Christensen covers the environment. He welcomes comments at
735-3243 and at
matt.christensen@lee.net.
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