Governor, ranchers welcome the wind
Oct 3, 2007 - Knight Ridder Tribune Business News
Author(s): Bill Jackson
Oct. 3--Gov. Bill Ritter and officials with the Cedar Creek Wind Farm talked
about alternative energy, economic development for rural areas and energy
independence when the northern Weld County farm went into operation Tuesday.
But for ranchers Gene and Sharon Hahn, the near completion of the facility
meant some easing of stress of trying to run cattle on ground that has been
parched by drought the past few years. "We have 18 of them (turbines) on our
ranch. It might help things just a little," Gene Hahn said with a wry smile
on his face. Ranchers and farmers like the Hahns are a major reason the
facility was built east of Grover, for it's their land where the almost 275
wind turbines sit on 32,000 acres on the bluffs above Grover, stretching to
the north toward Hereford. Ranchers lease and where the turbines are
constructed.
David Giordano of Babcock & Brown, which built the facility in partnership
with BP Alternative Energy, said the facility is the largest wind energy
built as a single project in the world. "The landowners were critical
partners in this project," Giordano told a crowd of more than 100 who
attended Tuesday's official start-up. The wind whipped the double-tents
where the ceremony was conducted, a fact that didn't escape Ritter, who
based much of his campaign last year on making Colorado the renewable energy
capital of the United States. "It's gratifying to feel the wind whip through
this tent," Ritter said.
"For all the ranchers and farmers who have cussed the wind, we're here today
to bless it." Ritter said the project is a boom for Colorado. "It's good for
our economy. It's good for our environment, and it's good for our energy
independence," he said. The facility is expected to be fully operational by
year's end, with the first phase up and running by the end of October. The
turbines will generate 300 megawatts of carbon-free electricity which is
enough to power 90,000 average-sized homes annually. ith a capital
investment of more than $480 million, the project will be 67 percent owned
by Babcock & Brown Operating Partners and 33 percent owned by BP Alternative
Energy North America.
About 400 workers have been at the site of the project for the pa t two
years. The electricity will be bought by Xcel Energy of Denver. Riley Hill,
an Xcel representative, said that company plans to provide 1,000 megawatts
of wind energy by the end of this year and 6,000 megawatts by 2020. Sharon
Hahn said she doesn't mind the change in the landscape. "I'd rather have
turbines than a housing development. To us it hasn't changed the view; it's
like looking through a window. And with the drought we've been dealing with,
it's been a blessing," she said. About the farm Cedar Creek Wind Farm, when
complete, will be one of the largest single wind-powered facilities in the
United States.
It will have 274 wind turbines -- 221 Mitsubishi models with a hub height of
226 feet and a rotor diameter of 202 feet, and 53 General Electric models
with a hub height of about 262 feet and a rotor diameter of 253 feet.
Above-ground transmission lines will be constructed on private easements in
a corridor extending from the wind farm substation near Grover in northeast
Weld County south to a Exel Energy switching station near Keenesburg, in
southeast Weld. During construction of the $480 million facility 415 workers
were used. The project will employ a full time staff of more than 20 who
will monitor and maintain the site once it becomes fully operational.
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