Navajo Nation To Develop 500 MW Of Wind Power
US: March 28, 2008
NEW YORK - The Navajo Nation, which has struggled for years to build a
coal-fired power plant, said on Thursday it has formed a joint venture with
a Boston company to develop 500 megawatts of wind energy on its lands in the
US West.
Navajo Nation President Joseph Shirley signed an agreement with Joseph
Kennedy II, the chairman and president of Boston-based Citizens Energy Corp
to develop the project.
The agreement forms a joint venture between Citizens, a global developer of
renewable energy and power transmission, and Dine Power Authority, the
Navajo's wholesale energy enterprise.
Wind power "can bring economic prosperity for the Navajo people and build
our energy independence while providing jobs and other benefits for the
Navajo Nation," Shirley said in a statement.
Under terms of the agreement, the Navajos would have a ownership stake in
the project development company and be able to invest additional equity in
the project, eventually acquiring a majority ownership stake, according to
statement from the Washington office of the Navajos.
Citizens Energy has also agreed to reinvest a portion of the profits from
the project on the Navajo Nation, it said.
Early estimates anticipate the Dine Wind Project could produce between $60
to $100 million in total revenue for the Navajo Nation over the lifetime of
the projects, not including the jobs and environmental benefits of wind
energy, the Navajo statement said.
About 200,000 people live on the Navajo Nation, a sovereign nation about the
size of West Virginia, which spreads over Arizona, New Mexico and Utah. The
Nation has been plagued with poverty and unemployment and many residents do
not have power or running water.
DESERT ROCK
Shirley has supported building a coal-fired power plant called Desert Rock,
which, he says, would bring about $50 million to the tribe annually.
The going has been hard for the coal plant. The Navajo Nation and Sithe
Global Power, LLC are trying to build the $3 to $4 billion 1,500 MW plant,
but they have been stalled for years because the US Environmental Protection
Administration has not issued it an air permit.
Desert Rock has also been criticized by some Navajos for its potential to
pollute the air in a place where two large coal plants already operate. And
Sithe has not yet decided whether it would bury its emissions of the main
greenhouse gas carbon dioxide, which has also led to criticism.
Some Navajos also complain that most of the power from the coal plant would
be exported to high demand areas in Arizona and Nevada and that many of them
could still be left without power.
The Navajo Nation sued the EPA last week over its lack of action on the air
permit.
If the 500 MW wind power project is successful, it could be a significant
addition to wind power generation in the United States. Installed US wind
power by the end of 2007 was nearly 17,000 MW, according to an industry
group.
(Reporting by Timothy Gardner, editing by Marguerita Choy)
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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