Renewable energy groups tout savings, other
benefits
Mar 25 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Doug Fraser Cape Cod Times,
Hyannis, Mass.
Many a town administrator would like to be in Adm. Rick Gurnon's shoes.
The president of Massachusetts Maritime Academy estimates his school saved
$250,000 over the past year in electric bills because of power generated by
a 660-kilowatt, 242-foot wind turbine installed in June 2006. And that's
with a relatively low average wind speed last year, he said.
Gurnon expects to save enough to pay for the $1.4 million turbine in less
than six years.
Now, the Cape and Vineyard Electric Cooperative, launched last June by the
Cape Light Compact in collaboration with the town of Barnstable and
Barnstable County, hopes to help local towns enjoy those same benefits.
The Compact is the regional energy group that purchases electricity through
New York-based ConEdison Solutions on behalf of its 170,000 customers on
Martha's Vineyard and Cape Cod.
Under the proposed plan, Cape and Islands towns would agree to build enough
turbines on their combined lands to take care of municipal energy needs. The
cooperative would finance and own the turbines and sell energy back to the
towns. Not every town would need to build a turbine, but those that did
would be paid a leasing fee by the cooperative for the right to use the
land. The cooperative would help insulate the towns against future increases
in energy costs, says Maggie Downey, administrator of the compact.
Meanwhile a bill now in legislative conference committee would help the
towns and Massachusetts Maritime Academy get more for the electricity their
turbines generate. The proposed regulations would allow the owners of large
turbines to be credited for excess electricity they generate at the price
they would pay on the retail market.
It is known as net metering, and Downey believes it will be included in the
bill.
Here's how it works:
The maritime academy, for example, pays the retail price, 17 cents per
kilowatt-hour for any electricity it needs beyond that generated by the wind
turbine, Gurnon said. Currently, state law only allows the owners of
60-kilowatt turbines -- roughly 1/10 the size of the MMA turbine -- to
credit any surplus power sent to the power grid on windy days against what
they have to buy on days when it's too calm to meet their own needs. The net
metering provision in the state energy bill would more than triple that size
to two-megawatt turbines.
So MMA, which is now paid a wholesale price of 7 cents per kilowatt-hour for
its surplus electricity, could apply that power against its total electric
bill, at the retail price of 17 cents per kwh. That more than doubles what
the electricity they generate is worth to them.
It also frees towns of the requirement that they locate turbines next to a
major power consumer such as a school or a wastewater treatment plant.
If towns get retail-priced credit for their electricity, they can put a
turbine anywhere.
The cooperative would receive the money from selling renewable energy
credits, Downey said. Utility companies buy these from "green" energy power
generators to meet federal and state requirements that a certain percentage
of their power be from alternative energy sources.
The cooperative's approach also removes several other major hurdles that
have stymied wind turbines in towns.
Turbines can cost $3 million to $4 million each for the large 1.5-megawatt
size. Economics often have forced municipalities to go with private
developers who pay for the turbines, but insist on maximizing their size and
the number of towers to make a profit.
That inspired stiff resistance from voters in towns such as Orleans and
Eastham, where residents were upset at the size and number of turbines, and
the idea that a private business would be making a profit off public lands.
But not every town finds the current situation daunting. Meghan Amsler,
co-chairwoman of the Falmouth Energy Committee, said her town is almost
ready to seek bids on a turbine that will power its wastewater treatment
plant. Much like the maritime academy, the town is convinced that, even with
having to sell excess power at the wholesale rate, the wind turbine is a
good deal.
"We pushed really hard in Falmouth for municipal ownership, and that model
is so much stronger than the private developer's model," she said.
Three towns on Martha's Vineyard, and Provincetown, have articles on town
meeting warrants asking voters for approval to begin negotiating with the
energy cooperative. Downey said her staff would be making visits to other
Cape towns later in the year after the cooperative gets a ruling from the
IRS on whether they can extend the program to residential users. |