Southern California Edison Starts Construction
on the Nation's Largest Wind Transmission Project
MOJAVE, Calif., Mar 07, 2008 -- BUSINESS WIRE
In the most recent demonstration of its national leadership role in
renewable and alternative energy, Southern California Edison (SCE) has begun
construction of the largest wind transmission project in the United States.
When all phases are developed, the Tehachapi Renewable Transmission Project
will include a series of new and upgraded high-voltage transmission lines
capable of delivering 4,500 megawatts of electricity from wind farms and
other generating companies in Northern Los Angeles and Eastern Kern
counties.
The first three segments include the following components: two new
substations -- Windhub and Highwind -- located near Mojave and Monolith; a
new, 25.6 mile, 500 kilovolt transmission line connecting SCE's existing
Antelope Substation with the new Windhub Substation; a new, 9.6 mile, 220
kilovolt transmission line connecting the Windhub Substation and the
Highwind Substation; a new, 21.0-mile, 500 kilovolt transmission line
connecting SCE's existing Antelope and Vincent substations; and a new,
26.7-mile, 500 kilovolt transmission line connecting SCE's existing Antelope
and Pardee substations. The new lines are expected to be operational in
early 2009.
"Southern California Edison is the nation's leader in renewable and
alternative energy, and we are continually looking for ways to expand our
renewables portfolio," said Alan J. Fohrer, chairman and chief executive
officer of Southern California Edison, the utility subsidiary of Edison
International. "The Tehachapi project is an example of the company finding a
progressive way to meet increased energy demands of our customers and meet
state officials' desires to enhance the state's renewables portfolio."
The Tehachapi project is the first major transmission project in California
being built specifically to access multiple renewable generators in a remote
renewable-rich resource area. When complete, it will be part of a
comprehensive $1.8 billion program to provide the high-voltage transmission
infrastructure necessary to interconnect and deliver the renewable wind
resources being developed in the Tehachapi Wind Resource Area to California
electricity customers.
Completing the Tehachapi project is an important component to meeting
California's renewable energy goals.
"Construction of the Tehachapi project will create the single largest power
block of wind energy in the United States," said Michael Peevey, president
of the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC). "Our action today
represents a critical step in alleviating the transmission constraints that
have limited our ability to access substantial wind resources in the
Tehachapi region."
Other phases of the project are in the regulatory and approval stage. The
project, if completed in 2013 as proposed, would be capable of carrying
4,500 megawatts of electricity, enough energy to supply nearly 3 million
homes at peak output. One megawatt is enough power to serve about 650
average homes at a given point in time.
"The Tehachapi project not only will facilitate the interconnection of new
wind generation, but also will improve grid reliability to help meet the
state's growing demand for electricity with renewable energy," said Dian
Grueneich, the lead CPUC commissioner on the Tehachapi project.
In addition to bringing significant wind energy resources to the California
transmission grid, the Tehachapi project will provide many other meaningful
benefits, including:
-- Improving the reliability of the California transmission grid by enabling
the expansion of the transfer capability of "Path 26," one of the state's
most important north/south transmission corridors.
-- Serving the growth in energy demand in the Antelope Valley.
-- Easing transmission constraints into the Los Angeles basin.
The Tehachapi project is part of SCE's five-year, $5 billion transmission
expansion program designed to ensure that Southern California has the robust
power delivery system needed by a growing region.
SCE is the nation's leading purchaser of renewable energy. In 2006, SCE
delivered about 13 billion kilowatt-hours of renewable energy, 17 percent of
its total power deliveries -- enough renewable energy to serve 1.8 million
homes for an entire year. Energy contracts signed by SCE from 2002 through
2007 account for approximately 4,200 megawatts of SCE's renewable energy
portfolio, the equivalent of about four major power plants.
An Edison International (NYSE:EIX) company, Southern California Edison is
the largest electric utility in California, serving a population of more
than 13 million via 4.8 million customer accounts in a 50,000-square-mile
service area within Central, Coastal and Southern California.
SOURCE: Southern California Edison
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