News Updates: T. Boone, economic crisis meets climate change crisis, renewables and the economy, climate change and ag science, get out and VOTE
October 29, 2008
Lovely fall morning up here in the hills of Jefferson County. Working at home today, in an unheated former sun porch, looking out over a beautiful view, huddled in blankets and guzzling coffee to stay warm, nursing a sick husband who brought home yucky germs off the ambulance, and without very good internet access. But the sun is finally coming up and it’s beautiful.
Now, to the real news.
Gossip about T. Boone Pickens. Is he selling off his wind turbines? Read David Sassoon’s Solve Climate piece on the possibility thereof. It’s a long entry, so I’ll boil it down for you - whether T. Boo (as Ben our intern dubbed him) is selling his turbines or not, the real story is that the establishment’s interest in renewable energies is as yet young and fickle. We’re the mistress, not the wife (the wife with an iron-clad prenup - ie, fossil fuels).
FYI, for the K-State Collegian take on the Pickens Plan, click here. It contains an interesting student poll about wind energy, too.
If you think the economic crisis is bad, wait till climate change kicks into high gear (Reuters). Renowned economist Nicholas Stern, whom people respect because he seems able to predict just about anything, has a warning. He called for “new fiscal spending tailored to low carbon growth,” and said that the “risk consequences of ignoring climate change will be very much bigger than the consequences of ignoring risks in the financial system.” “‘That’s a very important lesson, tackle risk early,’ Stern told a climate and carbon conference in Hong Kong.”
Bailout, tax credits, the markets, we’re getting mixed messages on renewables (KCBusiness Journal). (Of course, the good news is that in this economy, we are getting any good news at all.) Utility wind (and small wind, for that matter) now have tax credits. However, the credit crunch is affecting financing for wind farms. Hmm.
I would like to add - just from what I hear on the grapevine, while wind farm financing might be temporarily holding its breath, by no means are developers holding back on signing leases. CEP says this until our faces turn blue, and I am sure everyone is tired of hearing it, too - but before signing any wind lease, find a good natural resources lawyer!!!!
Ag scientist Jerry Hatfield’s recent talk at K-State on ag and climate change was EXTREMELY cool (Oznet). I had the good fortune to be in the audience, and took copious notes. One of the things I especially liked is that he talked about ranching and livestock concerns re climate change. Effects on crops is what usually dominates most ag/ climate discussions.
Everyone knows the election is coming up. All I have to say is - get out and vote!
Also remember, CEP offers voter resources on energy and environmental issues - check out this guide to state and national voter guides, and also take a look at how to research special interest $$$ (especially energy dollars) in Kansas elections.
— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org
Couldn’t make the KS Wind/ Renewables Conference this week? The KS media has you covered.
September 26, 2008
Here’s a start on the excellent coverage of this week’s ninth annual KCC-sponsored Wind and Renewable Energy Conference. I’m not going to get it all posted this morning, but hopefully soon.
Kansas aims to cash in on wind power (Salina Journal/ Harris News)
NASA scientist warns Kansans about CO2 emissions (Dodge Globe)
Global warming reaches emergency status (Salina Journal)
Some of the coverage also got wrapped up with the fact that KS had NASA scientist and climatologist James Hansen in town the day after the KS Chamber of Commerce heard from global warming skeptic and scientist Roy V. Spencer.
There were definitely varying takes on the contrast between the two speakers. This contrast is also not unconnected to the Kansas coal controversy.
NASA scientist urges action on global warming; His speech at clear odds with sentiment of researcher who says CO2 not to blame (Hutch/ Harris News)
Energy summit sparks debate, Coal plants may be back on table for legislature (TCJournal)
Speaker: CO2 not to blame for global warming (Hutch/ Harris News)
Editorial - Renewable Energy Must be Embraced (TCJournal)
— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org
CO-based Xcel Energy shuts down two coal plants. CO-based Tri-State Generation gets grilled by CO Public Utilities Commission.
August 21, 2008
The first article is from Denver Business Journal (reprinted in full below):
State regulators have approved a plan by Xcel Energy Inc. to shut down two coal-fired power plants in Colorado, citing benefits to public health and concerns about carbon-dioxide emissions.
It’s the first time in the nation a utility has volunteered, and regulators have approved, a plan to shut down power plants because of CO2 emissions, which are linked to global warming.
The Colorado Public Utilities Commission spent Monday and Tuesday discussing a plan from Xcel Energy Inc. (NYSE: XEL) to meet its customers’ power demands for the next several years. A written order offering specific details of the decision is expected in a few weeks.
The closures are two to four years away, and Xcel has proposed using natural gas to make up for the lost power supplies.
“In reaching the decision the commission was trying to move Xcel Energy toward carbon reduction goals that Gov. [Bill] Ritter has outlined in his climate action plan,” PUC spokesman Terry Bote said Wednesday.
“Also, they were adding renewable-energy resources in a cost-effective, technically feasible manner, ensuring an adequate supply of electricity in the future and being respectful of the cost that consumers have to bear,” he said.
Xcel, based in Minneapolis, is Colorado’s largest utility, serving about 70 percent of the population with natural gas and electricity.
When Xcel filed its plan in late 2007, the utility proposed shutting down the coal units at the Arapahoe power plant in Denver, near Santa Fe Drive and Evans Avenue, and the Cameo plant in Grand Junction.
“We are pleased that the commission has agreed with our proposal to close two of our power plants, as we continually move toward reducing our carbon dioxide emissions in Colorado,” said Xcel spokesman Mark Stutz.
“Gov. Ritter last year called for a 20 percent reduction in carbon-dioxide emission by 2020. These closures will reduce our emissions by 1.4 million tons a year and put us well on the way toward meeting the governor’s goal,” Stutz said.
The plants together can generate a total of 229 megawatts of electricity. Xcel proposed replacing the coal-fired generators at Denver’s Arapahoe power plant with ones that use natural gas and can generate 480 megawatts of power, but a decision on that plan has been postponed.
With the commissioners’ approval, the Cameo plant near Grand Junction is scheduled to close by December 2010. The Arapahoe station in Denver is slated for closure by December 2012, Stutz said.
“The Colorado Public Utilities Commission has set a clear path for Colorado’s energy future,” said Keith Hay, energy advocate for Environment Colorado, an advocacy group. “Colorado will be a leader in clean, renewable energy, and we’ll close down coal-fired power plants and replace that energy with renewable resources.
“We need to look at renewable resources first, and we need to get off of expensive and environmentally costly fossil-fuel resources. Solar is a better investment today and will be a better investment for tomorrow to supply energy for Colorado,” Hay said.
The commissioners also approved adding at least 200 megawatts of power from renewable-energy sources that have storage capability, Bote said.
That’s likely to mean Colorado will get a concentrated solar power plant that uses materials like molten salt to store the power of the sun’s heat for hours after sunset.
State regulators also approved adding 850 megawatts of power supplies from wind and solar generating plants, Bote said.
The second article - titled “Can Tri-State Emerge from the Dark Ages” - is from the Telluride Watch.
This past legislative session in KS, Tri-State partnered with Sunflower Electric to propose 1,400 of new coal generation for Kansas in Holcomb. This would have produced over 11 million tons of carbon dioxide emissions per year. The plants were vetoed three times.
Tri-State and Sunflower are appealing KDHE’s original permit denial through the courts. In the meantime, Tri-State is now preparing to propose either a coal-fired or nuclear plant in Holly, CO.
(article reprinted in full below)
DENVER – Officially, at least, Xcel Energy was nowhere to be seen last week in the hearing room at the Colorado Public Utilities headquarters in Denver.
But Xcel, the investor-owned utility that serves much of urban Colorado, was like an elephant in what was described as a precedent-setting “conversation” between PUC commissioners and representatives of Tri-State Generation and Transmission, the dominant supplier for rural Colorado.
At every turn, Tri-State representatives emphasized how they differ from Xcel: Their customers have generally lower incomes. Their market share is much smaller. It’s more difficult to integrate renewable energy because of a different daily demand curve, which has fewer midday spikes.
PUC members just as vigorously suggested differences, some none-too-flattering. Particularly prickly were the questions of Matt Baker, a PUC commissioner appointed by Gov. Bill Ritter in January. Does it bother Tri-State, he wanted to know, that Xcel has already developed some of the best wind resources in rural Colorado – on Tri-State turf?
No, responded Ken Reif, a senior vice president and general counsel at Tri-State, because Tri-State has different needs than Xcel. “At the moment we do not view wind as a viable baseload resource,” he said, referring to the constant, or base demand.
Again and again, Tri-State insisted that lowest cost is the driving force for determining how electricity is produced. Coal, at the moment, remains the cheapest.
Even that did not go unchallenged. Baker questioned whether coal prices will remain low, given recent increases.
Until it becomes cheap to ship coal to China, coal will remain relatively cheap, Tri-State representatives said.
And on it went for much of an afternoon.
The bigger picture
The exchange was the first chapter in what could become a loud debate in Colorado as Tri-State seeks to build a major new transmission line and a new power plant, which Tri-State representatives say could be either coal-powered or nuclear.
Tri-State clearly will need a permit from the PUC if it builds a power plant. However, it disputes the PUC’s authority over major transmission lines. For that matter, it disputes whether the PUC has any legal right to demand information about its plans.
Tri-State representatives repeatedly emphasized that the meeting was not a “hearing,” as is mandatory of Xcel, but rather a voluntary report.
By whatever name, the meeting was clearly part of the Ritter administration’s broader effort to reduce the state’s carbon footprint. Ron Binz, the PUC chairman, said as much in an interview later.
“I think all sectors of this industry need to pull their share, and while there are reasons that exact solutions may be different in rural areas and for small utilities, that’s just a matter of degree,” said Binz. He added: “Everybody has a role to play in this, including the co-ops.”
A central issue is to what extent coal can be a bridge into the future. If somewhat begrudgingly, Tri-State is conceding carbon constraints, but is holding out hope for technological innovation. A key question is whether carbon can be filtered from exhausts and sequestered underground, eliminating the emissions of carbon dioxide, a key greenhouse gas.
An experiment recently launched in New Mexico, in the San Juan Basin south of Durango, is part of that effort.
Tri-State is heavily invested in coal. It owns part of a coal mine at Craig, and even has some railroad cars for hauling coal. Altogether, about 75 percent of electricity distributed by Tri-State comes from burning coal. In contrast, Xcel gets 64 percent of its electricity from coal.
Xcel, in contrast, has invested more heavily in natural gas, which is more expensive than coal, but has half the carbon footprint – and can produce electricity more readily in response to peak demands. It can also more readily be integrated with intermittent renewables.
Colorado’s state government wants to see a much more rapid development of renewable energy sources and also a greater emphasis on energy efficiency than exists today. Guiding the effort is the Colorado Climate Action Plan, which ambitiously calls for a 20 percent reduction in greenhouse gases by the year 2020 and an 80 percent reduction by mid-century.
City and country mice
Today’s differences between Tri-State and Xcel can be traced to their roots.
Roots of the Public Service Co., Xcel’s subsidiary in Colorado, can be traced to 1869, when business leaders in Denver formed a company to provide gas lighting. In time, the company expanded to deliver electricity. Cities, with their closely spaced customers, were easily serviced. As such, they provided greater profit to private, monopolistic entrepreneurs.
Extending power lines to farms and ranches was far more expensive. In the 1930s, most of rural America remained without connection to electrical grids. To dismantle this electrical divide, Congress in 1935 set up the Rural Electrification Administration. That agency provided low-cost federal money to the new local electrical co-ops.
Unlike Xcel, which is owned by investors, with shares traded on Wall Street, these electrical co-ops are owned by the customers. Each customer is a shareholder, with a right to select directors.
In turn, several co-ops in 1952 created Tri-State, to absorb the job of getting electricity. Much of that electricity then came from dams, but today’s supply is only 15 percent hydroelectric. The growth in demand has been met primarily by burning coal and, increasingly by burning of natural gas.
Today, Xcel delivers 64 percent of electricity consumed in Colorado, either directly to consumers or to sale of rural co-ops and municipalities. Tri-State delivers 14 percent. Municipal utilities deliver most of the rest.
Co-ops describe themselves as a “family,” and the family tends to move as one. Despite their foundation in representational democracy, the co-ops, when they band together, tend toward secretiveness. Meetings are not open to the public and, according to many who have been involved, dissent within those meetings not pleasantly indulged.
The lines of fracture within Tri-State, as with much of the nation, are about coal, and whether it is a wise investment in the future.
The most openly rebellious of Tri-State members has been Delta-Montrose Electric, which in December 2006 rejected extension of a contract for coal-fired generation from Tri-State to the year 2050. The current contract is to expire in 2040. Kit Carson Electric, a co-op based in Taos, N.M., also rejected the extension.
Dan McClendon, general manager of DMEA, says the basic mentality of Tri-State and its cooperatives has been one of resisting change. Short-term costs dictate everything, he charges. “We don’t change until we have to,” he says.
Xcel has resisted change, too, but less stubbornly. After finally reaching a compromise with environmental groups, it is now building a 600-megawatt power plant near Pueblo, but plans to decommission two smaller coal-fired plants, one in Denver and the other near Grand Junction.
It has also increased efforts in what is called demand-side management, improving energy efficiency such as is achieved by compact-fluorescent lightbulbs and encouraging conservation, such as programs that temporarily cut use of air conditioners on hot summer afternoons.
Tri-State has been less aggressive about developing renewable energy. It is planning to get 10 to 20 megawatts from a concentrated solar project planned in New Mexico. It has also issued an invitation for proposals this year to develop another 50 to 100 megawatts of renewables.
This compares with the 189 megawatts shortage in supply forecast by Tri-State officials for the four-state service area by 2014.
Supply and demand
Tri-State expects 88 percent of its demand growth during the next five years to come from the industrial sector, primarily its booming oil and gas sector.
“We have very little growth at this point associated with the oil shale industry,” said Robert “Mac” McLennan, Tri-State’s senior vice president for external affairs.
Plan A for Tri-State was to partner with a Kansas company to build two new coal-fired power plants at Holcomb, Kan., in the state’s southwest corner. Gov. Kathleen Sebelius last October denied air-quality permits for the plants, citing the emissions of carbon dioxide. The U.S. Supreme Court last year ruled that C02 can be regulated under the Clean Air Act.
Tri-State is appealing the Kansas veto. Just the same, it is readying a plan B: either a coal-fired power plant or a nuclear generator, this time in Colorado, near Holly. The land and water rights have been secured, officials said, and air quality studies are now underway.
At least officially, Tri-State accepts that federal action putting a cost on carbon dioxide emissions will make coal-fired electricity more expensive. A tax of perhaps $50 per ton in emissions is why is why Tri-State is now looking “very hard” at nuclear, said McLennan.
Tri-State is investing research money into the potential for carbon sequestration. Use of renewables might be expedited, he added, if means to store compressed air can be found in Tri-State’s service area. Such storage technology is considered critical for allowing making both solar and wind capable of supplying electricity for baseload demand.
Xcel believes it can meet 30 percent of its demand through renewables.
The efficiency crucible
Demand-side management is also a central point of contention. Critics believe that Tri-State could, instead of building a new plant, meet demand by improving efficiencies.
That point was implicit in several comments from PUC members. Binz, the PUC chairman, suggested that Tri-State could engage a third-party energy efficiency firm, such as is done in Vermont, Wisconsin and several other states, providing expertise and volume unavailable to the local co-operatives.
While improving efficiency costs less than adding new supply, he conceded, it’s a tough sell to consumers.
Tri-State argues that, in the short term, demand can’t be dented sufficiently – that it needs a new power plant. Officials further argue that Tri-State does not have the direct relationship with consumers.
There is no doubt that Tri-State is changing. The executive team has largely been replaced in the last four years. Moreover, there has been dissent from the coal-first approach in even the most conservative rural communities.
The measuring stick, at least in Colorado, is always Xcel.
“We are not as far along as Public Service [i.e., Xcel] in our process, but our pace is far greater than it was even two years ago,” said Reif, Tri-State’s chief lawyer.
The question is whether Tri-State is picking up the pace sufficiently, given the carbon constraints that are generally expected from Congress within the next several years.
— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org
Report from Dan Nagengast on the Meade Wind Summit
August 20, 2008
Dan Nagengast of the Kansas Rural Center has been facilitating wind forums across KS during this spring and summer. Looks like more are coming, too - see below, Dan’s summary on the Meade event August 12.
Sponsors: Kansas Rural Center, Climate & Energy Project, Energy Foundation, Meade County Commissioners, Fowler State Bank, Meade State Bank, The Plains State Bank, Farm Bureau Association, Farm Bureau Financial Services, Meade County Historical Society, Sunflower RC&D, NetWork Kansas and Meade Economic Development
Attendance: There were 130 in attendance (capacity), including a county commissioner, state legislators, economic development directors from nearby counties, etc. Long discussion with the city of Liberal’s Economic Development Director Colleen Towns about organizing a similar three-county event for Morton, Stevens and Seward Counties.
Program:
10:00 AM Welcome / Introduction (Rodger DeGarmo)
10:10 AM Mike Irvin (Land Leasing Issues, State-wide perspective)
11:00 AM Steve Errebo (Lincoln Co. Commissioner, Local issues)
11:30 AM John Cyr (Finance Options)
12:15 AM Lunch
1:00 PM Terry Cordes (Local Land Leasing issues)
1:30 PM Dan Nagengast (State policy issues)
2:30 PM Q/A
3:00 PM Adjourn
Tone and Tenor of the Day: Virtually every speaker emphasized the need for wind development benefiting local and regional economies. Irvin, Errebo, Cyr, and my presentations all were updated since the previous summit, but all seem to more strongly emphasize the local economic aspect more than in the past. I also emphasized the flow of federal grant and loan dollars for buy down on projects to other states with more developed wind policies than Kansas.
A new speaker, Terry Cordes is a local attorney with an extensive oil and gas lease practice. He works with 35 landowners who are cooperating to present a united front in negotiating with land or wind developers. He went into great detail about problems with leases he had seen, and how he would counsel his clients against signing them.
He also has been working toward compensation packages that include a combination of minimum lease payment plus royalty payments on gross revenues. He calculated gross revenues in the $300,000 range per turbine for the region. Revenues to wind tower owners have climbed rapidly lately as customer fuel charges from utilities have hovered above 5¢ per Kwh. He also spoke about the benefits to landowners of their arranging cooperative negotiations using an attorney.
Materials: The Kansas Energy Office provided copies of all our 1-page handouts as well as CD-ROMs of those materials (with embedded hotlinks) and other materials KRC has developed. In addition, we distributed materials for the KEO about the upcoming Wind and Renewable Energy Conference featuring NASA climate scientist Dr. James Hansen.
— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org
News Updates: Status of the PTC, water in Arkansas River Basin, 2008 Prairie Festival at the Land Institute
July 30, 2008
So what IS happening in Congress with that Production Tax Credit (PTC) for wind and solar? How can so many politicians support it, yet mysteriously it never gets passed? According to US News & World Report:
Today, ironically, there is overwhelming bipartisan support for the incentives—even Sen. James Inhofe of Oklahoma, a conservative Republican and vocal global warming skeptic, is a strong proponent. Few consider the tax credits’ estimated price tag of about $8.2 billion a significant drain on the federal budget, especially in light of the measurably larger incentives awarded to oil and coal. In fact, a recent study by General Electric found that the tax credits more than pay for themselves, because they create jobs and profits, resulting in 2007 in a net gain of $250 million for the federal treasury. Also, the American public is behind them: About 94 percent of Americans support government development of solar energy.
It is tempting to think that all this goodwill would have presaged easy passage. But Congress, despite its pledges of support, has lately ground into something of a stalemate, and on multiple occasions in the past few months it has defeated or blocked bills that would have salvaged the credits.
At the moment, the main obstacle to progress seems to be a philosophical one. House Democrats, led by the so-called Blue Dog Democrats, a group of fiscally minded moderates, have insisted that the cost of the credits be offset by savings elsewhere. Their solution, which would raise taxes on offshore companies, has rankled Senate Republicans, who insist that no offsets are needed in the first place. And so a parliamentary standoff has unfolded. Twice the Senate attempted to attach an amendment to the now recently passed housing relief bill that would have renewed the credits; twice it was stripped out by the House. Meanwhile, a House bill with similar aims was defeated last week by a Senate Republican filibuster.
Supposedly there will be a vote before the August recess.
For CEP’s information sheet on the PTC, click here (.pdf).
Energy editorial - Kansas Electric Cooperatives executive vice-president and Kansas Energy Council Electricity Committee chairman Stuart Lowry offers a thoughtful look at some of the energy choices facing Americans today (Salina Journal).
Water and energy in the Arkansas River Basin. Been too busy to take a good look at this myself - but check out this very interesting presentation via DOE/EERE’s Windpowering America. Important re the ongoing Colorado/ Kansas water debates.
When big business and environmental organizations work together. Interesting new trend (USAToday). Missouri’s deal between KCPL and Sierra Club for a new coal plant is mentioned.
Via CEP’s Eileen - graphic on household energy hogs - hello, water heater (NPR).
Plug for CEP’s parent organization, the Land Institute in Salina KS. Make plans now to attend the 2008 Prairie Festival in Salina, Kansas!! Dates are September 26-28. For details and schedule, click here.
Author Barbara Kingsolver will be one of the honored guests. Lt. Governor Mark Parkinson will speak as well. So will renowned environmental historian Donald Worster.
— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org
You read that right. Billionaire oilman and clean energy convert T. Boone Pickens - who has received international publicity for his Pickens Plan to increase wind energy - will be kicking off a townhall style meeting tour in Topeka!
Wednesday, July 30th, 4:00 p.m., Heritage Hall of the Kansas Expocenter. (Yes, I think the same location where they have all the gun shows.)
EDIT2: We have officially sorted out the time of the event - Doors will open at 3:30 and the event will start shortly afterward - it may be 4:00 before they get started. Free and open to the public, but only 400 people will be allowed in.
Heritage Hall is actually not the gun show building - it is one of the wonderful original limestone buildings on the fairground
Come one, come all. Presuming you have no conflict with work.
— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org
In a new energy economy - especially in wind - there’s all sorts of ways to make the development happen.
Logan County Economic Development Director Dan Hartman has decided to see if county commissioners in northeastern Kansas are interested in teaming together to develop an integrated wind economy and infrastructure for wind-rich northwestern Kansas. The transmission picture in that part of the state is rapidly changing, with new lines coming in and old ones being upgraded.
Logan County is hosting a 13 county summit on August 13 from 10 a.m. to noon in Oakley, KS at the Colonial Steakhouse. There will be almost 40 county commissioners there. The purpose is to discuss various possible models of wind development for that area of the state.
The public is welcome, and no registration is required. Just show on up.
— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org
What New York recently did on net metering
July 23, 2008
“You could send me to hell or to New York City, it’d be about the same to me…”
Come on, it’s a Hank Jr. lyric. Just a little Kansas joke.
But regardless, if you did go to New York, they would have net metering. Check it out (I think I originally received this info from Dan Nagengast of the KS Rural Center).
reprinted in full below
*********************
18 June 2008 - Governor David A. Paterson today announced an agreement with the Legislature on landmark energy legislation that will authorize increased development of renewable energy with a process called net metering. Net metering allows electricity customers with qualified renewable energy systems to sell excess electricity back to their local utility.
The bill will significantly expand the State’s net metering law and lead to greater investment by homeowners, farms and businesses in facilities that generate energy from clean renewable sources. By increasing market demand for renewable technologies, the bill will also attract renewable energy manufacturers and installers to New York State.
“I want to thank the Legislature for making this enhanced energy law a reality. In addition to changing the State’s dependency on traditional, fossil-fuel based energy sources this law will be a job creation vehicle, particularly in Upstate New York,” said Governor Paterson. “For instance, those businesses with large roof areas present enormous opportunities for hosting solar energy facilities. If those kinds of resources are fully realized, it could relieve significant stress from our already over-burdened utility grid and improve our energy independence.”
Governor Paterson has long advocated for and championed the cause of renewable energy and enhanced energy independence for New York State. Governor Paterson campaigned on a promise of an enhanced emphasis on alternative fuel sources in 2006, and more recently called for an expanded and enhanced net metering law in February of this year as one of 16 recommendations from his Renewable Energy Task Force.
The bill will significantly expand net metering in three areas of renewable energy – solar, wind and farm waste.
Solar Power
The bill will expand the State’s solar net metering program to apply to businesses, and increase the size of eligible solar PV systems to 25 kilowatts for residential customers and up to 2 megawatts or the customer’s peak load (whichever is less) for non-residential customers. The law will also increase the maximum amount of electricity that the utility would be required to buy back through net metering. Additionally, the law will provide the Long Island Power Authority with authorization to implement non-residential solar electric net metering pursuant to Public Service Law requirements.
Wind Power
The bill will also authorize net metering for wind technology for all utility customer classes, including non-residential classes. Previously, the law authorized such systems for residential and farm operations only. The law will also allow non-residential wind electric generators to net meter up to the lesser of their peak load or 2 megawatts, and increase the maximum size of wind facilities for farm operations from 125 kilowatts to 500 kilowatts. Caps on net-metering enrollment in utility service territories will also be increased.
Farm Waste
The size of a farm waste electric generation system that can be net metered will increase from 400 kilowatts to 500 kilowatts.
Previously, the Governor’s Renewable Energy Task Force had identified New York’s net metering law limitations as a barrier to broader use of distributed renewable energy generation.
Senate Majority Leader Joseph L. Bruno said: “I applaud Senator Maziarz and Senator Johnson for providing leadership in the Senate on this critically important issue. Net metering can advance many sources of alternative energy in New York State, promote economic development and help us save energy. At a time where New York’s families are struggling with rising energy costs, this is an opportunity to provide much-needed relief. I’d like to thank the Governor and the Assembly for partnering with us on this legislation.”
Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver said: “The expansion of net metering paves the way for greater independence and cost-savings for New York’s energy consumers. This legislation will encourage residents, businesses, schools and non-profits to reduce costs by producing power through non-polluting alternative sources such as solar and wind technologies. By signing this bill, Governor Paterson joins the Assembly in its commitment to reducing costs and creating cleaner energy for our consumers.”
Senate Minority Leader Malcolm A. Smith said: “Governor Paterson has long been an advocate for alternative energy sources and I am extremely pleased the Legislature has once again taken a step towards embracing them. The net metering law will attract business and employment opportunities to the state, as well as reducing household utility costs—providing the much needed relief to working families. There is an appreciated need to tap into as many alternative sources to produce energy, especially with soaring gas prices expected to hit record highs during the summer season.”
Senator George Maziarz, Chairman of the Senate Energy and Telecommunications Committee said: “Greater access to net metering will give consumers greater control over their own energy future. Net metering will lower energy bills, promote renewable energy sources, and help create green-collar jobs in New York. This is a significant step in the right direction for finding a way to meet our long-term energy needs.”
Assembly Energy Committee Chair Kevin Cahill said: “Together with conservation, net metering represents our best hope to reduce peak energy demand immediately. I am proud to have been able to work with the Governor and my colleagues in the Legislature to come to an agreement that will help protect the environment, spark economic growth and meet our energy needs.”
Senator Owen H. Johnson said: “New York’s current restrictive net metering law has been an impediment to the widespread use of renewable energy, but that’s about to change. The net metering legislation we’ve agreed upon will promote greater use of solar, wind and farm waste energy and will increase the proportion of renewable electricity consumers use. I commend Governor David Paterson for his leadership on this issue and Senator George Maziarz for his hard work and resolve in getting this important legislation passed this year.”
Assemblyman Steven Englebright said: “With rising energy prices and increasing concerns about the impact of fossil fuels on our climate, New York takes a big step today to address these serious challenges. A broader segment of energy consumers will now have greater incentive to produce the types of clean power that will help reduce utility costs without further damaging our environment.”
Assemblyman Thomas O’Mara said: “Serving as the Ranking Republican Member on the Assembly Energy Committee, I want to commend Governor Paterson for his leadership in supporting this legislation, as it will help reduce energy prices for Upstate families and employers, along with promoting the use of renewable energy sources that are cleaner, greener and lessen our dependence on foreign oil.”
Konza Prairie to become major new site for studying climate change. (Salina Journal) K-State is in line for tens of millions of dollars to study the impact of climate change on ecological systems - in this case, the Konza prairie. If Congress approves the budget, then K-State would become a member of the National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON). Quotable:
“There are likely to be significant ecological changes over the next three decades,” Blair said. “The idea is we can detect types of environmental changes we wouldn’t necessarily be able to see at individual sites.”
Scientists expect changes such as more extreme rainfall over grasslands because of global warming, as well as ongoing changes in the country’s land use for farming, ranching and housing developments, among others.
“This research data will be freely available to the public and the entire scientific community,” Blair said.
Appeal filed in Ellis County wind development. I’m not too clear what’s going on out there with Iberdola’s new wind farm - it appears that while an appeal against the county commission’s decision to approve the plan has been filed, it is not going to matter to this part of the process. Instead, the wind development will probably go ahead while the appeal will be resolved in district court. I think. (Someone else read this story and try to make sense of it) (HDNews)
Moody’s financial outlook for utilities. In years to come, utilities face several major challenges (which can be handled, but they’ll have to step carefully) aging infrastructure, rising fuel and construction costs, and the current uncertainty over carbon regulation (Research Recap). Quotable:
“In addition, new legislative proposals regarding carbon emissions represent a material long-term credit risk for the sector due to the uncertainty over the framework, implementation and effect on costs to consumers.
“Moody’s remains indifferent as to which carbon dioxide emission reduction method is ultimately adopted, whether it be a straight tax regime or a cap-and-trade system, although, from a credit perspective, Moody’s views the cap-and-trade system as being more complex and less transparent than a straight tax.”
Wichita Eagle editorial - “Think Big on Energy” - comparing Obama’s and Pickens’ plans.
More on the Pickens plan. From Maril’s Dad (who is supposed to be on vacation, but is apparently sitting in front of a computer reading CNN’s Lou Dobbs interviews). Whatever your thoughts on the plan, or Dobbs, or Pickens, do take a moment to appreciate this quote, where Dobbs hands it to Pickens:
“You are talking straightforward about what to do and how to fix a problem while not another single elected official, another business association, because most businessmen now are represented by the Chamber of Commerce or the Business Roundtable and haven’t got the guts or the vision, apparently, to talk for themselves. I want to compliment you for doing so, if I may.”
— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org
Welcome to the second entry in CEP’s new Tips series. What better way to spend your summer than reading up on climate and energy policy issues, right?
(The following is available in .pdf at the link above.)
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Production Tax Credit: THE NEED
Developing renewable energy is critical to moving our country away from dependence on high-priced fossil fuels.
75% of Kansans want to see increased development of the state’s wind resources.
Developing renewables strengthens the economy, increases energy security and energy independence, and protects the environment.
Renewables – whose operations do not emit greenhouse gases, like carbon dioxide from fossil fuels - are one of our most powerful weapons for fighting climate change.
THE SOLUTION
The Production Tax Credit (PTC) is the nation’s most successful incentive for developing renewable energy.
This federal initiative provides a 2.0 cent-per-kilowatt-hour tax credit for electricity generated from wind turbines and other renewable energy sources.
It re-authorizes funding for Clean and Renewable Energy Bonds (CREBs) - interest-free loans for financing qualified energy projects.
The PTC works. When the PTC is in effect, wind development thrives. The last three times the PTC has expired, the following year saw a 76-90% decrease.
The PTC works for Kansas. President Bush and the Department of Energy have set a goal for wind to provide 20% of the nation’s power by 2030 – without the PTC, this goal will probably not be met. As NREL estimates the benefits of Kansas’ 7,158 megawatt share:
• $7.8 billion in total economic benefit
• Over 23,000 construction jobs and over 3,000 permanent jobs
• Payments of $20.8 million per year to landowners
• $19 million per year in payments in lieu of taxes to communities
THE PROBLEM
The PTC is set to expire at the end of 2008. Congress has not yet acted to extend these credits.
If Congress fails, then 116,000 jobs and more than $19 billion in investment in the wind and solar industries are at risk (American Wind Energy Association). Also at risk:
Jobs. It takes approximately two operations and maintenance personnel to run every 10-15 industrial sized wind turbines. A typical wind development has 50-75 turbines.
Farm income. Wind leases pay landowners $3-$10K per turbine per year.
County income. Wind developments offer new income for rural Kansas counties.
THE OBVIOUS
Extending the PTC will create thousands of jobs and generate billions in investment, especially in rural America.
News Updates: Wind in Ellis Co, net metering in Wyandotte? the state of the grid, wind forecasting
July 15, 2008
Wind project moving forward in Ellis County. Most KS wind folk know the contentious history of the Ellis County wind project. Wind developer Iberdola is now one step closer to making that project work. County commissioners will hear the proposal July 28 (Hays Daily News).
Net metering to come to Wyandotte County? If the legislature can’t put together a statewide net metering policy, that may not stop some Kansas utilities, like BPU (KMBC 9).
Wichita man featured in WSJ story about not using AC. (WSJournal) Quotable:
Troy Newman, of Wichita, Kan. Last summer, his home energy bills hit an unacceptable $300 a month. So he has installed dark curtains on his south-facing windows and limited his family’s use of heat-generating appliances. All summer cooking, for instance, is done on the outdoor grill. Much of the laundry is hung on a clothesline.
On hot afternoons, Mr. Newman runs a hose to the roof and douses the shingles for 20 minutes, which he swears lowers the temperature inside. “I don’t know if it’s all that good for the life span of the roof,” Mr. Newman says, “but when it’s 110 degrees, I really could care less.”
Though he recently added 1,200 square feet of living space to the house, Mr. Newman says his energy bills are at least $100 a month lower than they were last summer.
Great post from Climateer Investing on the state of the U.S. electrical grid. Including links to video!
Best places in the county for renewable energy (Forbes). KS is prominently mentioned. Definitely check out the maps feature. Slick.
Utah moves to a four day work week for state employees (LATimes). Hmm.
Wind forecasting. Pretty much just for dorks, but an interesting FERC ruling on wind forecasting. (FOr non-dorks, wind forecasting helps integrate intermittent power into the grid.) (Energy Legal Blog).
The Pope REALLY gets going on climate change. He’s spoken on the topic before, but he is definitely kicking it up more than a notch (WSJ Environmental Capital blog).
—Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org
Sat in on an interesting conference call yesterday morning. High points follow below. Topic was DOE/ EERE’s annual report on US wind power for 2007.
Some of the wind/electricity jargon below might be outside the experience of some of our blog readers - sorry! any questions, just email me or leave a comment and I will clarify.
(For .pdf of the report, click here. Page 2 presents list of major findings and statistics.)
The report’s authors were from Lawrence Berkeley National Labs, NREL presented the conference call, and the ppt will be posted on www.windpoweringamerica.gov. Data came from AWEA, EIA, and FERC.
Note: The report was limited to large (utility scale) wind. Large was defined as 50 kW turbines and up. Small, distributed wind was not included.
Major findings:
Wind is becoming a major player in the electricity industry. US wind capacity increased 46% in 2007 (compared to 19% in 2006, 12% in 2005), with 5,329 MW added (ahead of 1400 MW of new coal, behind 7,500 MW of new natural gas) and $9 billion invested.
TX was the leading state in capacity growth. The US leads the world in annual capacity growth. Wind contributed 35% of all new US electric generating nameplate capacity in 2007. From 1998-2007, the cumulative average wholesale price of wind was competitive with conventional power.
2008 is shaping up to be a record-breaking year, with 225 GW of wind in interconnection queues (not that all of it will get built). However, 2009 may be a year of retrenchment, given the instability of the Production Tax Credit - back to the boom and bust cycle.
Community wind appears to be losing steam.
Other findings:
GE is dominant wind turbine manufacturer but other manufacturers are challenging its market share.
The huge demand for wind turbines is inspiring the US wind turbine manufacturing industry. These factories are springing up around Kansas, but not in it.
Some states are achieving quite high wind penetration (20% is considered to be about the limit for the existing grid - this is energy capacity, not nameplate capacity) - MN 7.5%, IA 7.5%, CO 6.1%. KS is at 2.3% of actual grid penetration (or 12th on the list). Some individual utilities are achieving even higher penetration - Xcel Energy 9.3%, for example.
Average size of turbines is growing, average size of facility is growing (avg. 120 MW), IOU market share is growing, via wind European utilities are becoming, major players in the US utility market, opportunities and models for sale of wind power are growing,.
Price pressure continued to increase for wind power as for conventional power - weak dollar, rising materials and turbine costs, and component shortages (12-24 month waits for turbines blades) responsible in part. There is a fair amount of regional variability.
However, at the same time, capacity factors are rising for newer installations (especially in TX and Heartland regions), and this helps balance the costs. Wind remained competitive in wholesale markets. Wind prices are driven by project performance and capital costs.
Wind performance is improving over time. (They don’t know why - possibly better siting, possibly better turbines, possibly higher hub heights at levels of higher quality winds, they don’t know, it needs further study, they’d love to know). In the best wind resource areas, 25.9% of farms built between 2004-2007 are running over 40%.
O&M costs are also dropping at newer facilities. Wind integration costs are “well below $10/ MWh - and typically below $5/ MWh - for wind capacity penetration of as much as 30% of the peak load of the system in which the wind power is delivered.” NREL is also carrying on a major wind and solar integration study.
Lack of adequate transmission remains major barrier for wind development. Competitive Renewable Energy Zones (CREZ) are a good strategy to get around this. So are state level transmission authorities.
Policy matters to wind development. Federal: Production Tax Credit (PTC), Clean and Renewable Energy Bonds (CREBs), and USDA rural development funds (9006).
State wind policies: An RPS is critical. In 2007, more than 75% of wind capacity was built in states with RPSs. Green pricing programs also important, as are state renewable energy funds and state tax incentives. Carbon reduction policies also important.
— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org
Welcome to CEP’s new TIPS series. Meant for both citizens and candidates, these Tips offer you places to start talking about climate and energy issues. (For a .pdf version, please click here.)
TALKING ABOUT
CLIMATE AND ENERGY
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R E N E W A B L E S
Developing renewables will strengthen the Kansas rural economy, increase the nation’s energy security, help landowners become more energy independent, and protect the environment.
Future economic development depends on making the transition to a new energy economy less dependent on fossil fuels, with new green jobs that can’t be exported.
Renewables are cost-effective – prices for wind and solar are dropping while prices of fossil fuels are becoming more volatile. Renewables provide a hedge against future price changes.
Kansas needs to stay competitive - other states and countries are making enormous strides in building their renewable economies.
Studies show that adding renewables to our energy mix does not make our electricity supply any less reliable.
WIND
• Wind-rich. Kansas has the third top wind resources in the nation, but it ranks only 11th in wind development. Wind is a local source of energy with a fixed fuel cost – free.
• Clear goals. The President and the Department of Energy have set a goal for wind to provide 20% of the nation’s power by 2030.
• Farm income. Wind leases pay landowners $3-$10K per turbine per year.
• County income. Wind developments offer new income for rural Kansas counties.
• Jobs. It takes approximately two operations and maintenance personnel to run every 10-15 industrial sized wind turbines. A typical wind development has 50-75 turbines.
• Economic development. Wind turbine manufacturers are looking to locate in wind-rich areas of the country – like Kansas – to cut down on transportation costs.
• Low-impact. Wind operations create no greenhouse gas emissions (like carbon dioxide), and use almost no water to produce electricity.
• Reliable. When treated as energy rather than capacity, increasing wind power allows utilities to decrease use of fossil fuels.
SOLAR
• Solar power could provide up to 10% of U.S. power by 2025.
• Southwestern Kansas is one of the top solar and wind areas in the country. Manufacturers are experimenting with ways to combine the two forms of energy.
BIOFUELS
Cellulosic ethanol will allow farmers to convert non-food biomass to cash crops and liquid fuels.
METHANE CAPTURE
Gases from feedlots can be collected, stored, and burned to produce baseload electricity.
C L I M A T E C H A N G E
The long-term success and survival of Kansas depends on our climate staying as stable as possible. It’s common sense to avoid chances of increased drought and extreme weather.
Nine out of 10 scientists recommend taking the risks of climate change very seriously, and reducing greenhouse gas emissions like carbon dioxide.
It will cost less to act now. Ignoring climate change will cost us more in the future – in disaster relief, damage to the economy and infrastructure, higher food and fuel prices, etc.
HOW WARMING WORKS
• When you run a temperature even one degree above normal, you experience fever and chills.
• With global warming, the planet feels the same way. When heat is trapped in the atmosphere by a blanket of carbon dioxide, the earth becomes less able to regulate its normal cycles. Climate change is the result.
WATER
• Precipitation. Climate change affects patterns of rain, snow, ice, etc. Precipitation events are projected to grow more intense, even though average rainfall amounts may stay stable.
• Drought. Between precipitation events there will be longer spells without significant moisture.
EXTREME WEATHER
Increased heat in the atmosphere provides extra fuel for already dangerous weather, such as thunderstorms and tornados.
AGRICULTURE
• Increased atmospheric carbon dioxide might help some crops, but it will also help weeds. Higher temperatures will lead to more insects.
• Higher temperatures, more variable precipitation, and extreme weather will pose higher risks for crops – ie, wheat depends on temperature, and corn depends on moisture. Extreme precipitation will create more run-off and erosion.
• Easier winters for livestock will be offset by harder summers. Higher temperatures will also decrease dairy yields.
HUMAN HEALTH
Warmer temperatures help increase the risk of disease. They also intensify air and water pollution. Those most affected will likely be the young and old, and the poor and vulnerable.
P O L I C I E S
A balanced energy policy is open, accessible, and transparent, and fairly balances the input of citizens with that of special interests.
An official Renewable Energy Standard (RES) could offer incentives for community wind development, include a fair net metering policy for schools, farms, businesses, and homeowners, and allow utilities to count this production toward goals for renewables.
Energy efficiency policies – improved building codes, decoupling, etc. – can help reduce dependence on fossil fuels.
Given the federal regulatory uncertainty on carbon dioxide and carbon regulation, Kansas needs avoid risk in its energy choices.
New news in Kansas wind development (Hays Daily News). Six very wind-rich Kansas counties are talking about grouping together in some sort of compact to promote wind development (Trego, Wallace, Sherman, Thomas, Gove and Logan). In part, their approach will be to develop and control the infrastructure needed to get wind resources to market.
Imagine if during the last century, farmers’ co-ops had been able to build and control at least some of the railroads. Pretty cool, huh? Wind is a new resource, with new development patterns, and new social and economic organizations have the chance evolve as a result. Built on old ones, of course.
Kansans win EnergyStar awards. Emporia students build an EnergyStar rated home (Emporia Gazette), and the Koch Industries office building in Wichita wins national EnergyStar award (Wichita Eagle).
Midwest floods show signs of global warming. (Reuters) Quotable: “Floods like those that inundated the U.S. Midwest are supposed to occur once every 500 years but this is the second since 1993, suggesting flawed forecasts that do not take global warming into account, conservation experts said on Tuesday. “Although no single weather event can be attributed to global warming, it’s critical to understand that a warming climate is supplying the very conditions that fuel these kinds of weather events,” said Amanda Staudt, a climate scientist with the National Wildlife Federation.”
Earth-friendly fuels station opens in Lawrence (LJWorld). The EPA, local dignitaries (politicians), Maril’s biodiesel-obsessed husband, and hundreds more turned out for the grand opening of the new Zarco station in Lawrence. Pretty cool place. Currently only one of its kind in the nation - here in KS! We’re so cool.
Some Suzlon wind turbine blades cracking (WSJournal Environmental Capital blog). Whoops. Evidently in their quick ramp up to get their blades to the US wind market, Suzlon did not do adequate testing for the U.S. grid, or for our gusty winds. The manufacturer is reinforcing the blades and making repairs.
Creation care (USA Today). 67% of Americans say they care about the environment because it is God’s creation.
Wind and transmission in OK. Update on wind farms proposals and transmission line development in neighboring Oklahoma (Enid News). Lots of information about Lenexa-based Trade Winds, the corporation that owns the Lincoln County wind farm along I-70 in Kansas - for a photo essay on that wind farm (by CEP’s Jason), see here.
— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org
Kansas and the wind revolution
July 1, 2008
Probably one of those articles you should just click over to and read in full - from Business Week, a feature on the Kansas energy picture, including three of its major figures - Governor Kathleen Sebelius, Sunflower Electric CEO Earl Watkins, and wind farmer Pete Farrell.
Headline and sub-head: “Wind: The Power. The Promise. The Business. A partial answer to America’s energy crisis is springing up. But the struggle to harness the winds of Kansas shows the difficulty in building an industry that threatens the status quo.“
Gist of it: “Kansas, in the middle of the wind belt, has become a battleground for the wind revolution. Advocates of alternative energy are pitted against defenders of the status quo, which in Kansas means coal. The flash point: a proposal by Sunflower Electric Power to build two 700-megawatt, coal-fired power plants in western Kansas. State regulators denied permits on the basis of CO2 emissions, the Republican-controlled legislature passed bills to overturn the ruling, Democratic Governor Kathleen Sebelius vetoed the bills, and the legislature has narrowly sustained her vetoes. So ferocious is this fight that Sunflower and its allies placed ads in newspapers suggesting that because Sebelius is against their coal project she’s playing into the hands of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. The poisoned atmosphere helps explain why Kansas has only 364megawatts of wind power capacity from about 300 turbines, despite having some of the hardest-blowing wind in the country, while Texas produces more than 10 times as much.”
There’s a Bleeding Kansas vibe to the story. Not only are we ground zero for the nation’s ongoing coal controversy - but, throw wind into the mix as well.
— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org
Via Climateer, a new video out from Earthjustice (the legal arm of the Sierra Club). It features Governor Sebelius’s recent speech at the Earthjustice event out in CO, where she discusses the recent Kansas coal controversy.
The original post is from New Energy News, which also has some comments from Iberdola wind project manager Krista Gordon. Krista is currently working on two new projects in KS right now, in Ellis and Trego counties (just west of the Lincoln County wind farm on I-70). Iberdola already runs Pete Ferrell’s Elk River wind farm (150 MW) down in Butler County.
At this point, the Ellis County project (200 megawatts) appears to be moving forward. The County Commission just voted 5-2 to approve it (Hays Daily News.)
— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org
EDIT: ENTRY HAS BEEN UPDATED WITH ADDITIONAL PHOTOS!
All these trips - CEP’s carbon footprint is stinky lately. Yes, we buy offsets, but you still don’t feel good about the travel and the carbon dioxide. I’ve been thinking about stealing my husband’s truck and burning the bio(diesel) for these little jaunts.
The drive to Omaha was lovely, though (if you ignored the flooding) - blue chicory and orange day lilies are blooming all along the ditches.
Anyway. Getting pictures of wind turbines makes it all the carbon worthwhile. These are from Rock Port, Missouri. Rock Port (pop. 1,395) plans to be the first city in the nation to get all of its power from wind turbines.

Rock Port is much like any Midwestern small town along a major highway - it has the gas stations and fast food over by the big road, and you have to drive a little bit to get to the real town. They have their Casey’s General Store, the farm/ ag implements store, more churches than you can shake a stick at, and a cute tiny downtown hanging in there for dear life. A liquor store on the edge of town. Lots of pragmatic looking Morton buildings.
Rock Port has installed four Suzlon wind turbines of 1.25 megawatts (MW) each (5 MW total). The development is called the Loess Hill Wind Farm. There were plenty of cows grazing under the turbines but somehow I didn’t get any of them in the image.

It really, really did look different than Kansas wind development - I can’t explain it. Seeing turbines so close to trees, maybe that was it. Plus their ridges are closer and tighter, running along the bluffs of old river valleys formed from much harder rock than our limestone. KS ridges come from old prairie rivers (ie, broad and sweeping) and the pressures of ancient sea beds atop limestone. Just different.
According to the EERE website, construction of the wind farm was by the Wind Capital Group of St. Louis, which “specializes in small-scale wind developments for communities in Missouri and the Midwest.” John Deere Wind Energy out of KC handled the financing.
The Loess Hill Wind Farm is right close to the Cow Branch wind farm, which is 50 MW. This is a crummy picture, sorry, but (a) I didn’t want to get run over or trespass to get a better/ safer one, and (b) I was running horribly behind.

Technically, I think the Rock Port Loess Hill Wind Farm would probably get called community wind. That’s accurate on some level - but I really think “municipal wind” would be a better term. Muni gives a better sense of the forces behind it, as well as how they have to fit the development into their existing utility structures and relationships. Also from EERE:
The Missouri Public Utility Alliance in Columbia will purchase excess electricity from Loess Hills when the output from the wind power plant exceeds consumption in the town. This alliance provides electricity to Rock Port Municipal Utilities, which distributes to customers in town. The wind farm is sized to provide enough electricity over the course of a typical year to match electricity consumption in the town.
Community wind or muni wind, whatever you call it, both wind farms are small enough to be good examples of distributed wind. This is where you shoehorn small installations into the existing grid.
The advantage is - hopefully - that these many small locations add stability to the grid, versus the grid depending on so many large and centralized power sources. Small wind farms also offer additional energy resources so that big utilities can back off fossil fuels more often.
And in Rock Port, it also gives them an additional sense of being more energy independent, and making use of local resources.
UPDATE: More (and better!) images of the Loess Hill and Cow Branch wind farms. These come courtesy of Brian David of EPA Region 7, who toured the site as part the Region’s Energy Tour just a week or two ago. Forty-five EPA staff members attended.
On this one, you can get a sense of the roads that connect wind turbine sites - these roads are part of the farms, and are necessary for construction as well as the daily operations and maintenance.

What a Suzlon 1.25 MW turbine looks like from the underside -

I think this is actually the skyline of Cow Branch wind farm. Whether those lines were pre-existing or added later (or were upgraded) - don’t know.

thank you for the photos!
— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org
News Updates: distributed wind in MN, spies don’t like climate change, jobs and state energy efficiency policies
June 26, 2008
Minnesota does groundbreaking study on how to get small and community wind into the grid. (North American Windpower) Quotable: “The study’s goal was to identify a total of 600 MW of small renewable energy projects that could be operated in the transmission grid with few or no changes required to the existing infrastructure. Dispersed renewable energy involves wind, solar and biomass projects that will generate between 10 MW and 40 MW of power. The second phase of the study will seek to identify an additional 600 MW of renewable energy and will begin this fall.”
Spies coming in from the cold. (Sorry, couldn’t resist.) The U.S. intelligence community is much much less than pleased about the prospects of global warming and climate change for their already difficult job (US News and World Report). The full report will remain classified. Quotable:
“We assess that no country will be immune to the effects of climate change, but some will be able to cope more effectively than others,” says Thomas Fingar, who heads the National Intelligence Council, which drafted the assessment, adding that sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East, and Central and Southeast Asia would be the hardest-hit regions. “However, the spillover—from potentially increased migration and water-related disputes—could have a harmful global impact.”
The full report, issued as a National Intelligence Assessment, is classified, and officials say they are not planning to release it. The NIA is distinct from the better-known National Intelligence Estimates by being more speculative and relying more heavily on public sources. Both represent the consensus judgment of the nation’s 16 intelligence agencies and carry great analytic weight in Washington.
In particular, they are concerned about the impact of climate change on agriculture.
Economic impact of energy efficiency. Energy efficiency means jobs. These jobs can help offset economic impacts of fighting climate change thru carbon regulation. Findings from the ACEEE on the economic impacts of energy efficiency at the state level: “The set of studies reviewed in this report demonstrate an average of 23 percent efficiency gain with a nearly 2 to 1 benefit-cost ratio; a 20 percent efficiency gain by 2030 could provide an estimated 800,000 net jobs while a 30 percent efficiency improvement might generate as many as 1.3 million net jobs; and efficiency-led policies, in effect an emphasis on greater energy productivity, would likely increase the nation’s economy (as measured by our Gross Domestic Product, or GDP) by about 0.1 percent by 2030.”
— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org
This weekend MH headed out to Jetmore for a family reunion. Kansas wind folk might have just thought - hmmm, isn’t that close to the Spearville wind farm?
Yes, it is. This is the view from my uncle’s front yard/ pasture. He lives south of Jetmore. The zoom on my camera did beef it up a little. No one at the reunion but me (and my Dad) seemed to notice them on the horizon.

For comparison, this is what’s left of the little windmill that stands just back of the farmhouse, which powered the original pump for the farm (which had dairy cattle at one point). It also occasionally powered car batteries that then ran various farm and household devices. Another uncle had a hilarious story about climbing out of his window one night and shinnying up the windmill. He got caught. He ended up sleeping in the field the rest of the night (with the rattlesnakes. So he said).

And as we were driving in from Dodge, my dad stopped and insisted I also take pictures of the transmission lines serving the Spearville wind farm (as well he should). That’s my car in one of those pictures, just for scale. It’s a CRV.


He asked - “Are these the size they are talking about putting in between Spearville and Wichita?” I said that I was by no means an expert, but that I bet these were considerably smaller. Smaller tower, wire, right of way, I don’t know which. But I do bet they are smaller than 765 kV.
Overall impression of southwest Kansas right now - they have it as dry there as we have it wet here. Pretty crazy.
— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org
News Updates: real quickies
June 16, 2008
Not going to get to an official post today (maybe even tomorrow) so read these super-interesting articles:
Anyone catch the premiere episodes of the Greensburg show on Planet Green last night? If you want to waste some great time at work (no, CEP of course did not do this), check out the show’s website. Beware of the car commercials that will pop up and deafen you on the video clips, tho.
Kansas 2008 tornados already triple the annual state average - Wichita Eagle
“Preliminary statistics from the National Weather Service show that 172 tornadoes have been reported in Kansas this year — the most in the nation. Iowa is next at 134, and Missouri is third at 127. As of Friday, 1,577 tornadoes had been reported in the U.S. this year. Last year saw 1,093. While final statistics are typically lower because some preliminary reports are multiple views of the same tornadoes, officials say the numbers are still eye-opening. Kansas’ total is triple the state’s annual average, for example. But that’s not the number that troubles Dick Elder, the head meteorologist at the National Weather Service’s Wichita office. He’s bothered by 118, the number of tornado deaths nationwide — the most in 10 years. “It just seems like the number of killer tornadoes is way up,” Elder said.There have been 33 killer tornadoes this year, including three in Kansas.”
Record moisture levels in Midwest - Cattlenetwork.com
Weather-beaten economy - impact of floods on markets - Christian Science Monitor