Product Design & Development

Utility seeks approval for new Wyoming wind farm

By MATT JOYCE - Associated Press Writer - Associated Press
Wednesday, September 16, 2009

 Share
[-] Text [+]  
Loading...

Utility seeks approval for new Wyoming wind farm

CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — Rocky Mountain Power is progressing with plans to build a 74-turbine wind farm north of Medicine Bow and aims to begin producing electricity by November of next year, a company official said Wednesday.

Representatives of the Utah-based utility presented plans for the 111-megawatt Dunlap I wind project to Wyoming Public Service Commission staff members. Major utility projects are subject to a commission "certificate of public convenience and necessity."

Rocky Mountain Power, an affiliate of Oregon-based PacifiCorp Energy, proposes to build the turbines and a substation on a ranch mostly owned by the company about eight miles north of Medicine Bow. The project also includes construction of an 11-mile transmission line and a new substation in the Shirley Basin.

Rocky Mountain Power is the biggest producer of wind electricity in Wyoming with more than 515 megawatts of wind capacity in the state, or nearly two-thirds of the state's existing wind farm power.

ADVERTISEMENT

Mark Tallman, PacifiCorp's vice president of renewable resource acquisition, said the company hopes to break ground in the fourth quarter of 2009 and believes there are economic advantages to building in 2010.

"Certainly we believe we will get desirable construction costs. There aren't a lot of wind projects being constructed in 2010," Tallman said. "There's kind of that little lull following the big dip in the economic downturn. For the most part, the industry is looking at 2011 as kind of being the year the wind industry really gets back going full force."

The Dunlap I project is also devoid of complications associated with the greater sage grouse. The state of Wyoming is blocking new wind development in crucial sage grouse habitat in an effort to stave off federal endangered species protections for the bird.

Tallman said neither the Dunlap I project nor a potential 126-turbine expansion of the project, known as Dunlap II, overlaps with state-identified core habitat areas for the birds.

"That was a very large decision factor in us pursuing development of this site," he said.

Carbon County has already approved conditional use permits for the Dunlap I wind farm and substation, but the company still needs county building permits.

The company has also applied for a permit from the state's Industrial Siting Division, which has permitting authority over projects that cost at least $173.2 million.

"The Industrial Siting Council is ready to approve our permit and now we're waiting the final order, which should be out shortly," Tallman said.

The company's application to the Industrial Siting Division also includes Dunlap II, the project's potential second phase, but Tallman said the company has not set a development timeline for the second phase.

Tallman said energy produced at Dunlap would feed into PacifiCorp's power grid. He said the project is not dependent on Rocky Mountain Power's proposed Gateway West transmission line, a project with Idaho Power to build a line to export Wyoming wind and other power to Idaho and other points.

JOIN THE DISCUSSION
Rate Article:  Average 0 out of 5
register or log in to comment on this article!

0 Comments

Add Comment

Text Only 2000 character limit

Page 1 of 1

At Issue

Closed-Loop Quality Management Minimizes the Cost of Quality
Don Jasurda, Vice President, Dimensional Control Systems
Picking Glass Out of My Eyes
David Mantey, Editor, PD&D

Site Sponsors


Most Viewed

Videos & Webcasts

Bill Nye: The School of the Future 5/24/2012
Bill Nye talks about the future of school and learning.     Continue
MedTech Challenge 5/24/2012
Logics Academy in partnership with CIGITI (Center for Image Guided Innovation and Therapeutic Intervention) and kids science at Sick kids hospital are proud to present to you the MedTech Challenge.

  Continue
Carl Schoonover: How to Look Inside the Brain 5/24/2012
There have been remarkable advances in understanding the brain, but how do you actually study the neurons inside it?   Continue

Top Stories and Headlines
EVERY DAY!

FREE Email Newsletter