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Patriot
06-02-2007, 06:47 PM
That is quite a committment. But WB has deep pockets and some of his underlings have more clout than sense! Abel was the one that condemend the Scotts for the way they ran PPL but had the Scotts not bought when they did PPL probably would not exist today it would have been broke and been divested.


PacifiCorp To Construct Transmission Lines Through West
6/1/2007
Portland, OR — PacifiCorp recently announced plans to build more than 1,200 miles of new 500-kilovolt transmission lines originating in Wyoming and connecting into Utah, Idaho, Oregon and the desert southwest. The two lines are set for completion in year 2014. The $4 billion-plus investment plan includes existing projects in the company’s 10-year business plan and additional investments to address customers’ increasing electric energy use. In addition to improving system reliability, these projects are also aimed at delivering wind and other renewable generation resources to more customers throughout PacifiCorp’s six-state service area and the western region.

"We are pleased to announce these projects as a clear signal to our retail customers, regulators and transmission customers that we are taking steps now to ensure our system is adequate and capable of meeting future customer load growth and regional needs," said Greg Abel, president and chief executive officer of PacifiCorp. "We are uniquely situated to make these essential investments in the regional transmission grid, which ensure continued service reliability and access to various generation resources. While designed to provide us with much-needed options in our ability to reliably serve our native retail load, we believe these new projects also provide substantial long-term benefits to the western region by promoting cost-efficient, flexible and diverse resource development."

The new lines will move power to high-growth areas, particularly in Utah and Wyoming. They also will support the needs of the West Coast states including PacifiCorp’s existing customers in Washington, California and Oregon that are seeking increased use of renewable energy. Much of that renewable energy, particularly wind, is expected to come from Wyoming and adjacent states.

PacifiCorp has entered into a memorandum of understanding with Idaho Power Company to cooperate on the northernmost line, a double-circuit 500-kilovolt transmission line from PacifiCorp’s and Idaho Power’s jointly owned Jim Bridger power plant in Wyoming to southeastern Idaho, with a connection south into Utah along an existing transmission path from southern Idaho into northern Utah (Path C). Another segment of this line will be built west across Idaho and into Oregon. The 600-plus miles of line will be capable of delivering up to 3,000 megawatts of electricity from Wyoming to Idaho into Utah and up to 2,500 megawatts of new incremental capacity from Idaho west into Oregon.

"Idaho Power is pleased to continue our longstanding relationship with PacifiCorp by jointly working to develop regional-scale projects to serve our growing customer needs. The flexibility created by the design and location of these proposed facilities will provide our load centers the necessary transmission access to additional resources called for in our Integrated Resource Plan," said LaMont Keen, Idaho Power president and chief executive officer.

Another major line will run from southwestern Wyoming (near the Jim Bridger power plant) into central Utah at the Mona substation located in Juab County. The 600-mile project will extend from the Mona area into southern Utah and the desert southwest. It will be capable of delivering up to 3,000 megawatts from Wyoming to Mona, and 3,000 megawatts from the Mona area into the desert southwest.

"We believe these new lines will support and help enable these regional project objectives," said John Cupparo, vice president of transmission for PacifiCorp. "As the recently released Frontier Line feasibility study noted, a stronger and less-constrained grid will ease transmission bottlenecks, enhance domestic energy security and enable new markets for clean and renewable energy sources. Taken as a whole, all of the projects are critical to shaping and strengthening the West’s transmission system and ensuring reliable, efficient, coordinated service."

The new lines are a natural extension of the $250 million transmission investment commitments MidAmerican Energy Holdings Company made when it acquired PacifiCorp in 2006. Transaction commitments include a Path C upgrade to alleviate a bottleneck to the flow of electricity during increasingly high-consumption periods, a new transmission line from Mona north into Salt Lake City to relieve constraints in Utah and a line that will support renewable energy development in Washington.

PacifiCorp also continues to be an active participant in other regional transmission projects, including the Frontier Line and TransWest Express Line.

The new transmission projects announced today are a "hub and spoke" design—creating common points or "transmission hubs" of major interconnection for load and resources. From these hubs, power will be collected then moved in different directions. This comprehensive approach allows the company to deliver power from a variety of generation sources such as coal, gas or wind, to where it is needed.

Both lines will use double-circuit 500-kilovolt construction where feasible to lessen impacts on land use and also will optimize the use of future and existing transmission corridors where reliability requirements are not impacted.

"We cannot stress enough the need to focus on the long-term needs and benefits required for the region and the Western grid," said Cupparo. "It is this long-term view that will make the difference in how we address the expansion of the grid."

The lines will be the first major projects to be built under the oversight of the Northern Tier Transmission Group, a coalition of investor-owned and public utilities, state government agencies and transmission customers intent on pursuing regional transmission planning and expansion opportunities consistent with Order No. 890 requirements recently adopted by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. Northern Tier, formed in late 2006, will oversee the planning of the two lines and manage the public input process.

PacifiCorp and Idaho Power Company will be working with the Western Electricity Coordinating Council and the Northern Tier Transmission Group through the next steps of the regional planning and rating processes. Northern Tier will work with sub-regional groups including Northwest Transmission Assessment Committee, Columbia Grid, West Connect and others to ensure public and regional coordination is part of the process. Work will also commence soon on route selection and permitting for the two lines.

Squizzy
06-03-2007, 06:53 AM
Looks like someone is going to be busy for a while! That is whole lot of line!

linescum
06-03-2007, 01:16 PM
pack your bags gonna be a long one

Hemingray Insulators
06-04-2007, 11:17 AM
mabey i just migt have to get on this project:D

Squizzy
06-05-2007, 09:08 PM
The best part is Hemingray you will have time to finish your apprentiship then you can go build a line that Consumers won't pull down!:D

mullet man
06-11-2007, 09:30 PM
is there any other public info available about this project?

Budda
06-21-2007, 07:47 AM
Is this line be installed to hold the overload of windturbined producing alot of MW onto the grid?

BigClive
06-21-2007, 11:41 AM
mabey i just migt have to get on this project:D

Well you'd definitely know about transmission by the time you'd finished. Not much experience with bucket trucks and spikes though.

Maybe get to jump on and off helicopter skids from tops of pylons though, which would be cool. (Worth doing the job for alone!)

Patriot
07-01-2007, 05:29 PM
I am not sure when this project will start, but I bet the permitting process is a full time job for a few guys! And right-of-ways! WHEW!

linescum
07-02-2007, 04:15 AM
there are 2 projected 500kv lines proposed here in the northeast.

tolex42
07-02-2007, 03:21 PM
AEP and Allegheny 765-kV transmission project approved by PJM

COLUMBUS, Ohio, June 22, 2007 – American Electric Power’s (NYSE: AEP) 765-kilovolt (kV) joint transmission line proposal with Allegheny Energy Inc. (NYSE: AYE) was approved today by PJM Interconnection (PJM).

The PJM board included the Potomac-Appalachian Transmission Highline (PATH) project in their five-year PJM Regional Transmission Expansion Plan (RTEP) designed to maintain the reliability of the transmission grid. The PJM plan approves the building of 250 miles of 765-kV extra-high voltage trans-mission from AEP’s Amos substation near St. Albans, W.Va., to Bedington substation, northeast of Martinsburg, W.Va. Another 40 miles of transmission, consisting of twin-circuit 500-kV transmission, will be constructed from Bedington to a new substation to be built at Kemptown, located southeast of Frederick, Md.

AEP and Allegheny announced plans April 18 to form a joint venture to build PATH. The total project is estimated to cost approximately $1.8 billion. AEP’s estimated share of the costs will be approximately $600 million. The PJM RTEP calls for the PATH line to be put in service by June 2012 to meet the reliability needs of the region.

“PJM approval allows us to move forward with construction of a significant portion of the I-765 TM transmission superhighway that is urgently needed to help relieve transmission congestion and enhance reliability in PJM. PJM’s analysis shows that the transmission system in this region will be overloaded as soon as 2012 unless upgrades are made. This project will expand the benefits of 765-kV extra-high voltage transmission in PJM to enhance reliability and address issues preventing efficient flow of electricity into this area,” said Michael G. Morris, AEP chairman, president and chief executive officer.

AEP and Allegheny expect to formalize their joint venture agreement for PATH within the coming weeks and file for incentive rate recovery from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC). AEP and Allegheny also will begin work on a routing study and environmental assessment for the project. The companies will seek regulatory approvals from the utility commissions in both West Virginia and Maryland for the project following the completion of the routing study.

AEP will have lead responsibility for engineering, designing and managing the construction of the 765-kV elements of the project. Allegheny will have similar responsibilities for the twin-circuited 500-kV line. Each company will provide services to the joint venture for siting, acquiring rights-of-way, securing regulatory approvals from the states the line crosses and maintenance of the project.

The PATH project encompasses the first half of the AEP I-765TM Interstate Project, a 550-mile, $3 billion 765-kV transmission line proposed by AEP in January 2006. The remaining portion of AEP’s proposed I-765 TM Interstate Project from Kemptown Station into New Jersey remains under study by PJM and is not part of the joint venture.

American Electric Power is one of the largest electric utilities in the United States, delivering electricity to more than 5 million customers in 11 states. AEP ranks among the nation’s largest generators of electricity, owning more than 38,000 megawatts of generating capacity in the U.S. AEP also owns the nation’s largest electricity transmission system, a nearly 39,000-mile network that includes more 765 kilovolt extra-high voltage transmission lines than all other U.S. transmission systems combined. AEP’s transmission system directly or indirectly serves about 10 percent of the electricity demand in the Eastern Interconnection, the interconnected transmission system that covers 38 eastern and central U.S. states and eastern Canada, and approximately 11 percent of the electricity demand in ERCOT, the transmission system that covers much of Texas. AEP’s utility units operate as AEP Ohio, AEP Texas, Appalachian Power (in Virginia and West Virginia), AEP Appalachian Power (in Tennessee), Indiana Michigan Power, Kentucky Power, Public Service Company of Oklahoma, and Southwestern Electric Power Company (in Arkansas, Louisiana and east Texas). AEP’s headquarters are in Columbus, Ohio.