Puget Sound Energy today announced the utility placed an order for 22
wind turbine generators with Vestas on Nov. 7 for the proposed expansion
of the utility’s Wild Horse Wind and Solar
Facility. Delivery of the turbines and initial construction, after all
approvals are received, is slated for mid-2009, with entry into
commercial service by late 2009. The turbine order accounts for the
major portion of the proposed $100 million project.
"We’re pleased to be
in a position to move forward with the Vestas turbine order,”
said Kimberly Harris, executive vice president and chief resource
officer for PSE. "The turbines have proven
themselves at our Wild Horse and Hopkins Ridge facilities in providing a
reliable source of clean, renewable energy. Building on the success of
Wild Horse makes sense for our customers, and for the economy of the
Kittitas Valley.”
Vestas, a leading turbine manufacturer, is the current supplier to Wild
Horse, located east of Ellensburg in Kittitas County, and the utility’s
Hopkins Ridge Wind Facility in Dayton, Columbia County.
In addition to the turbine order, the Kittitas County Board of
Commissioners voted at a public hearing on Nov. 4 to approve the
expansion plan as a modification to the original 2005 site development
agreement with the county. The planned expansion will result in 149
turbines and a capacity of 269 megawatts (MW) at Wild Horse, well within
the original development agreement limits of 158 turbines and 312 MW.
Currently, the wind facility has 127 turbines capable of producing 229
MW of electricity.
Most of the proposed expansion will occur on 960 acres of undeveloped
land PSE purchased earlier this year immediately to the north of the
existing 9,150-acre site. The permanent footprint of new turbines,
roads, and support facilities will be approximately 2-3 percent of the
total site area.
An environmental impact study for the project will be completed later in
2008, with final approval of the expansion plan expected by the state
Energy Facilities Site Evaluation Council in early 2009.
In building Wild Horse, PSE voluntarily created a conservation easement
that was formally accepted by the State of Washington Fish and Wildlife
Commission on Nov. 7. The conservation easement will help secure the
preservation of almost 12 square-miles of unique shrub-steppe habitat.
PSE has worked with legislators, regulators, environmental interests,
land owners and other stakeholders toward mutually beneficial solutions
to safeguarding the natural habitat, including assistance in acquisition
by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife of more than 26
square-miles of shrub-steppe habitat and grazing management over a
90-square-mile area.
Other preservation efforts include voluntarily replanting more than
1,000 cacti in an extensive restoration effort to safeguard the area’s
shrub-steppe habitat and planting 6,500 sagebrush plugs in sensitive
sage-grouse habitat.
The Wild Horse site also includes a 500-kilowatt solar project, the
Pacific Northwest’s largest producer of solar
energy, and the Renewable Energy Center environmental education
facility. Since opening in April 2008, the Renewable Energy Center has
brought more than 17,000 people to the Ellensburg area to learn more
about wind and solar power, as well as the natural history of the
Kittitas Valley.
Kittitas County has prospered from the wind facility since its
completion in late 2006. The facility created more than 20 permanent
jobs, generates more than $1.3 million in new tax dollars annually for
local schools and county services, and spurred additional investment in
local businesses and infrastructure. PSE expects the expansion project
to increase those long-term benefits by about 15 percent. In addition,
construction of the new turbines and support infrastructure will create
a large number of temporary jobs; the project labor force peaked at
about 250 during Wild Horse’s 2006
construction.
At maximum output, the Wild Horse facility currently generates enough
power to serve approximately 60,000 households. With the expansion, Wild
Horse will be able to serve approximately 10,000 additional households.
In total, the facility has generated 1.2 million megawatt-hours of
electricity since entering operation in December 2006.
More information on PSE’s wind facilities and
the expansion project can be found at PSE.com.
About Puget Sound Energy
Washington state’s oldest and largest
energy utility, with a 6,000-square-mile service area stretching across
11 counties, Puget Sound Energy (PSE) serves more than 1 million
electric customers and 739,000 natural gas customers.
PSE, a
subsidiary of Puget Energy (NYSE:PSD), meets the energy needs of its
growing customer base primarily in Western Washington through
incremental, cost-effective energy conservation, procurement of
sustainable energy resources, and far-sighted investment in the
energy-delivery infrastructure. PSE employees are dedicated to providing
great customer service to deliver energy that is safe, reliable,
reasonably priced, and environmentally responsible. For more
information, visit www.PSE.com.