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Groundbreaking for U.S.'s Largest Windfarm

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  • Groundbreaking for U.S.'s Largest Windfarm

    SoCal Edison breaks ground on wind farm to power 3 million homes

    Friday, March 7, 2008
    Mojave, Calif. (AP) --

    Predicting that it will be the largest wind transmission project in the country, Southern California Edison on Friday announced it was breaking ground on a desert wind farm that could provide power for upwards of 3 million homes by 2013.

    Officials estimate that the Tehachapi Renewal Project will eventually provide 4,500 megawatts of electricity. The project will harness the wind that blows through the Tehachapi Mountains about 100 miles north of Los Angeles.

    Michael Peevey, president of the California Public Utilities Commission, said the project will create the single largest power block of wind energy in the country.

    "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," he said in a statement.

    Currently the country's largest wind farm is the Horse Hollow Wind Project in Texas that provides 730 megawatts, according to Edison spokesman Steve Conroy.

    Construction was expected to begin on March 11. The first few phases include building two new substations near Mojave and Monolith and several new transmission lines that are expected to be operational by 2009.

    The project is part of Edison's five-year, $5 billion transmission expansion program. Edison provides power to 180 cities in central, coastal and southern California outside Los Angeles.

    In January, the city of Los Angeles broke ground on the 8,000-acre Pine Tree Wind Project in the same area. That project is expected to produce enough electricity to power 56,000 homes when it's complete in 2009.

    Wind energy currently makes up just over 1 percent of all the power used in the U.S. but is the nation's fastest growing energy source, according to the American Wind Energy Association.
    1 step closer to being green.

  • #2
    I heard an interesting interview on npr yesterday on the potential of using our southwestern deserts for solar power. Cool stuff.
    "mono has crazy flow and can rhyme words that shouldn't, like Eminem"
    Drake Tungsten
    "get contacts, get a haircut, get better clothes, and lose some weight"
    Albert Speer

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    • #3
      One major problem with that is 'deserts' in the US outside of a smallish portion of Arizona are not deserts in the sense you think of - big sandy things with no life. New Mexico and much of Arizona are actually 'high desert' which entails some life (cacti, mesquite bushes, and such), as well as significant animal life. Any significantly sized solar farm would end up with significant damage to the local ecosystem...
      <Reverend> IRC is just multiplayer notepad.
      I like your SNOOPY POSTER! - While you Wait quote.

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      • #4
        Yeah, but fortunately I don't care about desert life.
        "mono has crazy flow and can rhyme words that shouldn't, like Eminem"
        Drake Tungsten
        "get contacts, get a haircut, get better clothes, and lose some weight"
        Albert Speer

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        • #5
          Rape the gila monsters! GIVE ME POWER!!!

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          • #6
            Originally posted by monolith94
            Yeah, but fortunately I don't care about desert life.
            Perhaps, but the same ecodudes who care about solar power tend to care about not disturbing viable ecosystems

            And besides, spend some time in the desert, it's quite interesting and peaceful
            <Reverend> IRC is just multiplayer notepad.
            I like your SNOOPY POSTER! - While you Wait quote.

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            • #7
              We should make the wall along the Mexican border entirely out of solar panels. Excess heat can be used to turn the Rio Grande into a boiling moat.

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