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G3
Power Plan: New Green Power For 2.5 Million Americans From Geothermal
Steam Boom In Northwest Nevada
Bend, OR. Vulcan Power Company today announced the G3 Power
Plan, a preliminary plan for green grid transmission upgrades
to deliver a “green gigawatt” (1,000 megawatts)
of clean geothermal power to Los Angeles and Las Vegas from
massive natural steam zones located in northwest Nevada. Maps
and full article text can be found at http://www.G3Plan.com.
Scientists at the Great Basin Center for Geothermal Energy
at University Nevada Reno estimate that 2,500 megawatts (MW)
of geothermal natural steam exists in northern Nevada, according
to the recent press release of director Dr. Lisa Shevenell.
This clean steam fuel could generate power for 2.5 million
people, corroborating the US Senate majority leader Harry Reid
(D-NV)
observation that Nevada is the “Saudi Arabia of Geothermal”.
There has already been about 240 MW of geothermal online in
Nevada for 15 years, which is evenly split between Nevada
and California utility buyers Sierra Pacific Resources and Southern
California Edison Company, the nation’s largest
renewable power purchaser.
But new green grid upgrades are needed for Nevada steamfields
to grow up to 2,500 MW, supplying a “green gigawatt” (1,000
MW) each to California and Nevada. Seven companies with
advanced sites have been selected to supply progressive
Nevada and California
utilities with about 500 MW of geothermal, with over half
utilizing these grid upgrades.
“The geothermal genie,” said Vulcan board member
Sandy Lonsdale, “is being held hostage by antiquated
transmission lines from northern Nevada to California
and southern Nevada.”
Lonsdale is also the former president of the Juniper Chapter
of the Sierra Club. He is Chairman of Vulcan’s Native
Restoration Fund (NRF) which plans to give 5% of Vulcan project
income back to fund habitat restoration and tribal restoration
projects. NRF was the brainchild of the Vulcan CEO and Jon Wellinghoff,
a former Vulcan board member and current Commissioner of the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. “The green grid
can be a win-win for the land and Americans both in rural areas
and our cities,” he added.
Vulcan’s CFO, Bryan Urban, has previously managed large
power and transmission projects as CFO of Panda Energy, who
financed and built $5.5 billion of successful power projects. “New
geothermal projects are attracting finance community support,” Mr.
Urban said.
He added, “Merrill Lynch Commodities invested $35 million
in Vulcan. Vulcan now has a $100 million institutional
private placement underway. Vulcan has a large portfolio of geothermal
contracts and owns one of the largest geothermal property
positions
in the nation, with resources independently rated
at over 700 MW.”
“G3 Plan transmission economics are very compelling,” said
Vulcan board member Richard Rodgers, a former senior banker
at Bank of America. “Geothermal is a bargain
for California, particularly when compared to new
gas fired power, believed
to cost $0.096 per kWh. The first 1,000 MW of new
geothermal could justify building about $4 billion
worth of grid upgrades
and doubling that output justifies $8 billion in upgrades.”
Cost estimates for the G3 Plan are expected in the second quarter
of 2008 while very preliminary “Green Tap” budget
estimates have been received. Electranix recently
estimated a 500 MW tap on the 3,100 MW Pacific DC
Intertie line in Nevada
will cost $125 to $180 million and a 1,000 MW tap
from $170 to $250 million, depending on design,
location and if it connects
with Sierra Pacific to provide counterflow power to Nevada.
G3 benefits also include the economic and environmental benefits
of clean power, which exceed $18 billion and nearly 2 billion
gallons of groundwater savings per year.
The G3 Plan team includes former transmission planning executives
Jim Kritikson of SCE and Robert Jackson of SDG&E, DC line
specialist Electranix and Ed Evatz, former deputy director Nevada
USBLM. Ed Evatz said, “the G3 Power Plan welcomes stakeholder
comments, ideas and questions by email or shared at local small
town meetings that G3 will be scheduling. The team has held meetings
and is contacting other stakeholders in both states.”
The full article covers project benefits, public outreach, transmission
costs and maps with public comment email address which can be
found at http://www.G3Plan.com.
Contact:
Christa Wicks, AA
(541) 317-1984
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