L.A. Utility To Build Wind Facility

LOS ANGELES -- - The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, the largest US municipal utility, is planning to build a 120 megawatt wind power facility, L.A. mayor Jim Hahn said.

The Pine Tree Wind project, to be constructed in the Mojave Desert about 100 miles north of Los Angeles, is scheduled to begin operation in July 2004. It would supply enough power for more than 100,000 households, Hahn said in a statement.

The LADWP's board of commissioners will consider the $162 million project at its board meeting on Tuesday and it must also receive the backing of the city council. The project would be constructed by Wind Turbine Prometheus LLC.

Hahn said the project would be the largest municipally owned wind plant in the U.S.

The largest wind facility in the U.S. is FPL Energy's 300 MW Stateline Wind Energy Center on the Washington-Oregon border. FPL Energy is a unit of Juno Beach, Florida-based FPL Group Inc.

Related News

alberta solar

Solar power is the red-hot growth area in oil-rich Alberta

CALGARY - Solar power is beating expectations in oil and gas rich Alberta, where the renewable energy source is poised to expand dramatically in the coming years as international power companies invest in the province.

Fresh capital is being deployed in the Alberta’s electricity generation sector for both renewable and natural gas-fired power projects after years of uncertainty caused by changes and reversals in the province’s power market, said Duane Reid-Carlson, president of power consulting firm EDC Associates, who advises on electric projects in the province.

“From the mix of projects that we see in the queue at the (Alberta Electric System…

READ MORE

The nuclear power dispute driving a wedge between France and Germany

READ MORE

ontario nuclear

Ontario confronts reality of being short of electricity in the coming years

READ MORE

Energy experts: US electric grid not designed to withstand the impacts of climate change

READ MORE

coal pile

New England Emergency fuel stock to cost millions

READ MORE