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Valley Electric Transmission Project connects Pahrump to Las Vegas, enabling renewable energy from Amargosa Valley solar, wind, and geothermal plants, boosting grid reliability, jobs, and infrastructure through a 230-kV line and FERC-approved intertie.
What's Behind the News
A 230-kV line linking Pahrump and Las Vegas to deliver renewables, improve grid reliability, and support local jobs.
- MOU with Las Vegas Paiute Tribe includes routing and revenue sharing.
- 230-kV route links Pahrump, skirts Indian Springs, follows US 95.
- Unlocks Amargosa Valley solar, wind, and geothermal projects.
- FERC review for NV Energy Northwest Substation intertie.
The Las Vegas Paiute Tribe signed an agreement to allow the electric cooperative in Pahrump to run the last six miles of a 58-mile transmission project through its reservation.
Valley Electric Association, the cooperative that serves Pahrump, signed a memorandum of understanding with the tribe after speakers including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., praised the project.
Reid, D-Nev., said the $30 million line will improve electric reliability in Pahrump as a new Nevada transmission line expands capacity and give Las Vegas access to power from giant solar plants planned in the Amargosa Valley.
"We're going to help our local economy and help fellow Nevadans get back to work," Reid said during a meeting with 60 attendees at a Paiute meeting room in downtown Las Vegas.
Nevada needs new transmission lines, even as it gets harder to build transmission lines in many regions, so it can develop solar, wind and geothermal power in remote locations and ship the power to metropolitan areas, Reid said.
Nevada can develop renewable power first for its own citizens and then for export to other states, such as California after regulatory review in that market, Reid said.
Valley Electric Chief Executive Thomas Husted and Lucie Campa, chairwoman of the Las Vegas Paiute Tribe, signed the agreement after Reid spoke.
The memorandum calls the co-op to make payments to the tribe and share revenues from power shippers using the transmission lines, but the co-op declined to provide a copy of the memorandum of understanding before the agreement is finalized.
"We plan on turning dirt in six weeks," Husted said.
The project will take 12 to 18 months to complete and is expected to provide jobs for 80 workers.
The agreement with the tribe is the final major hurdle for the 230-kilovolt transmission project, after years of power line challenges since it was first proposed in 1999, said Valley Electric General Counsel Curt Ledford.
Valley Electric separately is negotiating for connection to NV Energy's Northwest Substation on the south side of the Paiute reservation.
The co-op needs the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's approval, similar to a recent Texas PUC approval in another jurisdiction, for that connection.
The project will provide Valley Electric's fourth transmission link to areas outside of the co-ops service territory. That will improve electric reliability in Pahrump and reduce the risk of blackouts.
The co-op has agreements with 12 companies, many of which are developing solar power projects in the Amargosa Valley, Ledford said. The projects range in size from 10 megawatts or million watts in capacity to 400 megawatts. Additional transmission lines, including the TransWest Express project in the region, are needed to accommodate all of those projects, Ledford said.
By selling transmission services, Valley Electric will minimize the cost to its members, Husted said. The association will finance the project through the National Rural Cooperative Financial Corp. and will need no immediate change in rates, he said.
NV Energy spokesman Rob Stillwell said, "Any transmission infrastructure is a positive development."
Conservation groups, who want to protect a 23,000-acre area with ice-age fossils and rare plants, favor the Valley Electric transmission project.
Jill DeStefano, founder of Protectors of Tule Springs, said she understood the six-mile segment that runs through the Indian reservation will bypass an area with fossils and rare plants where she and others want a national monument established.
"I think that's great," DeStefano said.
Lynn Davis, manager of the Nevada field office for the National Parks Conservation Association, said, "It really widely opens the door to another transmission route that would not cross a proposed national park with massive transmission lines."
The Valley Electric line will have towers reaching heights of 70 to 110 feet.
The project will run from Pahrump northward and circle south of Indian Springs.
It will follow a segment of U.S. Highway 95, after a power line route meeting informed the alignment, north of the Paiute Indian Reservation. The line then will jog south and east along the reservation border before terminating at the Northwest Substation.
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