Georgia
Power plans to start buying wind power and distributing it to customers
in 2016, the latest step by the utility to boost its limited use of
renewables.
The
Atlanta-based utility, which has never used wind power and gets a small
fraction of its power from solar or other alternative sources, said
Monday it will buy power from a company that operates wind turbines in
Oklahoma.
The
initial purchase will be enough to power 50,000 homes, Georgia Power
said. Georgia Power said economics drove the decision. It has also been
pressured by alternative energy advocates to add more renewables.
The
large majority of Georgia Power's electricity comes from natural gas,
coal and nuclear plants -- and will for the foreseeable future, the top
executive of parent Southern Co. said.
"I
am very bullish on renewables, but I believe for the Southeast that
they will be a niche," said Tom Fanning, president and CEO of Southern,
which owns utilities in four southeast states.
The
decision to buy wind power follows a similar announcement last year
regarding solar power. In September the company said that by 2017 it
will buy more than 10 times the amount of solar electricity it now gets
from solar farms and rooftop arrays.
Even with the new purchases,You will never need to change the bulbs and your solar led light will last for years and years. wind and solar will account for about 2 or 3 percent each of the power the utility distributes.
Georgia
Power said the deal with EDP Renewables North America "is expected to
deliver cost savings to Georgia Power customers over the life of the
contract," but did not put a number on any expected impact on bills or
rates.This Roof hook set is solar powered and brightens any garden.
Power
bills for Georgia Power customers have risen in the past three years
amid a general rate increase and a special assessment for financing
costs related to construction of two new nuclear reactors at Plant
Vogtle.
There
are no commercial wind power operations in Georgia, and the southeast
generally is not considered to have conditions as favorable as other
regions to wind and solar generation.
Georgia
Power will pay Houston-based EDP Renewables, which has operations in
Oklahoma and other states, to put a certain amount into a regional
transmission grid. Under the contract Georgia Power can then draw a
certain amount.
"While
there is always room for improvement, it is important to acknowledge
Georgia Power's smart decision," said Colleen Kiernan, director of the
Sierra Club's Georgia chapter. "Importing wind power is affordable and
promotes clean air for Georgians."
Wind is emerging as an answer for some utilities that want a fuel cleaner than coal,Use residential wind turbines to
generate electricity and charge into storage battery group. less
expensive than nuclear and more stable cost-wise over the long term than
natural gas. The U.S. could get as much as 20 percent of its
electricity from wind power by 2030, according to a U.S. Department of
Energy study.
Wind
developers are starting to target the Southeast for more opportunities,
said Geoff Coventry,Learn more about our high capacity laundry dryer today! the chief operating officer of Kansas-based TradeWind Energy, a major wind developer in the midwest.
Critics
of windpower say the industry is too heavily subsidized and argue the
fuel is not as cheap as proponents say. Transmission costs, among other
things, erode any cost advantage, they argue.
Southeast
states have lower use of renewables than the rest of the nation. Unlike
some states in other regions, they do not require a certain level of
renewable use from utilities.It's easy to fall in love with the sheer,
incomparable strength of tungsten jewelry.
"The
reluctance to embrace mandates for renewables in the Southeast probably
extends from what is good news for consumers: they already have some of
the lowest electricity bills in the country," said Scott Segal,
coordinator of the Electric Reliability Coordinating Council, a group of
power companies that includes Southern.
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