LADWP Increases Supply Of Clean Energy For Angelenos By 50 Megawatts
Los Angeles, CA - As part of its commitment to supply 20 percent of its retail energy from renewable energy sources by 2010, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LA Water & Power) Board of Water and Power Commissioners has approved an agreement to purchase 50 megawatts of renewable energy annually for a five-year period. This power purchase agreement will enable Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa to meet an additional 2% of his annual Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS) acquisition goal.
The agreement between LA Water & Power and Powerex Corp. (Powerex) provides for the purchase of 438,000 megawatt-hours of renewable energy annually, enough power to serve approximately 70,000 homes each year. During the first year, LA Water & Power will purchase renewable energy from several small hydro-electric generating facilities in the Pacific Northwest. Over subsequent years LA Water & Power may receive other types of renewable energy including small hydro, biomass, landfill gas and wind through the agreement from generating facilities located in the Pacific Northwest.
The purchase agreement, which requires approval by the Los Angeles City Council, indicates that LA Water & Power expects to pay approximately $75 per megawatt-hour (MWh), for an annualized cost not to exceed $39 M in fiscal years 2006-07 through 2011-12. Under the agreement, the renewable energy will be delivered to LA Water & Power at the Nevada-Oregon border and shipped to Los Angeles via the Pacific DC Intertie a north-south transmission line with capacity owned by LA Water & Power so that no additional transmission infrastructure or transportation will need to be built.
The power purchase agreement between LA Water & Power and PPM Energy, Inc. (PPM), providing for the purchase of 82 megawatts or 234,000 MWh of wind power annually, received approval from the City Council on August 15. Under that agreement, which went into effect September 1, LA Water & Power will purchase the wind power from the Pleasant Valley Wind Energy Center, located in Uinta County, Wyo. LA Water & Power has agreed to pay a fixed amount of $63 per MWh for a 16-year period. LA Water & Power estimates that the energy delivered through the PPM contract will cost between $236 million and $280 million.
LA Water & Power officials said the Powerex and PPM agreements increase the agency's renewable energy to more than 8% of its energy supply portfolio. Other renewable energy projects already in the works are the 120-megawatt Pine Tree Wind Project located in the Tehachapi area, and the Green Path transmission system, a system of transmission projects designed to gain access to geothermal and solar resources located in the Salton Sea area, northeast of San Diego.
SOURCE: Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, Board of Water and Power Commissioners