Title: Electric Transmission and Economic Opportunities
1Electric Transmission and Economic Opportunities
- Richard W. Caperton
- Senior Energy Policy Analyst
2Energy Opportunity at the Center for American
Progress
- Clean energy is a success story in tough economic
times. - Now we need to scale everything up.
- There are three things that will grow the clean
energy economy - Market demand
- Financing
- Infrastructure
3Transmission Does More than Carry Power
- Enables new generation
- Improves reliability
- Reduces congestion and improves market conditions
- Puts people back to work
4Transmission Enables New Generation
- "In order for renewable to replace a meaningful
amount of our imported oil, we need a national
electricity transmission system to carry this
electricity be it wind, solar, biomass or other
alternatives." - T. Boone Pickens, Texas oil
magnate - The U.S. DOE has identified transmission
limitations as the greatest obstacle to realizing
the enormous economic, environmental, and energy
security benefits of obtaining at least 20 of
our electricity from the wind. - A poll conducted at the WINDPOWER 2008 Conference
and Exhibition in June in Houston, Texas, found
that participants saw transmission as the largest
roadblock to the continued development of wind
energy in the U.S. - Almost 300,000 MW of wind projects, more than
enough to meet 20 of our electricity needs, are
waiting in line to connect to the grid because
there is inadequate transmission capacity to
carry the electricity they would produce. - The DOE 20 wind scenario would create over
500,000 jobs and 450 billion in economic impact
by 2030, including billions in tax revenue for
rural landowners and farmers.
5Transmission Improves Reliability
Base-Case Estimation of Cost of Power
Interruptions by Customer Class
Base-Case Estimate of the Cost of Power
Interruptions by Type of Interruption
6Transmission Improves Reliability
- Today, our grids are antiquated, fragile, and
vulnerable to cascading failure. Power outages
and defects in the current grid system cost U.S.
businesses more than 120 billion dollars a year.
It has to be upgraded anyway." - Vice President
Al Gore - The 2003 blackout in the Northeast U.S. and
Canada caused an estimated 7-10 billion in
economic losses. - An analysis of SPP construction of two
transmission projects found that the projects
would have reduced loss benefits of nearly 100
million.
7Transmission Reduces Congestion and Improves
Market Conditions
8Transmission Reduces Congestion and Improves
Market Conditions
- The AWC Project will reduce LMPs, especially in
the EMAAC region of PJM, compared to the radial
alternative. These price impacts would save PJM
customers approximately 126 million per year or
1.35 billion over 20 years. - The Brattle Group - The DOE identified New England in 2006 as a
Congestion Area of Concern due to high
electricity price differentials across the region
and congestion-related reliability problems in
Massachusetts, and Connecticut. However,
congestion continues to decrease due to efforts
and achievements on several fronts specifically
with energy efficiency reducing total loads. In
2009, New England was no longer a Congestion Area
of Concern but New England still faces a
potential resource shortfall under extreme load
conditions over the next few years. - The DOE continues to identify San Francisco,
Seattle, Portland area as a Congestion Area of
Concern and the DOE continues to identify the
San Diego Los Angeles areas as a Critical
Congestion Area. The New York, Philadelphia,
Baltimore, and Washington D.C. area are also
listed as a Critical Congestion Area according to
the DOE. - The Figure illustrates that PJMs top 20
congestion-causing constraints were responsible
for 87 of PJMs total congestion costs in 2007.
9Transmission Construction Puts People Back to Work
- Pilot projects from the Rapid Response Team on
Transmission - Oregon and Idaho 500 jobs, 300 mile long, 500 kV
transmission line - Wyoming and Idaho 1,200 jobs,1,150 mile long,
high-voltage transmission - Minnesota and Wisconsin 1,650 jobs,
Double-circuit 345 kV transmission line, and
single circuit 345 kV line. - Oregon 450 jobs, 210 miles of 500 kV
transmission line - New Mexico and Arizona 3,408 jobs, two 500 kV
lines - Pennsylvania and New Jersey 2,000 jobs, 145 mile
long 500 kV, and several 230 kV lines - Wyoming, Utah, and Nevada 1,500 jobs, 700 mile
long 600 kV line
10Transmission Construction Puts People Back to Work
- We want to spend a fair amount of money
investing in a new smart grid. That is, the
ability to transmit across high-tension wires in
the minds of most people in the public, or
underground in these wires, wind and solar
energy. You can't do that now. That would create
tens of thousands of new jobs, high-paying jobs.
Vice President Biden - An AWEA report analyzes that a SPP proposal that
costs 1.1 billion in transmission expansion in
Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas would create 7,475
transmission jobs and 962 million in economic
output. - A report by the University of Southern Maine
analyzed a 2008 proposal by Central Maine Power
Company that would cost 1.5 billion and be
implemented over three years. The project would
result in 2,100 indirect and direct jobs in
Maine. The project would result in 242 million
in wages and salaries, and increase Maines GDP
by nearly 300 million over four years. - The American Transmission Company (ATC) recently
completed a large scale project (353 kV) and a
small scale project (138 kV) in Wisconsin and
Minnesota. The small scale project generated 42.5
jobs for every mile and had a 6 million per mile
total economic impact. The large scale project
generated 11.6 jobs for every mile and has a 2.1
million per mile total economic impact.
11Thank you!
- www.americanprogress.org
- rcaperton_at_americanprogress.org
- 1-202-741-6284