Interior Department gives two major renewable projects the go-ahead

by Shane Henson — January 20, 2012—The U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI) is seeking to make good on its ongoing mission of protecting America’s natural resources and heritage and supplying the energy to power our future. The agency recently announced the approval of two utility-scale renewable energy projects, including the first renewable project on public lands in Arizona and a solar energy project in California. Combined, the two projects will generate nearly 500 megawatts (MW), enough to power 150,000 homes, and create 700 jobs during peak construction. Also, DOI announced the first major step in developing an offshore wind transmission line on the Atlantic Outer Continental Shelf.

DOI approved Arizona’s Sonoran Solar Energy Project, proposed by a subsidiary of NextEra Energy Resources, making it the first-ever renewable energy project approved for construction on public lands in Arizona in the desert southwest of Phoenix. The project’s photovoltaic (PV) panels are expected to generate 300 megawatts, and the project will create 374 jobs through construction, operation, and maintenance.

Also approved was the Tule Wind Power Project, located 70 miles east of San Diego, California, which will produce 186 megawatts of electricity via 62 wind turbines sited on public lands, or enough to power up to 65,000 homes. Proposed by a subsidiary of Iberdrola Renewables, the project is expected to create 337 jobs, say DOI officials.

DOI also took the next step toward developing a Mid-Atlantic Wind Energy Transmission Line. Atlantic Grid Holdings has requested a right-of-way grant to develop a high-voltage direct-current line that would collect power generated by wind turbine facilities off the coasts of Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, and Virginia. With the new line, up to 7,000 MW of wind turbine capacity could be delivered to the grid.