Department of Energy Finalizes Loan Guarantee
for New Transmission Project to Deliver Renewable
Energy to Southwest
Nevada Project Expected to Create Over 400 Jobs
and Improve Grid Reliability
Feb 27, 2011 - U.s. Dept. of Energy
- energy.gov
Washington, D.C. — Energy Secretary
Steven Chu today announced that the U.S. Department
of Energy has finalized a $343 million loan guarantee,
supported by the Recovery Act, to develop the One
Nevada Transmission Line, known as the ON Line
project. The ON Line project, which is jointly
owned by Great Basin Transmission South, LLC and
NV Energy, consists of a new 500 kilovolt (kV)
AC transmission line that will carry approximately
600 megawatts of electricity, including from renewable
energy resources, in northern Nevada. This is the
Department’s first loan guarantee for a transmission
project, and will help integrate existing transmission
systems in northern and southern Nevada, improving
grid reliability and efficiency.
“As our country increases its use of alternative
energy sources, new transmissions lines like the
ON Line project will play a vital role in moving
clean energy from one region to another,” said
Secretary Chu. “This project will create
jobs, increase the reliability of the grid, and
save money through greater efficiencies in the
grid.”
“This Recovery Act-financed project will
create hundreds of jobs for Nevadans and make our
grid more reliable and capable of delivering low-cost
renewable energy to market,” said Nevada
Senator Harry Reid. “This transmission line
is a major step toward unlocking Nevada’s
vast clean energy potential and creating thousands
of jobs that will stay in Nevada and that cannot
be shipped overseas. This loan guarantee is exactly
the kind of public-private partnership that Nevada
and the nation need to help us lead the world in
clean energy jobs. “
The ON Line project will run 235 miles from Ely,
Nevada to just north of Las Vegas, with a new substation
located at the northern end of the line. ON Line
represents the first phase of the Southwest Intertie
Project (SWIP) which, when fully completed, will
carry approximately 2,000 megawatts of electricity
and enable wind and solar resources in Wyoming,
Idaho and Nevada to power the southwest and California
markets. Project sponsors estimate that the ON
Line project will contract about 85 percent of
its parts and labor from U.S. companies and will
create approximately 400 construction jobs.
The Department of Energy, through the Loan Programs
Office, has issued loan guarantees or offered conditional
commitments for loan guarantees totaling over $17.5
billion to support 18 clean energy projects. Together,
these projects will produce over 37 million megawatt-hours,
enough clean energy to power approximately 3.5
million homes. Additional DOE-supported projects
include two of the world’s largest solar
thermal projects, two geothermal projects, the
world’s largest wind farm and the nation’s
first new nuclear power plant in three decades.
by Maureen Bavdek)