Under two 15-year contracts, Glacier Wind Energy will add 210 megawatts from wind energy facilities under development near Glacier National Park to SDG&E's total power-generating capacity. The wind facility is owned by a U.S. subsidiary of Naturener SA, a renewable energy company based in Madrid, Spain.
The wind farms are expected to increase the amount of electricity produced by renewable energy sources for San Diego's power grid by almost 4 percent by 2010, the utility said. Under a statewide mandate, 20 percent of SDG&E's power must be generated by renewable energy sources by 2010.
To meet that goal, state utility regulators allow California's major utilities to tap renewable energy sources throughout the western United States and Canada.
Yesterday, SDG&E said renewable energy sources now account for 6 percent of SDG&E's total energy mix, an upward adjustment from the 5.2 percent the utility used as recently as last month.
SDG&E said the contribution from the wind farms will bring its renewable energy total to 10 percent. But the company says meeting the 20-percent goal depends on completing its Sunrise Powerlink transmission line. That point is heatedly disputed by environmental opponents of the $1.5 billion, 150-mile power line from El Centro to Rancho Peñasquitos.
No comments:
Post a Comment