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Victoria (View Royal) to Port Angeles USA power cable project


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#1 Holden West

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Posted 17 June 2008 - 02:35 PM

Interesting story that hasn't gotten a lot of attention by the local media.

Undersea cable between Canada and Port Angeles gets permits, but project delayed

By Brian Gawley, Peninsula Daily News


PORT ANGELES — A company proposing a high-voltage power cable between Victoria and Port Angeles has received two more permits.

But the project's anticipated completion date has moved from August 2009 to mid-2010, said Paul Manson, president of Sea Breeze Power Corp., one of the partners.

"It's an 18-month manufacturing and construction cycle," he said. "We still have to complete the design and financing.

"There's indications there will be commercial contracts this year, but I don't want to nail down dates yet."

Sea Breeze Pacific Juan de Fuca Cable LP, a partnership that includes Sea Breeze Power Corp., wants to build a 550-megawatt high-voltage direct current light transmission cable to deliver wind-generated electricity from Vancouver Island to Port Angeles.

The cable would be built underneath the Strait of Juan de Fuca at an estimated cost of $750 million.

High voltage direct current light is a variation of high voltage direct current that is being used in cables already in the Strait.

Permits awarded

The federal Department of Energy awarded a presidential permit to the project last week.

The permit is required to build an electric transmission line across the U.S. border.

It requires an assessment of the project's potential impacts on both the environment and the reliability of the U.S. electric transmission system, Manson said.

It is equivalent to the Canadian National Energy Board's certificate of public convenience and necessity that was awarded in September 2006.

Bonneville Power Administration spokesman Doug Johnson said the company also received a record of decision last week that permits the connection of the Juan de Fuca Cable project into the region's power grid.

The 550-megawatt transmission line — one megawatt is enough to power about 625 homes — would extend from View Royal on Portage Inlet near Victoria to the Bonneville Power Administration's substation at Park Avenue and Porter Street, just west of the Peninsula College's Port Angeles campus.

The company itself wouldn't generate power, but instead would lease capacity on the line to power generators on both sides of the border.

Manson said the project's permitting is effectively completed in the U.S., and that only minor federal permits remain on the Canadian side.

Technical studies of how the new line would affect Bonneville's power grid are complete, he said.

Similar studies being done by British Columbia Transmission Corporation at a cost of $250,000 are due in August, Manson said.

The engineering, procurement and construction contract with ABB Cable, the British company that designs, manufactures and lays the cable, is ready, but it awaits completion of a marine survey of the floor of the Strait of Juan de Fuca, he said.

"The last one is really a tough nut to crack," Manson said.

"It's the commercial contract."

Tells of benefits

"We've done exhaustive internal studies, and believe the project would provide benefits to the region," he said.

The Blaine intertie carries 90 percent of the power traveling between Canada and Bonneville's power grid, and the next large one is located in Minnesota, Manson said.

The Juan de Fuca Cable would provide another pathway for that transmission.

"There are also benefits beyond just increasing the capacity. There's also the reliability," Manson said.

The existing power grid is a "backwards C" — its gap being between Victoria and Port Angeles, he said.

The Juan de Fuca Cable project would create a circle, which is the best shape for an electrical transmission system because power can be rerouted if there's a break, Manson said.

If it's a straight or "radial" system, then it just stops at one point and there's nowhere to reroute if the line breaks, he said.

Radial power lines also have technical problems that become more frequent the farther away they are from the power source, Manson said.

Connecting the new line into Bonneville's power grid would require expansion of the existing Bonneville substation located on Lauridsen Boulevard near Peninsula College.

But when that might happen is unknown.

"The details still need to be worked out," Johnson said.

"No target date has been determined for interconnection at Port Angeles."

Schedules for cable construction and for modifying the substation must be coordinated.

"We will notify affected residents before any work begins," he said.

The company also needs to lease Clallam County Public Utility District property south of Bonneville's substation for a converter station that would take about seven months to build.

It would convert the direct current from the cable to alternating current and connect the system to Bonneville's power grid.

Clallam PUD General Manager Doug Nass said that the district had an appraisal done of its property that the company would need to lease, but that he hasn't heard anything lately.

"So we're waiting on them," he said Friday.

"They are wanting to meet with us soon, but no date has been set yet."

Port Angeles Public Works Director Glenn Cutler said last week he also planned to meet with Sea Breeze officials to discuss the project.

________
Reporter Brian Gawley can be reached at 360-417-3532 or brian.gawley@peninsuladailynews.com.

Last modified: June 14. 2008 9:00PM


"Beaver, ahoy!""The bridge is like a magnet, attracting both pedestrians and over 30,000 vehicles daily who enjoy the views of Victoria's harbour. The skyline may change, but "Big Blue" as some call it, will always be there."
-City of Victoria website, 2009

#2 Ms. B. Havin

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Posted 17 June 2008 - 03:53 PM

I remember hearing about this a couple of years ago. Wondered what happened in the interim!

The article reads as though the big deal is that VI will provide wind-generated power to the Olympic Peninsula (and it's kind of weird for us to export power, given that we might be running short?). But IIRC from the older articles about this, I think the real story -- and the real benefit -- is in the completion of that circle: going from a "C" (with a gap between Port Angeles & Victoria) to a full circle, which helps ensure that power breaks aren't crippling.
When you buy a game, you buy the rules. Play happens in the space between the rules.

#3 Holden West

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Posted 27 January 2010 - 11:30 PM

http://www.prnewswir...n-82843022.html

Juan de Fuca Cable - Project Status Review - US Loan Guarantee Application

TSX-VENTURE - SBX

VANCOUVER, Jan. 27 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ - Sea Breeze Power Corp. is pleased to report on recent progress with development of the Juan de Fuca Cable (the "Project" or "Cable").

The Juan de Fuca Cable is a proposed 550 MW submarine interconnection across the international Strait of Juan de Fuca, between Port Angeles, Washington, and Victoria, British Columbia, providing a new link between the northwest terminus of US federally- owned Bonneville Power Administration's grid, and the southwest terminus of the provincially-owned system in British Columbia, Canada.

The Project has been granted all major permits necessary to proceed to construction within both the United States and Canada, including a Presidential Permit issued by the US Department of Energy, and a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity ("CPCN") issued by Canada's National Energy Board.

Construction of the Juan de Fuca Cable is estimated at 26 months, with a target for commencement of operations in 2012.

On December 22, 2009, an application was submitted to the US Department of Energy's Loan Guarantee Program under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, for a loan guarantee of up to US$480 million. In addition to the capital cost specific to the cable system itself, the project budget also includes provision for significant network upgrades to the existing grid systems on both sides of the international border, should they be necessary.

The Project has been designed to utilize the most advanced generation of "high voltage direct current - voltage source conversion" technology manufactured by ABB, Inc. - a highly reliable, environmentally low-impact, and Smart-Grid compatible technology called "HVDC Light®".

The economic benefits of the Juan de Fuca Cable will be significant. A 2008 study of transmission projects proposed for the region, conducted by the Idaho National Laboratory ("INL" - a US national laboratory dedicated to supporting the US Department of Energy's missions) calculated that over the lifecycle of the project, up to $134 billion of additional economic activity in the region and an estimated regional increase of 177,000 'person years' of employment would result from the new transmission capacity that the Project would add.

The strategic and commercial value of the Project has accordingly attracted broad political support in the United States. The State of Washington's Governor Christine Gregoire, and both of Washington's federal Senators, Senator Patty Murray and Senator Maria Cantwell, have all provided strong endorsements for the Project in recent letters addressed to US Secretary of Energy Dr. Steven Chu.

Governor Gregoire referred to the Project as "a critical missing link allowing new green energy projects to be developed" and described the initiative as "exactly the kind of infrastructure project that deserves federal recovery funding".

Senators Murray and Cantwell, in a jointly signed letter to the Secretary, stressed the benefits of the Project, referencing " the immediate and long-term employment opportunities it would create...as well as through the improvements made to the existing transmission system."

Congressman Norm Dicks, in whose congressional district the Cable will interconnect, noted in a letter to Secretary Chu that "a regional approach to balancing intermittent resources could decrease the total cost of integrating renewable resources, increase regional grid stability, and further the goal of developing utility-scale renewable resources."

Congressman Dicks further noted that "The necessary pre-condition to this is having sufficient transmission capacity to be able to take advantage of these opportunities" and referred to the Project as "a critical part of America's Smart Grid future."

The 550 megawatts of new, bi-directional capacity added to the region by the Juan de Fuca Cable will represent a geographically diversified increase of approximately 20% - 30%, parallel to the present transmission pathway west of the Cascades Mountains between Vancouver, British Columbia, and Seattle, Washington, which in recent years has been noted for becoming increasingly and chronically congested.

Through an order issued by the US Federal Energy Regulatory Commission ("FERC") granting "market authority" allowing the Project's management to bi-laterally negotiate terms for use of the cable, discussions are presently underway with a number of utilities and independent power producers in both the US and Canada for subscription of capacity and ancillary services of the Cable, under a formula by which the cost of the project will be borne by the users of the line, rather than by the ratepayers or taxpayers of the region.

Sea Breeze Power Corp., the originating developer of the Juan de Fuca Cable Project, holds a 49.5% direct interest in the project's corporate entity Sea Breeze Pacific Juan de Fuca Cable, LP, and a further 0.25% indirect interest through the joint-venture limited partnership's general partner. An equal project ownership interest is held by Boundless Energy NW, LLC. The remaining interest is held by United States Power Fund, LP (managed by Energy Investors Funds ("EIF"), a US-based, private equity fund manager) which has provided a significant portion of the development funding for the Project to date.

Andrew Schroeder, a Senior Partner with EIF noted that "The Juan de Fuca Cable is an innovative project adding value to the West Coast energy infrastructure. EIF is very pleased to be involved with a project which offers such a clear example of the benefits that can be created by having the private sector collaborate with, and support the objectives of, publicly-owned utilities in the region.".

EIF was founded in 1987 as the first private equity fund manager dedicated exclusively to the independent power and electric utility industry. Its consistent, proven investment strategy is to create geographically and technologically diversified portfolios of electric power-related assets that provide superior risk-adjusted equity returns with current cash flow and capital appreciation. As an investment manager, EIF seeks to mitigate commodity risk (fuel and electricity) by focusing primarily on acquiring power assets with long-term off-take contracts. EIF has mobilized over $4 billion in capital raised in seven funds, and currently manages four private equity funds from its offices in Boston, New York, and San Francisco. These funds have made over 100 diversified investments which have an underlying asset value greater than US$15 billion. EIF controls 4,000 MW of operating power assets with another 2,200 MW of power assets under development or construction. United States Power Fund, LP and its affiliates have the right to fund the equity portion of the Juan de Fuca Cable's total project costs. For more information visit www.eif.com.

The principals of Boundless Energy are well known in the transmission world as being founders of the highly successful Neptune Cable (660 MW - HVDC), connecting Sayreville, New Jersey with Hempstead, Long Island in New York State, which went into operation in 2007.

Sea Breeze Power Corp. is developing utility scale renewable energy projects in British Columbia, and through its joint ventures with Boundless Energy, LLC, developing several high-voltage transmission projects throughout North America.

For more information about the Juan de Fuca Cable Project, please visit www.JDFCable.com.

By order of the Board of Directors,

Sea Breeze Power Corp.

Paul B. Manson,

Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

SOURCE Sea Breeze Power Corp.
"Beaver, ahoy!""The bridge is like a magnet, attracting both pedestrians and over 30,000 vehicles daily who enjoy the views of Victoria's harbour. The skyline may change, but "Big Blue" as some call it, will always be there."
-City of Victoria website, 2009

#4 VicHockeyFan

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Posted 29 January 2010 - 03:20 AM

http://www.timescolo...8406/story.html

Power link primed for green light

Sea Breeze awaits loan guarantee, approvals for $480-million project

By Andrew A. Duffy, Times Colonist
January 29, 2010 1:10 AM


[...]

#5 Bernard

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Posted 29 January 2010 - 07:49 AM

This project is interesting because this is the first case I know of private piece of the transmission grid being built in BC. They will be able to make money off any green power developed on the Island and sold to the states. They will also be able to make money when BC Hydro needs to buy power to supply the Island.

It is good to see the private sector enter a field that has been a government monopoly. Now if we could only get the government to sell BC Hydro so that CO2 levels can be reduced.

#6 victorian fan

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Posted 03 February 2010 - 03:29 PM

KAPS
http://www.kapsradio...-cable-project/


(PORT ANGELES)- A Canadian company wants the U.S. Department of Energy to guarantee loans for an underwater cable project from Victoria to its likely Port Angeles terminus: a Bonneville Power Administration substation next to Peninsula College.

Sea Breeze Power wants to build a 31-mile cable under the Strait of Juan de Fuca to connect the U.S. power grid with energy generated on Vancouver Island.

[...]

#7 Marilyn

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Posted 09 February 2010 - 02:32 PM

The cable will transmit power from "Vancouver Island by renewable sources such as wind power."

Where are they going to locate these wind farms?

Update:
To answer my own question:
Knob Hill Wind Farm
150 MW project on the Knob Hill Plateau on the northern tip of Vancouver Island
66 turbines, 35 k to the west of Port Hardy. There are already 8 meterological towers
on the site.
http://www.seabreeze...om/page176.html

#8 Bernard

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Posted 09 February 2010 - 05:23 PM

It is much more likely that the transmission line will be used to bring power onto Vancouver Island as we need more power on the island. That said, this sort of connection to the rest of the Western Interconnection is something we do need to have no matter whether power is imported or exported.

The Sea Breeze Knob Hill proposed wind farm has been stalled out for some years now, going on six years I believe. The problem with most wind farms is that the technology is still not producing power cheap enough that they can make a profit at the rates available in BC.

We have VERY low power rates in BC and this means many green power projects simply are not economically viable. The only two green power sources that make economic sense in BC are biomass and non-storage hydro (aka run of the river or microhydro).

BC Hydro electrical rates are significantly lower than those in Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Alberta. They MUCH,MUCH lower than rates in Alaska

#9 Marilyn

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Posted 10 February 2010 - 11:25 AM

have been okay'd by the Province, not only for Knob Hill but the entire Northern tip of Vancouver Island except for the parks (I hope!). The government has also accepted the environmental assessments for coal and gas exploration over thousands of acres in the Cowichan valley. I believe that the pipeline is for these projects, energy going out not coming in.

What energy does the hungry giant next door have to sell anyway?

#10 Bernard

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Posted 10 February 2010 - 04:04 PM

BC currently buys more power from the US and Alberta than we send to them. There is power out there to accessed.

The EA cert. is only for the Knob Hill project. The Holberg wind farm was granted a certification, but it has been abandoned as a project due to low rates.

No other wind energy projects are under consideration on Vancouver Island at this time.

I assume you mean the Comox valley for the coal development, the Raven Creek project. This falls in an active coal mining region and has been so since 1848. The Quinsam coal mine is still on operation

 



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