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Electricity extortion has South Dakota roost 

Credit:  BOB MERCER American News Correspondent, May 4, 2012, aberdeennews.com ~~

Pierre – A government folly is playing out in our state’s Capitol over a wind electricity project a group wants to build in Clark County.

At the root of this folly is a federal requirement. Believe it or not, a wind farm developer can force a utility company to buy its electricity, even if the company doesn’t want it.

This gets worse. The wind power might cost more than the company wants its customers to have to pay for electricity.

In this case, Oak Tree Energy LLC wants to erect wind turbines in Clark County and force NorthWestern Energy to buy the electricity that would be produced.

Oak Tree is a Delaware company that was formed in February, according to its filings with our secretary of state’s business registration office. The company has existed longer than that, however.

Records filed with the state Public Utilities Commission show Oak Tree has been trying for more than a year to force NorthWestern Energy to buy the 19.5 megawatts Oak Tree says will be generated from the towers it plans in Clark County.

NorthWestern Energy has little choice. That’s because of a 1978 federal law known as PURPA – the Public Utility Regulatory Policy Act – that makes utility companies buy from independent energy producers.

But in March 2011, NorthWestern refused to negotiate any further with Oak Tree.

That led Oak Tree to file a complaint with PUC, asking the state regulators to settle the price NorthWestern would have to pay Oak Tree for the electricity NorthWestern didn’t want in the first place.

For more than a year, the complaint has confounded the PUC and its staff.

The dispute remains a long way from resolution, because there’s no agreement among Oak Tree, NorthWestern and the PUC staff on how something known in the utility regulation world as “avoided cost” should be calculated.

A two-day hearing last month led the commission’s chairman, Chris Nelson, to suggest a compromise as part of oral arguments that were held April 26.

NorthWestern’s response is the Nelson proposal is illegal, overstates NorthWestern’s avoided costs, is technically flawed and will have “deleterious” unintended consequences.

That’s because, according to NorthWestern, the proposal “does not provide guidance as to what constitutes a legally enforceable obligation in South Dakota.”

Oak Tree’s response, on the other hand, is accepting of the Nelson proposal if it can be further tweaked in Oak Tree’s favor.

“Oak Tree believes it will not be able to finance and build its project without a modification in Chairman Nelson’s calculation,” the company said in its official letter of response.

Frankly, we have now arrived at the point where the real folly of forced wind purchases becomes evident.

Oak Tree wants an inflation factor built into the pricing structure because, according to the company, “the Oak Tree project (like any proposed wind project) faces a number of uncertainties.”

Are you ready? Here’s uncertainty No. 1, according to the company:

“For example, Oak Tree cannot with any certainty guarantee the amount of wind that will be available for generation over a period of 20 years.”

Source:  BOB MERCER American News Correspondent, May 4, 2012, aberdeennews.com

This article is the work of the source indicated. Any opinions expressed in it are not necessarily those of National Wind Watch.

The copyright of this article resides with the author or publisher indicated. As part of its noncommercial educational effort to present the environmental, social, scientific, and economic issues of large-scale wind power development to a global audience seeking such information, National Wind Watch endeavors to observe “fair use” as provided for in section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law and similar “fair dealing” provisions of the copyright laws of other nations. Send requests to excerpt, general inquiries, and comments via e-mail.

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