Wonderful
wind
Dream of wind power now a reality for Missouri
(The
following appeared in the October 2007 issue of Rural
Missouri )
 |
| The sun was shining bright and the wind blew strong on Sept.
17, when Missouri's electric cooperatives gathered to dedicate
the first commercial wind farm in the state. |
All
day long the wind blew. It bent stalks of corn waiting to be
harvested. It blew dust on the polished shoes of U.S. Rep. Russ
Carnahan. It ruffled hair of U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill and Secretary
of State Robin Carnahan. It shook the sides of a tent, scattered
papers and sent hats flying.
Outside,
Tom Carnhan commented: “Isn’t
the wind wonderful?” Those
gathered around him could only grin and agree.
Above
him, and no matter where one gazed on the horizon, great machines
gathered the wind blowing across this section of northwest Missouri
and magically turned it into electricity. As their 140-foot blades
turned in rhythmic precision, they emitted a gentle “whoop,
whoop whoop.”
That
sound was accented by a giant transformer inside a fenced substation.
The humming of the transformer signaled the energy created by
these machines was on its way across Missouri, where it would
power coffee pots, heat water, charge cell phones and light the
way for rural Missourians who get their energy from electric
cooperatives.
The
cause for the gathering was the dedication of Missouri’s
first wind energy farm. The wind farm, called Bluegrass Ridge,
is located in Gentry County north of King City. Two additional
facilities, the Cow Branch and Conception wind farms, are located
in Atchison and Nodaway counties, respectively. These facilities,
developed by Tom Carnahan’s Wind Capital Group with financing
by John Deere Wind Energy, are expected to be complete by year-end 2007.
Combined, the three wind farms will be capable of producing
157 megawatts, enough clean, renewable power for about 45,000
homes.
 |
Barry Hart, CEO of the Association of Missouri Electric Cooperatives,
explains how the electric cooperatives made wind energy possible
to U.S. Rep. Russ Carnahan and his sister, Secretary of State
Robin Carnahan, during the Bluegrass Ridge dedication ceremony. |
For
those gathered at the site Sept. 17, the dedication signaled
a dream come true. “There was a view at one time
that Missouri didn’t have viable
wind sites,” said Jim Jura, CEO of Associated Electric Cooperative,
the wholesale supplier of electricity to most of Missouri’s electric
cooperatives.
“It’s
a remarkable testament to Tom Carnahan, to John Deere and to the
co-op organization and everybody who worked on this that we have
viable projects that are bringing renewable wind energy to our
homes and farms across the state of Missouri,” Jura said.
Stepping
up as the first Missouri utility to purchase home-grown wind
power, Associated will buy for 20 years all the electricity produced
by the three wind farms.
Added
Jura, “This is the first
wind energy that we’re bringing into
our system, and we’re very excited about it. The biggest
challenge for our system is how do we meet our load growth, and
we’re
looking at a wide range of activities and generation resources,
as well as other demand-side resources such as energy efficiency,
to meet those demands.”
Missouri-based
wind power provides a reasonably priced, green and renewable
source of electricity; displaces more expensive natural-gas-based
generation; spurs economic growth in rural Missouri; and helps
meet growing electricity needs among cooperative members. Landowners
who provided the tower sites receive lease payments, providing
them with another “crop” while
still allowing them to farm right up to the base of the giant
towers.
Forecasts
show continued growth of about 100 megawatts per year for the
next 10 years among Associated’s member
systems, the equivalent of adding about 30,000 homes annually.
 |
| U.S. Sen. Claire
McCaskill told the crowd that projects such as Bluegrass
Ridge show the state can harness “nature’s
blessings” for energy independence. |
The
accomplishment of bringing on-line Missouri’s first wind
energy represents a “win-win-win-win-win” for the
state of Missouri, said keynote speaker McCaskill. “One
of the biggest problems facing this country is the source of
our energy. I can’t tell you how important it is for
the next generation and the generation after that in this wonderful
land we call Missouri to be able to look out and realize we
can harness our energy from nature’s blessings.”
For
Tom Carnahan, one highlight of the effort was when he first
walked the fields with the landowners. “Anyone who has been
involved with a project like this knows that, when given a choice,
you always benefit from choosing the high ground. That’s what
we are all about here today. It doesn’t matter
if it’s the landowners, investors, public officials,
utilities or environmental activists. We’re all here
because we know the promise of wind energy will lead us
to the higher ground.”
He
recognized the many landowners who made the project possible,
citing their desire to do something good for the King City area.
The Bluegrass Ridge project will be one of the county’s largest taxpayers.
He also thanked the electric cooperatives for their vision
in providing the final piece of the puzzle, a buyer for
the electricity.
“They understood that energy diversity
and protecting the environment was something that was important
to their members and important to this country. Instead
of just talking about it like so many people do, they decided
to do something about it.”
For
more information, contact:
Jim McCarty, (573) 659-3402
jmccarty@amec.coop |