The
PSC approved an application by SWEPCO to foist costs of the Windcatcher project
onto Louisiana ratepayers. The decision was expected as staff had worked out an
agreement
with the producer that includes northwest Louisiana’s Wal-Mart properties agreeing
to purchase power from it, a cap on construction costs, qualification for 100
percent of the federal Production Tax Credits, and minimum annual production
from the project – similar to a deal made for Arkansas’ regulators’ approval. Building
the wind farm and transmitting power to customers with no new need established
requires assent from these states plus Oklahoma and Texas.
The
project
has way too many question marks to merit acceptance. Data sew doubt the
project will save ratepayers money over the long haul, especially as federal
wind power production tax credits will expire by 2020, too many risks of
inefficient production exist, SWEPCO’s has a history of cost overruns (plus
onshore wind power typically costs per unit roughly triple that of fossil fuels
when considering all factors such as reliability and subsidies), and the likelihood
of lower margins on projected sales all should serve to scuttle the effort.
Some of those concerns have eased since other utilities have signaled they would hook into the system. SWEPCO and its Oklahoma partner also have said they would agree to performance guarantees. But other opposition has arisen, including Oklahoma and one of the cities through which transmission wires would go have sued to prevent that, after the Osage Nation already denied use of its land.
Fortunately,
regulators in Texas and Oklahoma did their homework and have cast a very skeptical
eye on the project, and in July their rejections of it would save Louisianans
from their own regulators that probably would make them pay higher rates than
necessary. However, one PSC member did distinguish himself on this issue.
The
only dissenting vote came from the PSC’s newest member, Craig Greene. Rather
than uncritically accepting the company’s line, he noted the nature of wind
generation that makes it unlikely to cost less than more conventional means of
power production, such as using natural gas. Thus, swapping wind for gas power
would unnecessarily raise rates unless gas prices rose significantly.
Given
Republican Greene’s past association with Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards,
whether he would vote conservatively on PSC matters didn’t seem certain. But
this now makes a couple
of high-profile decisions where he voted on the basis of conservative governing
principles. He has gone a long way to reward conservative voters who placed their
faith in him.
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