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Canadian, Irish companies pursue US wind power

(MATTHEW BROWN)
Published: Nov 6, 2009
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BILLINGS, Montana (AP) — A Canadian transmission company and an Irish wind developer said Friday they are teaming up to pursue a central Montana power project that could result in at least $1 billion worth of new energy sales.

If the project succeeds, it would give Montana's burgeoning wind energy industry room to grow — an expansion that to date has been limited by a lack of lines to move power out of the state.

Toronto-based Tonbridge Power Inc. already is building a $215 million transmission line that will carry wind power along a 200-mile (322-kilometer) route between Lethbridge, Alberta and Great Falls. The company now is considering a 100-mile (160-kilometer) link between that line and another in southern Montana that connects to electricity markets in the Pacific Northwest.

The new project would be known as the Green Line. Tonbridge CEO Johan van't Hof said Friday it would likely carry only wind power.

Tonbridge would allocate at least 500 megawatts of capacity to the North American subsidiary of Dublin wind developer Gaelectric.

Gaelectric vice president Van Jamison said that equates to about $1 billion worth of wind energy projects. The company has about 100,000 to 150,000 acres under long term lease in the Great Falls area for future wind farms, he said.

"This is hand-in-glove," he said of the plans for the Green Line. "Both pieces have to come together. Otherwise, you end up with a transmission line with no one to use it, or a wind farm with nowhere to send the power."

Gaelectric also has been negotiating a potential deal with another Canadian company, TransCanada, that has proposed a $3 billion transmission line from central Montana to Southwest markets.

Jamison said those negotiations were continuing and that his company could eventually develop enough wind power generation that it would need both lines. He said the company has leases on land across the state, but declined to give an overall figure.

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Canadian, Irish companies pursue US wind power