Turbines blow hot, cold on financial benefits for local towns
 By 
       
        Elaine Thompson
       
       
        
        Telegram & Gazette Staff
       
       
        
        
       
      
      
      
     
     
     
     
     
     
        
        Posted Dec 23, 2017 at 7:00 PM
         
Updated Dec 23, 2017 at 10:05 PM
Massachusetts and other states are ramping up 
efforts to better harness wind as a bigger source of renewable, clean 
energy and the experience here has been generally favorable. Despite the
 demise of the Cape Wind project, much smaller wind turbine projects 
have generally proven to be a good investment.
However,
 in Central Massachusetts, Princeton is an exception. Residents there 
are not benefiting financially from the electricity generated from their
 $7 million wind turbine project.
In 
addition to not being able to use energy from the two 15 megawatt 
turbines installed on the side of Wachusett Mountain in 2010, ratepayers
 have to make up the nearly half-million-dollar annual project deficit.
Brian
 Allen, manager of the Princeton Municipal Light Department, said the 
failed project is the result of a “business plan that didn’t pan out the
 way it was supposed to.” He notes he was not manager at the time.
In 2006, when energy was selling at about $90 a megawatt, projections indicated that when the wind turbines went on line four years later, a megawatt of energy would sell for $100 to $115, he said.
 
But, right after the turbines were 
commissioned in 2010, the natural gas market took a dive. Instead of 
getting the projected price, the town receives $30 per megawatt.
Having
 a business plan that included an agreement with an organization that 
would buy electricity at a certain rate instead of market rate might 
have been a better way to go, Mr. Allen said.
The annual cost of the turbines, including paying down the 20-year $7.3 million bond and maintenance, is about $900,000.
“We
 recover $400,000 in energy we sell and renewable energy credits, which 
leaves us $500,000 in the hole every year. Since 2010, we’ve had to 
absorb this,” Mr. Allen said.
The 
shortfall is shared by the 1,500 residential customers, since the town 
has virtually has no commercial customers. The current rate is 24.75 
cents per kilowatt hour. Without the turbines, it would be 19.75 cents 
per kw hour.
“In 2016, we would have had 
to get 28 cents a kw hour to break even. Nobody will pay us that because
 the market price people can buy energy is so low right now,” he 
continued.
He said the towns of Sterling 
and West Boylston buy 25 percent of the output at 8 cents per kw hour. 
The other 75 percent goes into the market.
The
 town buys all of its energy from Florida-based NextEra Energy, which 
owns the largest number of wind turbines in the country; 6,000 mw of 
solar energy, as well as the lion’s share of the Seabrook Nuclear Power 
Plant in New Hampshire and the Florida Light and Power Co.
Mr.
 Allen said the project was too big for the town. It might have been 
better if the project was smaller, perhaps a smaller turbine, so the 
energy could all be used in town.
Mr. 
Allen said, to no avail, he reached out to the Patrick administration 
through state Sen. Harriette L. Chandler, D-Worcester, to try to get 
some financial assistance through the Clean Energy Technology Center and
 other means.
The state, he said, should be obligated to 
help the town because Princeton constructed the first wind turbines in 
the commonwealth in 1983. They were replaced by the two installed in 
2009.
State officials at that time were 
excited because they saw this as an opportunity to pave the way for 
other communities and institutions to pursue wind energy, he said.
“That’s
 all well and good, but it hasn’t quite worked out the way we wanted it 
to,” he said. “Doesn’t the state have some obligation to push this along
 ... isn’t there some culpability on the state’s part?” 
Ms.
 Chandler said she tried to help relieve Princeton of some of its 
financial burden, including costs associated with the mechanical 
breakdown of one of the turbines, but was unable to. The senator filed 
an amendment to the fiscal 2015 state budget that would have authorized 
the state Clean Energy Technology Center to spend up to $2 million to 
buy renewable energy credits from the town.
Kevin
 E. Connor, spokesperson for the senator’s office, said the money would 
have been “de facto funding to help relieve some of (Princeton’s) debt 
burden.”
He said current law prohibits the 
Massachusetts Clean Energy Technology Center from providing grants to 
municipal plants such as Princeton, so this option to purchase 
certificates provided a method of financing debt relief for the 
municipal light plant.
The measure was 
adopted by the Senate, but did not make it through a House-Senate 
conference committee. Ms Chandler was not a member of the conference 
committee.
“Princeton was clearly trying 
to do the right thing. They thought wind was the answer,” Ms. Chandler, 
who is acting Senate president, said. “This is an awful lot of money for
 a small community to lose and it would have a ripple effect on the 
town’s budget.”
She said in 2010-2011 the state was dealing with very tight budgets because of the recession.
“We
 thought maybe (the state) would deal with the crisis they (Princeton) 
were having financially. The answer was no at the time. I have not heard
 from Princeton since the amendment failed to get out of the conference 
committee. I think it’s kind of limited what could be done now all this 
time later,” she said.
She said she was not looking at her effort as a promise that had to be fulfilled by the state.
“I’m
 sure there are other communities across the state who have tried 
different technology and it hasn’t worked for one reason or another. I’m
 not sure if the state has made any obligation to any city or town,” she
 said.
Positive experiences with turbines
On
 the other hand, the experiences with wind turbines have been positive 
for several communities and institutions throughout the state and in 
Central Massachusetts. Among them are turbines installed at Holy Name 
Central Catholic Junior/Senior High School in Worcester, Mount Wachusett
 Community College in Gardner, North Central Correctional Institution in
 Gardner and the 10-turbine, 15-megawatt project atop Brodie Mountain in
 the Berkshire town of Hancock, which serves 14 municipal utilities, and
 eight communities - Ashburnham, Boylston, Holden, Paxton, Shrewsbury, 
Sterling, Templeton and West Boylston - in Worcester County.
Jeffery
 Quick, director of the state Division of Resource Management, said the 
two 1.6 mw turbines owned by the state Department of Correction that 
went online in 2013, have been very successful. They produce more than 
enough energy to provide all the electricity at the prison in Gardner, 
as well as the three DOC facilities in Shirley. Part of the savings, 
including $60,000 to $80,000 quarterly from the sale of renewable energy
 credits, helps cover the cost of maintenance and pay down the 20-year 
$10.3 million bond, he said. DOC has solar throughout the department, 
but the Gardner and Shirley DOC facilities are the only ones also served
 by wind turbines, he said.
“The Gardner 
site is probably one of the best wind sites in the state, until you get 
out in Western Massachusetts. That’s why it was selected. We did a wind 
study with a meteorological tower for a year to collect wind speeds,” he
 said. “It’s been a great learning experience for this office and the 
facility as well.”
The wind turbine 
installed at Worcester’s Holy Name Central Catholic High School in 2008 
has reduced the school’s electricity bills from $200,000 a year to 
$40,000 a year. The school also recently agreed to lease a small site 
near the turbines for $30,000 a year for National Grid to do a battery 
power storage study on the campus. The large batteries will store power 
that is not needed to be used when energy is not generated because of a 
lack of wind. 
Holy Name Headmaster Edward
 Reynolds said in addition to the cost savings and environmental impact,
 the turbines and batteries are an authentic STEM experience that no 
other school can offer. After the midterm exams in February, the project
 will be integrated into the curriculum.
“I
 think it will raise their awareness of renewable energy and how well it
 can work. I also think it will have a profound effect on their study of
 science and math because they will have a real world application in 
their backyard that’s going to be part of their study. They’re very 
excited and eager to begin,” Mr. Reynolds said.
Robert E. LaBonte, vice president of finance 
and administration at MWCC, said he does not know of any other college 
that has a wind portfolio. The school’s electric bill was about $1 
million annually about 15 years ago. In 2003, the school installed a 
biomass plant that burns wood chips for heating. That took about 40 
percent off the school’s electrical load. The school also has a solar 
array on the roof.
“At the time we built 
the two turbines, we were down to the use of 5 million kw hours a year, 
which is pretty much about what the turbines produce,” he said. The 
school comes out about $100,000 ahead each year after paying for the 
loan to install the turbines. Over time, the savings will be even more 
than the debt.
“Financially, there’s not 
this huge wow factor. But environmentally, it is. We are completely 
powered by renewable energy. That’s the big story,” he said.
When
 the 10 turbines owned by the Berkshire Wind Power Cooperative Corp. 
went online in 2011, it was the largest wind farm in the state. The 
largest now is the $90 million 19 1.5 mw Hoosac Wind farm in the towns 
of Florida and Monroe that went online in 2012.
The
 Berkshire turbines were projected to operate at a capacity factor of 
about 40 percent and produce more than 52,500 mw hours of electricity 
annually, which is enough to power about 6,000 homes. The project was 
also expected to offset the production of nearly 612,000 metric tons of 
carbon dioxide and the use of 1.7 million barrels of oil.
David
 Tuohey, spokesperson for the nonprofit Massachusetts Municipal 
Wholesale Electric Co., which acts as the BWPCC’s agent, said the 
Berkshire project is “beating the expectations.”
But not everyone is happy with the project.
In 2015, the town of Hancock, where the 
project is located, threatened to sue the cooperative over its payment 
in lieu of taxes agreement after receiving a check less than the 
agreed-upon $156,600 annual payment. The issue was finally resolved, but
 Hancock Selectman Chairman Sherman Derby said the town should be 
getting much more. The agreement is based on the assessed value of the 
turbines and the town’s single tax rate of $2.90 per $1,000 of 
valuation.
“They (wind farm owners) negotiate for their own benefits,” Mr. Derby said.
He
 said the owners of a wind farm the size of the local one that’s located
 in Woodstock, Maine, where he owns a summer home, pays that town 
$430,000 each year, plus a $20,000 scholarship to a local student.
Mr. Tuohey said each side is looking to get the maximum benefits.
More turbines in the future
More
 renewable energy resources, including wind farms (on-shore and 
off-shore) are in the making as a result of legislation Gov. Charlie 
Baker signed into law in 2016 that requires the state’s three energy 
distribution companies to solicit proposals for 1,200 megawatts of clean
 energy, including wind and hydropower; and an additional 1,600 
megawatts of offshore wind energy. Each has to acquire at least 400 
megawatts of wind energy by June 30, 2020. The goal is to have 2,000 
megawatts of off-shore and on-shore wind energy by 2020, up from the 
current 112 megawatts from 128 projects. The state also plans to 
increase its solar capacity.
Three companies that have acquired leases on thousands of acres of ocean floor from the federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management
 to pursue development of wind energy. Bids were submitted to the state 
Department of Energy Resources Dec. 20. The leases are among 13 the BOEM
 has granted for almost 1 million acres of ocean floor running from 
Massachusetts to North Carolina. A lease is the first step in a long 
process to get approval for a wind farm.
Matthew A. Beaton, secretary of the state 
Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs, said the new 
requirements will make significant strides in further increasing the 
state’s renewable energy portfolio and improving the cost-savings to 
rate payers. The three bidders will tell the DOER how much wind energy 
they will produce and at what price.
Barbara
 A. Durkin of Northboro, who devoted a decade to studying and opposing 
the failed Cape Wind project, said the new state legislation to ramp up 
the number of on-shore and off-shore wind farms is “wishful thinking.” 
She said the standard design codes have not resolved the issues of 
failure, including internal and external corrosion of turbines. She 
prefers renewable energy sources of hydropower, which she says is more 
benign and cleaner, and nuclear power, which is efficient and clean.
Mr.
 Beaton said with three companies competing, unlike in the Cape Wind 
project, will result in the most competitive resources as the state 
sheds fossil fuels.
The state, he noted, 
has an aggressive renewable portfolio standard and the most aggressive 
greenhouse gas targets in the nation under the 2008 Global Warming 
Solutions Act, which requires the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions 
25 percent below the 1990 baseline emissions level by 2020 and at least 
80 percent by 2050.
He said there is a 
1,200 mw proposal for renewable energy that would be the largest import 
of renewable energy in New England’s history.
“We’re
 doing a hell of a lot. And we have a long ways to go,” he said. 
“Massachusetts has been No. 1 in energy efficiency for seven years in a 
row.”
National Grid spokesman Robert 
Kievra said the company believes the solution to New England’s energy 
challenge is a diversity of fuel sources. It supports renewable projects
 and policies consistent with the goal of reducing emissions while 
ensuring reliability and minimizing the cost impact to customers.
He said that in 2017, 22.3 percent of National Grid’s electricity distributed in Massachusetts came from renewable sources.
“In
 2018, we are obligated for 26.6 percent. By 2028, our obligation, under
 current regulations, will be at least 46.5 percent,” he said in an 
email.
The two key components of the 2016 
energy legislation: the clean energy and offshore wind components will 
provide pathways for Massachusetts to reach the targeted emissions 
reductions set out in the Global Warming Solutions Act.
“We
 are active participants in the evaluation of the bids for clean energy 
procurements and would expect, with the maturation of the offshore wind 
industry in the United States, that we will meet or exceed the timelines
 laid out in the legislation to support this industry,” Mr. Kievra said.
The report also found that 68 percent of workers in clean energy fields earn more than $50,000 a year, and the industry generates $11.4 billion in economic activity and 2.3 percent of the state’s gross domestic product.

 
 
Gee they did not talk about Templeton, how come ? Do we still have one gear box left ? Just because it is spinning does not mean it is making electricity.
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