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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Solar, wind power hub planned

New Mexico project would link nation’s three electrical grids

Gov. Bill Richardson gives a news conference at the Aperture Center in Mesa del Sol, in Albuquerque, N.M., on Tuesday announcing that Tres Amigas will be building a superstation in Clovis, N.M. The project is intended to allow energy to flow more freely across the nation’s three massive power grids. (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Heather Clark Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – Officials announced an ambitious project in New Mexico on Tuesday that would allow energy to flow more freely across the nation’s three massive power grids, breaking down significant barriers to ramping up alternative energy in the United States.

The proposed Tres Amigas SuperStation in Clovis, N.M., would help route energy from isolated wind and solar installations to urban centers and other places that consume the most power.

New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who served as President Bill Clinton’s energy secretary, said the transmission station would be “historic.”

“This is going to be the largest power converter in the world, making New Mexico the meeting place for America’s electricity needs,” he said at a news conference to unveil the project.

The transmission hub would be located across 22 square miles in eastern New Mexico near the Texas border. Clovis was chosen because it is nearest to where the nation’s three power grids – called the East, West and Texas interconnections – come closest together.

Tres Amigas would build a triangular pathway of underground superconductor pipelines, combined with AC/DC converters that synchronize the flow of power between the interconnections. The equipment allows electricity to be transferred from grid to grid.

Construction could begin in 2011 or 2012, and the hub could be running in 2013 or 2014, said Phil Harris, chief executive of the Santa Fe-based Tres Amigas.

The pipelines, 3 feet in diameter, contain hair-thin ceramic fibers developed by Devens, Mass.-based American Superconductor and can carry enough electricity to power 2.5 million homes.

“That’s how we’re going to break the power gridlock in this country,” said Greg Yurek, the company’s founder and chief executive.

American Superconductor has partnered with scientists at Los Alamos, Oak Ridge and Argonne national laboratories for two decades to develop the superconductor, which already is being used in Columbus, Ohio; and Long Island and Albany, N.Y., Yurek said.

Harris, a New Mexico native, said the transmission hub will have a 5-gigawatt capacity but will be built for an ultimate capacity of 30 gigawatts to move renewable energy out of the Southwest to the rest of the nation.

Richardson said the station would “help enormously” to lessen the effects of blackouts and brownouts in the East and West.

While the nation’s need for renewable energy is driving the building of the hub, the transmission station could also transmit power from a nuclear or coal-powered facility.

“You’ve got a major oilfield here, but it’s in terms of wind and solar, so let’s tap that,” Harris said. “We truly couldn’t unleash the potential of renewables unless we found a way to put these grids together.”