10 reasons to oppose the COB plant
in Bonanza
by Roger Hamilton, Bonanza, OR
Printed in the Herald and News Sept
1, 2003.
I am opposed to the construction in Langell
Valley of what would be the largest natural gas
electric generating plant in the Northwest. I’m sure
the knee jerk reaction of many, including the
national administration, to the northeast blackout
is to want to build more power plants and more
transmission lines. And I am not opposed to that if
the plants and lines are the right kind in the right
place. Unfortunately, the COB plant is the wrong
plant in the wrong place. I can think of at least
ten reasons:
- The construction of an industrial scale power
plant on farm land in Langell Valley would violate
the quality of life and agriculture of this quiet
rural community. An exception to the Klamath
County land code will be required and should not
be granted by the state or county siting
authorities.
- The use of tax incentives by way of county
enterprise zones would be a waste and a burden on
local taxpayers. Enterprise zones should be used
sparingly to create significant numbers of jobs by
providing incentives for processing plants, not to
line the pockets of power plant shareholders whose
projects create few.
- An electric power station is not needed in the
local region, where over 600 MW of Pacific Power
plants are already in operation, with a plan for
another 500 MW.
- The BPA high voltage transmission system is
currently congested, particularly in the north to
south direction which the COB facility would use
to sell to California and Arizona markets.
Transmission line congestion is one of the
suspects in the northeast blackout.
- The high voltage electricity grid in the west
is under stress because plants like the COB are
built distant from load centers, thus increasing
the voltage instability we saw in the northeast
blackout, and creating the need for additional
power plants to provide voltage support.
- The high voltage system best serves clean
plants like wind, hydroelectric, and geothermal,
located in specific areas usually remote from
where the electricity is consumed, not natural gas
plants which may easily be located close to where
customers live and work.
- A water-cooled facility using the Babson well
would pose an unacceptable risk to irrigation
groundwater on which farmers and ranchers depend
for their livelihoods. And there is no reason to
locate the plant in Langell Valley if the Babson
well is no longer under consideration and the new
proposal is for an air-cooled facility. Then
again, an air-cooled facility would not be
efficient at this high altitude, producing more
air pollution per unit of electricity production
and increasing the likelihood of shutdown for
economic reasons. Solve one problem and you get
another.
- Have you checked your gas bill lately? Natural
gas supplies in North America are diminishing, and
natural gas prices have almost doubled in the past
year, increasing the likelihood of uneconomic
operation of this plant, frequent shutdowns, and
higher prices for gas consumers.
- It seems only fair to me that consumers
causing power plants to be built, residing in the
areas to which the power from the COB facility
would be delivered, should be the ones exposed to
the noise and pollution of the power plant serving
them. This same principle best serves the
efficiency, reliability, and security of the
electric grid by distributing the stress caused by
very large plants throughout the system. An 1100
MW power plant like COB, with the capacity to
serve a city the size of San Francisco, Seattle or
Portland, should be built in those places, not in
a farming community like Langell Valley which will
have no use for the electricity produced.
- Klamath county should have a long term
strategic plan. If it had one, I don’t think the
COB plant would fit. The next generation
electricity system takes advantage of local
renewable resources like wood waste, wind,
geothermal, and solar. It uses power plants that
are small and compact like fuel cells, and that
can be distributed throughout a community sized
grid easily isolated from the cascading
disturbances we have seen bring down the
continental scale high voltage grids. The COB
plant belongs to the old world we saw collapse in
the northeast. The electricity technologies of the
future will create local jobs, will go easy on the
environment and our precious natural resources,
and will be a lot more reliable.
I oppose this plant for these reasons, and yes, I
will freely admit, because my ranch is ten miles
down wind from the proposed location. I have served
the past twenty years as a Klamath county
commissioner, an Oregon public utility commissioner,
and as Governor Kitzhaber’s energy advisor. I have
seen a lot of energy schemes come and go, some
worthy of public support, others so foolish they
have spared their investors by dying early on the
vine. But this one surpasses them all in its
technological clumsiness and callous indifference to
the local folks who will bear the brunt of its
impacts every day of their lives.
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