Going Hydro
December 7, 2008
By Terry Kinney and Jim Suhr
Far from it. The push to get electricity from moving
water is only picking up steam.
There is mounting political
pressure to get more energy from alternative sources and developers are pushing
ambitious projects to exploit
"Some of these applications
have been around for decades, but there's renewed interest now," said Jeff
Hawk, spokesman for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers'
A new generation of low-impact
hydroelectric plants is expected to light up the
Water is already the leading
renewable energy source used by utilities to generate electric power.
The recent credit crisis has not
been a concern for most.
"One thing that is certain is that this will pass," said Dan Irvin, behind one of
the ventures planned for the
American Municipal Power-Ohio is a
nonprofit wholesale power supplier for 123 municipal systems in
In
Hydro gives the 30,000 customers
of the city-owned utility the lowest electricity rate in
The price tag: $450 million over
40 years.
"The cost is in construction.
Once the project's built, that's it," said Linda Church Ciocci, executive director of the
FROM PAGE 1E
National Hydropower Association, a
Washington-based trade group. "There's no fuel cost associated with
hydropower."
There are 20 navigation and flood
control dams on the Ohio River along its 981 miles from Pittsburgh to Cairo,
Ill. Hydro plants at six of the dams already are producing electricity, with a
generating capacity of more than 300 megawatts; four more that have been
licensed would double that perhaps be on line in 2013.
The principle behind hydro is
simple. Moving water spins the blades of a turbine, which turns a generator
shaft. A fall of less than 30 feet, the height of most
Harnessing the Mississippi River's
flow for electrical generation isn't new: A 134-megawatt hydroelectric plant by
St. Louis-based AmerenUE, for instance, has been
running since 1913 at
Developers see even more potential,
however.
Massachusetts-based Free Flow
Power Corp. is studying the prospects of planting thousands of small electric
turbines in the river bed at 55 sites from
The plan, with a possible $3
billion price tag, uses hydrokinetics -- electrical generation from river
currents or ocean waves. The river's flow would spin submerged turbines about
two feet in diameter and perhaps made of carbon fiber or some other lightweight
source durable enough to withstand being hit by debris swept downriver while
not interfering with barge traffic.
"It's elegant, it's
simple," says Irvin, Free Flow's chief executive and a former investment
banker. His company screened some 80,000 river sites across the country.
Preliminary permits that Free Flow
Power already has from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission give the
startup first right to seek operating licenses for projects at those locations
while giving it three years to do environmental and technical studies.
Janet Sternberg, a Missouri
Department of Conservation policy coordinator, urged FERC months ago to not
move too hastily on such projects until more about hydrokinetics is known.
"People saw the
Irvin calls such debate healthy.
"We have no objection to the
careful scrutiny and scientific question," Irvin said. Stressing that Free
Flow's turbines would turn only with the speed of the river, "we're pretty
comfortable that what we're proposing is going to be completely benign to
fish."
Up the river in
By the end of this fiscal year,
which ends next May,
"We'd like to make this part
of our state the poster child for hydroelectricity in our country," Spring said. "Normally, you'd never see an entity this size take on such a gigantic project. But I think it's
the future, and it's the right thing to do."