Commentary: Aroostook Renewable Gateway is a failure of imagination

November 8, 2023

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Joshua Abram Kercsmar is an early American historian and associate professor of Environmental Humanities at Unity Environmental University. He also serves as vice president of Preserve Rural Maine.

BY JOSHUA ABRAM KERCSMAR

If LS Power’s “Aroostook Renewable Gateway” project is truly Maine’s “gateway to progress,” we should expect it to innovate in ways that speed the state toward meeting its climate goals.

So far, however, the same problems that plague green transmission projects across the U.S. – developers’ insistence on erecting massive poles and unsightly corridors, predictable outrage on the part of landowners and environmentalists, legal challenges, competing interests of different providers – are now surfacing here in Maine, putting climate targets at risk.


The ARG would carve a 150-foot-wide corridor through 41 municipalities over 140-160 miles. It would negatively impact hundreds of landowners from its origin in Aroostook County, where it may someday connect to King Pine Wind, to its terminus in Windsor. These unlucky “hosts,” as LS Power calls them, would face significantly diminished property values, the marring of generational land, and the prospect of eminent domain.

The environment would also suffer. An overlay of the route on Google Earth suggests it would entail clear-cutting around 2,000 acres of forest (150’ x 109 miles). If one forested acre removes 5,880 pounds of carbon dioxide from the air each year, building a corridor this large would mean sequestering nearly 12 million pounds less carbon annually.

And the damage goes further. An independent analysis by the College of the Atlantic’s ArcGIS Lab found that just one 37-mile section of the proposed route (from Dixmont to Windsor) would impact 138 acres of wetlands, four acres of inland waterfowl habitat, 210 acres of deer wintering area and, perhaps most alarmingly, around 87 acres that support special-concern species.

If this is what a “gateway to progress” looks like, imagine the dystopian hellscapes of actual progress. At the recent E4ME Energy Summit, one panelist speculated that meeting the demands of the ISO-NE queue would require the equivalent of 57 King Pine Wind projects by 2050. Even if the number is less, our current approach will mean inviting many more out-of-state firms (like LS Power) to construct a massive “gateway grid” that gouges new corridors into the landscape, wrecking ecosystems and tourism alike.


Little wonder, then, that citizens have expressed fear and anger, protested and formed a grassroots nonprofit, Preserve Rural Maine, that secures legal representation for landowners while imagining a better way to site transmission infrastructure.

Small wonder, too, that citizens have asked: Why can’t we bury the ARG within existing corridors and build it with proven high-voltage direct current (HVDC) technology rather than the standard overhead high-voltage alternating current (HVAC)?

LS Power’s answer is that burying the lines could cost five to 10 times more.

Yet a study by NextGen Highways has found that the cost per gigawatt-mile is comparable for buried HVDC and overhead HVAC. Furthermore, running lines within existing corridors would all but eliminate the cost of clearing new ones; save millions of dollars in environmental impact assessments and mitigation; reduce maintenance and weather-related costs over the system lifetime; curb the threat of expensive lawsuits; offer scalable transmission for future King Pine Wind equivalents........................

https://www.centralmaine.com/2023/11/08/commentary-aroostook-renewa...

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Comment by Penny Gray on November 9, 2023 at 9:22am

An excellent summation that includes some actual facts, tho the last section could've been eliminated. There's no real reason to be saddling ratepayers with unreliable and super expensive electric rates while at the same time destroying Maine. Hard to believe so many people were up in arms about CEC's short section of power lines bringing reliable hydropower from Canada, yet so few are screaming about this sprawling environmental and economic travesty.

Comment by Dan McKay on November 9, 2023 at 5:21am

The Maine Legislature has thrust its last, desperate stab into the hearts of the Maine people with this proposed "Green Energy" development. 

Troy Jackson's contemptuous attempt at sneaking a multi-billion-dollar boondoggle into the County is failing fast. CMP doesn't want to contract with it. Versant doesn't want to contract with it. The people with abutting land are enraged by it.

There is no need for the PUC, the DEP or the Legislature wasting anymore time and money evaluating the impacts of this project. Destroy it before it destroys Maine.

 

Maine as Third World Country:

CMP Transmission Rate Skyrockets 19.6% Due to Wind Power

 

Click here to read how the Maine ratepayer has been sold down the river by the Angus King cabal.

Maine Center For Public Interest Reporting – Three Part Series: A CRITICAL LOOK AT MAINE’S WIND ACT

******** IF LINKS BELOW DON'T WORK, GOOGLE THEM*********

(excerpts) From Part 1 – On Maine’s Wind Law “Once the committee passed the wind energy bill on to the full House and Senate, lawmakers there didn’t even debate it. They passed it unanimously and with no discussion. House Majority Leader Hannah Pingree, a Democrat from North Haven, says legislators probably didn’t know how many turbines would be constructed in Maine if the law’s goals were met." . – Maine Center for Public Interest Reporting, August 2010 https://www.pinetreewatchdog.org/wind-power-bandwagon-hits-bumps-in-the-road-3/From Part 2 – On Wind and Oil Yet using wind energy doesn’t lower dependence on imported foreign oil. That’s because the majority of imported oil in Maine is used for heating and transportation. And switching our dependence from foreign oil to Maine-produced electricity isn’t likely to happen very soon, says Bartlett. “Right now, people can’t switch to electric cars and heating – if they did, we’d be in trouble.” So was one of the fundamental premises of the task force false, or at least misleading?" https://www.pinetreewatchdog.org/wind-swept-task-force-set-the-rules/From Part 3 – On Wind-Required New Transmission Lines Finally, the building of enormous, high-voltage transmission lines that the regional electricity system operator says are required to move substantial amounts of wind power to markets south of Maine was never even discussed by the task force – an omission that Mills said will come to haunt the state.“If you try to put 2,500 or 3,000 megawatts in northern or eastern Maine – oh, my god, try to build the transmission!” said Mills. “It’s not just the towers, it’s the lines – that’s when I begin to think that the goal is a little farfetched.” https://www.pinetreewatchdog.org/flaws-in-bill-like-skating-with-dull-skates/

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Hannah Pingree on the Maine expedited wind law

Hannah Pingree - Director of Maine's Office of Innovation and the Future

"Once the committee passed the wind energy bill on to the full House and Senate, lawmakers there didn’t even debate it. They passed it unanimously and with no discussion. House Majority Leader Hannah Pingree, a Democrat from North Haven, says legislators probably didn’t know how many turbines would be constructed in Maine."

https://pinetreewatch.org/wind-power-bandwagon-hits-bumps-in-the-road-3/

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