Published: November 20, 2009
Southern California Edison's Devers Palo Verde2 Transmission Line Approved by California Public Utilities Commission
ROSEMEAD, Calif. - (BUSINESS WIRE) - The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) today approved
Southern California Edison's (SCE's) Petition to Modify the company's
application to build the Devers Palo Verde2 (DPV2) Transmission Line
project in California.
The 128-mile, 500-kilovolt transmission line will connect SCE's Devers
Substation near Palm Springs to the company's proposed Midpoint
switchyard near Blythe, Calif. Additionally, SCE will build a 42-mile,
500-kilovolt transmission line between the Devers Substation and its
Valley Substation in Riverside County as part of the project.
When completed, DPV2 will allow the transfer of an additional 1,200
megawatts of power from the Blythe area in Riverside County to energy
customers in Southern California. This is enough electricity to supply
about 780,000 typical homes. Representative of the transmission upgrades
necessary to strengthen the transmission system in the western United
States, it will also reduce energy congestion within a nationally
designated, critical electricity corridor.
Les Starck, SCE vice president, Local Public Affairs, said that the CPUC
decision to approve the company's Petition to Modify is a positive and
necessary action toward building needed electric transmission
facilities. "This favorable decision from the CPUC is an important step
in SCE's ongoing efforts to strengthen the transmission grid in
California," Starck said. "DPV2 and other transmission projects on which
we are working are needed to strengthen service reliability and improve
the grid's ability to transmit electricity from new generating sources
such as planned renewable energy projects."
The DPV2 project will provide the capability to meet generation
developers' request for interconnecting new renewable and conventional
generation projects in the solar energy rich areas of Southeastern
California. By providing these developers with the earliest possible
means to access markets in California, Arizona and other states in the
Western region, construction of DPV2 will support these states' efforts
to meet their respective renewable portfolio targets.
The California portion of the project currently is expected to be placed
in service in 2013, subject to licensing and regulatory approvals.
As originally proposed in January 2007, DPV2 included transmission line
segments and related facilities from Romoland, Calif. to the Palo Verde
area west of Phoenix, Ariz. The modified project will end at the
proposed Midpoint switchyard near Blythe, Calif. The CPUC approved the
entire proposed project, but in June 2007 the Arizona Corporation
Commission (ACC) denied the Arizona portion of the project. In May 2009,
SCE informed the ACC that the utility's updated analysis of the project
indicated that the benefits of the Arizona portion for California
customers had substantially declined. Current studies confirm these
results and do not support SCE's pursuit of the Arizona segment of DPV2
at this time.
The CPUC decision authorizing construction of the California portion of
the DPV2 project is contingent upon approval by the California
Independent System Operator (Cal-ISO).
About Southern California Edison
An Edison International (NYSE:EIX) company, Southern California Edison
is one of the nation's largest electric utilities, serving a population
of nearly 14 million via 4.9 million customer accounts in a
50,000-square-mile service area within Central, Coastal and Southern
California.
Southern California Edison
Media Contact:
Paul
Klein, (626) 302-2255
or
Investor Relations Contact:
Scott
Cunningham, (626) 302-2540
Copyright © 2010, Business Wire, Inc., All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2010, NewsBlaze,
Daily News
Tags: Business wire, arizona, california, Utilities