View Article  Navajo Nation gets $4.9M for smart grid
Navajo Nation Gets $4.9M for Smart Grid
By Steve Lynn
The Farmington Daily Times
Posted: 10/28/2009 12:00:00 AM MDT

FARMINGTON   The Navajo Nation will receive $4.9 million in stimulus funding to develop a smart electrical grid.
The money would fund a smart grid for the Nation that quickly would identify electrical system outages, monitor people's appliances for efficiency and better facilitate the use of alternative energy.

The U.S. Department of Energy on Tuesday announced $3.4 billion in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funding for smart grid projects throughout the nation.

"This is an important investment in the Navajo Nation, one that will result in better service to the (Navajo Tribal Utility Authority's) nearly 40,000 customers," Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., said in a prepared statement announcing the funding. "At the same time, this grant will help create good jobs in the area."

Bingaman, chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, helped create the smart grid stimulus grant funding, according to the statement.

The funding will advance the use of renewable energy sources in the region, Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M., said in the statement.

"Implementation of smart grid technology can help transform our energy infrastructure in the places we need it the most, like the Navajo Nation," Udall said in the statement.

No funds for Farmington

The city of Farmington, which applied for the same federal grant money as the Nation, did not receive any funding.

"I regret to inform you that your application was not selected for award," an Energy Department letter to the city stated. "This result represents the level of competition rather than a reflection on your application."

Another letter will provide details on the Energy Department's review of the Electric Utility, The letter stated.
The Energy Department received almost 400 applications for $9.3 billion in requests for smart grid projects.

The city's Farmington Electric Utility System budgeted almost $17 million for a smart grid, Electric Utility director Maude Grantham-Richards said.

Grantham-Richards was disappointed and said the lack of federal funding would delay the smart grid project.
Almost $2 million is budgeted for smart grid meters through the next two years, and another $15 million for other smart grid equipment over the next six years, Grantham-Richards said.

But there are unresolved issues with smart grids, such as whether they can be protected against security cyber attacks, she said. The utility wants to research those issues further before the project goes forward.

"We're going to take our time moving into this," she said.

Jen Stutsman, an Energy Department spokeswoman, said she could not comment on specifics of individual applications.

Energy Department experts considered several factors in deciding where funding would go, including job creation and the ability to provide at least an equal amount of funding for the smart grid, Stutsman said.
That means the Nation would have to contribute at least an additional $4.9 million toward its smart grid, Stutsman said.

"The department chose the highest ranking proposals that we felt could best put us on a path to transition towards a cleaner, smarter, more efficient electrical grid in the country," she said.

Smart grids include devices that monitor people's electrical use and the ability for heating and air-conditioning systems and appliances to be turned off at times when electricity is used most. People also could better monitor their own electricity use and its cost.

Navajo Tribal Utility Authority officials did not respond to telephone calls and an e-mail requesting comment Tuesday.

Steve Lynn:
slynn@daily-times.com
Source Link: http://www.daily-times.com/ci_13658109
View Article  Special report: Desert Rock debate continues
Special Report: Desert Rock Debate Continues
By James Monteleone
The Farmington Daily Times
Posted: 10/25/2009 12:00:00 AM MDT

NENAHNEZAD Navajo Nation leaders are increasingly looking to the proposed Desert Rock power plant to surge the tribal economy as new environmental rules threaten operations at existing coal-fired plants, potentially costing hundreds of jobs and millions in tribal revenues.

The Desert Rock Energy Project sets itself apart from other generating facilities on the Navajo Nation because the tribe intends to invest more than $350 million into it, earning a 25 percent share in the $4 billion power plant's revenues that would provide millions in additional tribal income, said Doug MacCourt, representing the Diné Power Authority.

Critics of the development, however, claim the alleged economic gains will not trump the health and environmental costs to be paid by the Navajo and other residents of the Four Corners over the lifespan of a third coal-fired power plant within a single 30-mile radius if all three exist.

Desert Rock, proposed to be built in Nenahnezad about 25 miles southwest of Farmington, describes itself as a modern "ultra low" emissions facility that will produce a fraction of the chemicals and greenhouse gases emitted by the other two decades-old power plants in the area. The project, developed in conjunction with Texas-based developer Sithe Global, is on hold after the Environmental Protection Agency in April revoked an air quality permit for the facility, regardless of the proposed improvements describes Desert Rock as the key to the tribe's future.

The Navajo investment in Desert Rock, which would be paid almost entirely by borrowing from bank and bond markets, would be repaid over a 25-year period.

It likely would require payments less than what the Navajo Nation projects as its tax-free revenues from electricity generation. The tribe could opt to purchase rights for as much as 49 percent of the plant. However, the additional share is available only at a higher market rate.

The tribe anticipates earning more than $14 million in profit in the first year of Desert Rock's operation with a 25 percent share, and more than $46 million after 10 years of operation, MacCourt said.

"As you start getting out into year 25-plus, you're talking about really significant numbers for that 25 percent stake," MacCourt said. "When you couple that this will be financed largely through the security on the revenue stream, it's pretty much a no-brainer."

Utilizing Navajo resources

The two existing power plants on Navajo land could be forced to reduce operations and lay off as many as 300 plant workers if the EPA opts to require $1 billion in haze-improving environmental upgrades under consideration, company officials claim.

A project like Desert Rock capable of adding new, high-wage jobs is critical to the Navajo Nation, where a reported 50 percent of residents are out of work, according to the Navajo Nation Office of the President and Vice-President.

Similar to the Four Corners Power Plant in Fruitland and the Navajo Generating Station in Page, Ariz., Desert Rock would provide an additional 400 full-time plant operations and mining jobs to Navajo workers and more than $50 million in tribal taxes and natural resource royalties. The four-year construction of Desert Rock also will employ more than 1,000 temporary workers.

Navajo Nation President Joe Shirley was unavailable to comment on the Desert Rock project.

The bottom line for the Navajo Nation will continue to be supporting the needs of the community, and revenues and jobs provided by the project will go a long way to help improve the quality of life for tribal residents, Shirley spokesman George Hardeen said.

"Ultimately i's for jobs. That's Joe Shirley's perspective; jobs and revenue for the Nation to fund the services it provides," he said. "It takes money to address these, and Desert Rock is an important component to help generate the revenue needed. ... If we could make the same amount of money selling incense and candles that we could make selling electricity, we'd be in the incense and candles business. But energy production is and historically has been the most lucrative business wherever you go."

Taking an opportunity to create new revenues utilizing the 200-year coal supply available through the BHP Navajo Mine, the tribe has a unique opportunity to combine its investment in the facility with its rights to a large coal supply. It also could profit from a growing regional demand for electricity, Desert Rock advocates claim.

"With this power plant, they get it from a tax side, they get it from a (land) lease side, they get it as a revenue site," said Frank Maisano, an attorney representing Sithe Global and spokesman for the Desert Rock project. "There's a multitude of ways that the coal benefits them, and multiplies itself into direct benefit for the Navajo people."

Not a fix-all


Critics of Desert Rock argue the project is seen by some Navajo leaders as a fix-all solution to Navajo problems, welcomed without taking into consideration the long-term consequences of creating a third power plant in the region.

"The tribe is just taking whatever pennies they can get, and whatever pennies they can get, they think it's going to be able to solve all the financial problems that the tribe has," said Dailan Long, with Diné Citizens Against Ruining Our Environment. "I think the tribe doesn't acknowledge some of the environmental costs, or some of the health costs, or some of the social costs that are already being incurred."

Although the project has promised dramatically lower chemical emissions, better research is needed to understand how the chemical byproducts continue to burden human health in northwest New Mexico, where numbers of children requiring medical treatment for asthma and other respiratory conditions annually increases, critics contend.

But in the cost-benefit analysis that weighs community health against economics for the Desert Rock project, the prospect of new money continues to win out among tribal decision makers, Long said.

Another concern cited by critics is that any new money created by the power plant project will go to fund pet projects of Navajo leaders, rather than reinvested money into the Nenahnezad and Burnham communities directly affected by the power plant blight and pollution.

The Nenahnezad Chapter, unanimously approving the Desert Rock site lease in 2004, requested $2 million for a community health facility, "a percentage" of the plant royalties be returned to the chapter for capital projects, annual pro-rated power plant funds to pay chapter scholarships and needed road construction equipment, according to the chapter resolution.

Chapter President Lucinda Bennalley could not be reached for comment regarding the status of the chapter requests.

"Proponents of the power plant are using economic development as an excuse. We can't use an excuse and put the lives of the people at risk. We can't just be thinking in dollar signs," said Elouise Brown, president of the anti-Desert Rock group, Dooda Desert Rock. "No matter how much money this proposed plant generates, it's not going to be enough to keep the people healthy, and our lives are not worth dollars in any amount."

James Monteleone:
jmonteleone@daily-times.com

Source Link: http://www.daily-times.com/ci_13637635?source=most_viewed
View Article  EPA finalizes clean air plan for Four Corners Power Plant

EPA finalizes clean air plan for Four Corners Power Plant

Release date: 05/01/2007

Contact Information: Contact: Wendy Chavez, 415/947-4248, chavez.wendy@epa.gov

(San Francisco, Calif. -- 05/01/2007) The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency yesterday finalized a clean air plan that regulates emissions for the Four Corners Power Plant located on the Navajo Nation near Farmington, New Mex.


The plan contains federal emission limits for sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, total particulate matter, opacity, and dust control requirements.

The plan includes significant sulfur dioxide reductions from the facility's historic highs at the 5-unit 2,040 megawatt Four Corners plant, which began operations in 1962. The reductions are the result of a partnership between the Navajo Nation, the Arizona Public Service, the National Park Service, Environmental Defense, Western Resource Advocates, and New Mexico Citizens for Clean Air and Water.

“This action demonstrates how collaboration can lead to significant environmental benefits,” said Deborah Jordan, the EPA’s Air Division director for the Pacific Southwest region. “Since the Four Corners plant will be emitting over 20,000 tons less sulfur dioxide per year than in the recent past, this action ensures that citizens in the Four Corners area will have cleaner air to breathe, and that visibility will be improved.”

The EPA proposed a federal plan for Four Corners in 1999, but held off on finalizing the plan until negotiations on sulfur dioxide reductions for Four Corners were complete. Negotiations and the testing period successfully concluded in 2005, and the EPA proposed a new federal plan on September 12 that included the agreed upon sulfur dioxide reductions.

On July 26, the Sierra Club filed a complaint in U.S. District Court for the District of New Mexico requesting that the EPA take final action on a federal plan. Consistent with a December proposed consent decree, the EPA finalized its 2006 proposed federal plan.


Additional information on the plan is available on the EPA's Web site at: http://www.epa.gov/region09/air/navajo/index.html

This action is not related to the air quality permit for the proposed Desert Rock power plant. The EPA is currently evaluating public comments on the proposed Desert Rock permit. Information about the proposed permit can be viewed online at http://www.epa.gov/region09/air/permit/desertrock/index.html

View Article  Diné CARE -- Mission and Contact
Diné Citizens Against Ruining our Environment (Diné CARE) formed in the late 1980's as the the first Navajo grassroots environmental organization within the Navajo homeland. We continue to educate and advocate for environmental justice, based on our traditional Diné teachings and a commitment to protect and provide a voice for all life within the Four Sacred Mountains. We promote alternative uses of natural resources that are consistent with the Diné philosophy of the "Beauty Way." Our main goal is to empower local and regional community people to organize, speak out on issues that matter to them, and participate in nurturing a healthy environment. Diné CARE's goal to preserve the Diné lifeway starts from the ground up, within the homes of those living in the most impacted communities.

We are a non-profit organization 501(c)(3) by and for the Diné, the People. We do not collect dues or run membership drives. Our work is funded primarily through the support of volunteers, foundations and donors. Our members are not only those who are leaders in their communities, but all those Diné who strive to maintain a relationship with Mother Earth based on the concepts of Balance and Harmony. For us, membership means taking up the cause of Honoring Mother Earth and Honoring our Relations to our Environment. We are local, community people working together on issues that affect our communities.

Visit Dine' CARE's Homepage

Lori Goodman
10 A Town Plaza, PMB 138
Durango, CO 81301
PH: (970) 259-0199
FAX: (970) 259-2300
Cell: (970) 759-1908
kiyaani@frontier.net