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For Immediate Release:
12/21/2006
For More Information:
Contact Bernadette Del Chiaro
(916) 446-8062 x 103

Statement by Bernadette Del Chiaro on So Cal Edison’s New Contract to Build 1,500 MW of Wind Power in Tehachapi

Southern California Edison’s newly announced contract to buy 1,500 megawatts (MW) of wind power from the Tehachapi area is great news, and potentially historic. This is by far the largest single contract for renewable energy signed in California. Once built, this single project would increase California’s wind capacity, already the second largest in the nation, by 65%.

For those following the wind power competition between California and Texas, this project, once built, would blow past Texas’s 2,400 MW by bringing California’s total installed capacity up to 3,800 MW. California currently has around 2,300 MW of wind installed throughout the state.

There are a few key things that need to happen for this new wind farm to actually supply clean electricity to California homes and businesses, however. These are: 1) the federal production tax credit needs to be extended by Congress in 2007, and 2) California’s utilities, including So. Cal Edison, need to come together to increase transmission line capacity coming out of the Tehachapi area so that the power generated by this new wind farm can get to end users.

Ultimately, this contract is a sign of the times and of more good things to come. Renewable energy is finally taking hold as an affordable and mainstream energy resource that is able to compete with conventional fossil fuel and nuclear power plants. Thanks to leadership from California’s legislature and Public Utilities Commission, California is aggressively building up its homegrown renewable energy resources and shutting its doors to imported fossil fuels and nuclear power.

For anyone who cares about breathing clean air, solving global warming and becoming more energy independent, this 1,500 MW wind contract is really exciting news. Edison should be applauded and urged to do more along these lines, sooner rather than later, so that California can continue to lead the way toward a clean energy future.