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ELLY GRIMM

   • Leader & Times

 

Methods of energy transmission continue to be discussed and recently, some work in Kansas could help with that.

Thursday, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced 10 proposed National Interest Electric Transmission Corridor projects have been scaled down to three, none of which will run through Kansas. In the meantime, the Grain Belt Express transmission line, approved by the Kansas Corporation Commission (KCC) in 2011, will continue through the state regulatory process, according to a release from the State of Kansas.

“While the route of the Grain Belt Express project fell within the borders of one of the proposed DOE corridors, its status as a previously approved project has not changed and is moving forward,” the State of Kansas release noted. “In addition, without a Federal Corridor designation, State jurisdiction and approval processes remain intact for the Grain Belt Express and the KCC will continue to review any potential future projects. Federal ‘backstop’ siting authority or the use of federal eminent domain are not an option.  The DOE’s decision does not reverse the previously announced $4.9 billion conditional loan guarantee awarded to the Grain Belt Express project Nov. 25.”

To date, the KCC has taken the following actions in respect to the Grain Belt Express project:

• 2011 – The Grain Belt Express project, designed to transport energy from Kansas wind and solar farms, was approved based on benefits to the State and granted a Certificate of Convenience and necessity to build the line.

• 2013 – The route of the Kansas portion of the line was approved, beginning at a converter station in Ford County continuing on to Missouri.

• 2019 – The commission approved the acquisition of the project by Invenergy Transmission LLC from Grain Belt Express Clean Line LLC.

• 2023 – The KCC approved a request to allow the line to be built in two phases. Phase 1, which includes Kansas and Missouri, can begin once all regulatory and financing requirements have been obtained for that portion of the project. The order issued did not remove or alter any of the protections for landowners that were required by the commission when it approved the acquisition of the project by Invenergy in 2019.

• 2024 – The KCC gave conditional approval to a siting plan for two 345 kV transmission lines, known as the AC Collector System, designed to connect wind and solar farms to the Grain Belt Express.

Thursday’s news follows meetings in July to to discuss an application from Grain Belt LLC to site two 345 kV transmission lines designed to connect nearby wind and solar facilities to the Grain Belt Express line, with one line planned to run through parts of Ford, Meade, and Gray counties (the “Meade-Dodge City Line”) and the other through parts of Ford County (the “Bucklin-Dodge City Line”).

A final order on the siting of the AC Collector lines is expected to be issued in 2025.

One comment

  • This should come with no tax statements. It should also have a transmission tax paid to the state or counties through which it runs. The land owners should also receive a lease payment each year for the use of their property.

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