By Garrett Christensen on Wednesday, September 28th, 2022 in More Top Stories Northeastern Oregon News
OREGON – (Release from Idaho Power) Oregon’s Energy Facility Siting Council on Tuesday approved a permit to build the Boardman to Hemingway transmission line across five eastern Oregon counties. The line will move power between the Pacific Northwest and Intermountain West, helping meet customer needs during peak seasons. Construction is expected to start in 2023.
B2H will connect a new station near Boardman, Oregon, to Idaho Power’s existing Hemingway Substation in southwest Idaho. It will provide a crucial link to move energy, much of it from hydroelectric, wind and other clean sources, between the Pacific Northwest, where energy use peaks in the winter, and the Intermountain West, where energy use peaks in the summer.
Existing connections between the two regions are full — they can’t carry any more power during peak periods. Industry experts, environmental groups and government agencies agree that building more high-voltage transmission lines is crucial to incorporating a growing amount of clean energy on the grid. B2H will help Idaho Power pursue its goal of providing 100% clean energy by 2045. It will also support the clean energy goals of other energy providers in the West.
“It would be hard to overstate the importance of this project, not just for Idaho Power customers, but for homes, businesses and farms all across the western U.S.,” said Lindsay Barretto, Idaho Power’s 500-kilovolt and Joint Projects Senior Manager. “More and more energy from wind, solar and other sources is coming online. Better transmission connections to surrounding regions will help incorporate this clean energy while enhancing grid reliability and keeping customer prices affordable.”
B2H’s site certificate follows a multi-year process in which residents, tribes, local governments, the federal government, interest groups and other stakeholders provided input on the project.
“We’re extremely grateful to all the people — many of them unpaid representatives of their communities — who spent so many hours analyzing this project, communicating with us and testifying in public meetings,” Barretto said. “The result is a better project that balances the need for reliable, affordable, clean energy in the West with the values of communities near the transmission line.”
Idaho Power and Portland-based PacifiCorp plan to own B2H jointly. Bonneville Power Administration participated in the project’s permitting. Construction of B2H is expected to start in 2023, with the project coming online in 2026. For additional information, visit idahopower.com/b2h.