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Dateline: February 5,
2009
Wind
farm might be operational this year
By Roger Estlack, Clarendon
Enterprise
Donley
County’s first wind farm could be online by the end of this year
following the announcement of an agreement to develop an area along FM
2471.
Nacel
Energy Corporation has entered into the agreement with members of the
Naylor family on 636 acres to develop what it is calling Hedley Pointe.
“We
started researching wind energy about a year ago,” said family spokesman
Blake Frye. “I was working with oil companies and seeing workers getting
laid off and thought wind was going to be the next big thing.”
Frye
said he approached Nacel, and they were interested in the Donley County
property. The company erected a meteorological tower in December to
measure winds.
A
call to Nacel was not returned before press time, but a press release from
the company said it anticipates 10 megawatts (MW), or more, of power
generating capacity from Hedley Pointe.
“The
winds are blowing about twice what they need here,” Frye said. “They
also said this is a strategic spot because it allows them to connect to
either ERCOT or SPP to sell the power.”
According
to Nacel, SPP provides power to Kansas and portions of Texas, New Mexico,
Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana. ERCOT provides power to 21 million
customers covering 75 percent of Texas.
Frye
said he has been
doing contract work with Nacel and helped them and former Clarendon
Alderman Michael Tibbets begin another project in Swisher County. Nacel
has asked Frye to help them incerase the size of the Donley County
project.
“I’m looking for two
more sections on FM 2471 to expand this project to 20 turbines,” Frye
said.
But
that’s not slowing down development of Hedley Pointe, Frye said, noting
that the company is proceeding with getting permits and hopes to have
construction begun and completed by the end of this year or in early 2010.
Hedley
Pointe is Nacel’s fourth location in the Texas Panhandle, CEO Brian
Lavery said in the release. In addition to the 1,573-acre project in
Swisher County, the company has two other projects in Moore County.
“We
anticipate generating a total of 80 MW of clean, renewable power upon
build-out of our four Texas Panhandle projects – enough energy to meet
the daily requirements of an estimated 24,000 average American homes,”
Lavery said.
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