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Bob McCarty Writes links to /abqnews/
New Mexico Independent links to NEWS/METRO: Fed Law: Fetus Can Be Murder Victim
Democracy for New Mexico links to NEWS/STATE: Denish Prepares To Take State Reins
Texas on the Potomac links to NEWS/STATE: Governor Drops Out of Commerce Consideration, Cites Federal Probe
Law Blog - WSJ.com links to NEWS/STATE: Pay To Play Inquiry Derails Cabinet Post
Heath Haussamen on New Mexico Politics links to NEWS/STATE: Governor Drops Out of Commerce Consideration, Cites Federal Probe
My Photojournalism Life links to home page
New Mexico Politics: New Mexico FBIHOP links to Solar Financier Has Shaky Past
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Swampland - TIME.com links to /abqnews/

Full list and what they're blogging



New Mexico
New Regulations Proposed for Valles Caldera

Judge Gerard Lavelle Sworn in Promptly

UNM Announces 3 Finalists for Anderson Dean

AROUND N.M.

Board Considers Limiting Emissions

Missing Boarder Found Alive

Crash Report: Pilot Was Disoriented

Cadigan Starting Campaign Today

Denish Takes News About Richardson Staying in State in Stride

Milky Way Gets A Boost in Status

Obama: Cut Taxes by $300B

800 N.M. Guard Members To Deploy in '09

Richardson Statement

Painful Decision

Searchers Find Snowboarder at Ski Area

Mexican Warlock Predicts U.S. Troops on Border

Cleanup Contract Awarded on Vermejo Park Ranch

N.M. Launches Breast and Cervical Cancer Awareness Campaign

State Police Bust Valencia County Cockfighting Operation

PNM Says Natural Gas Costs Down From Last January

Two Dead After High-Speed Crash Near Las Cruces

Six Las Cruces Men Indicted for Murder

N.M. Chile Yield Down Due to Disease

Governor Drops Out of Commerce Consideration, Cites Federal Probe


More New Mexico


    

          Front Page  news  state




Western Governors, Utility Heads Seek Energy Solutions

By Matt Joyce
Associated Press
      TETON VILLAGE, Wyo. — Energy utility companies need regulatory and financial cooperation from state and federal governments to produce and distribute enough power for the West's growing population while also eliminating harmful carbon emissions, utility directors say.
    Several utility heads made their case as part of a wide-ranging discussion Monday at the annual Western Governors' Association meeting, held this year near the Grand Teton Mountains in northwestern Wyoming.
    Americans are using increasing amounts of electricity, but the process of building new electricity transmission lines is often bogged down in state-by-state permitting battles, the utility directors said.
    Since 2000, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has signed off on more than 10,000 miles of interstate natural gas pipelines, compared with 970 miles of interstate electricity lines, said Michael Niggli, chief operating officer of San Diego Gas & Electric.
    "I have a feeling this is going to change if we're going to meet the mission the governors have for a renewable society and a non-carbon society in terms of generation," Niggli said. "Electric transmission is a key element in unlocking substantial environmental value, not only on renewable energy development, but ultimately, if you can electrify transportation, you end up with fewer emissions."
    For their part, the governors supported boosting electricity transmission to harness the solar and wind power potential present in many western states.
    "Many of our resources, whether it's wind or sun or geothermal, they're out in rural areas. There's not a lot of people out there, and we just don't have any infrastructure," Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman said. "If we're going to take this whole energy piece on the renewable side seriously ... we've got to get the transmission and infrastructure piece right."
    With demand for electricity in the West growing at 1.5 times the national average, utility companies will be seeking a broad range of sources, including nuclear power, said Jeff Sterba, president and chief executive of New Mexico-based PNM Resources.
    "Over 35 percent of the resources we will need in 2030 don't exist yet," Sterba said. "We've got to ensure they come increasingly from zero or really low emissions resources, and that creates a huge challenge."
    The utility heads said state governments can help meet the region's energy needs by spearheading conservation efforts, facilitating the regulatory process of building new transmission lines and helping the utility companies with the time and money they need to develop clean-energy technology, including viable methods of capturing carbon emissions.
    The executives said they don't anticipate the construction of many more traditional coal power plants, beyond those already under development.
    "The big guys in the industry say that's a technology of the past," said Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer, whose state has rich coal resources in the Powder River Basin.
    "That means that we are demanding that the investment is made in carbon capture technology and we're demanding the federal government creates the legal framework for us to start capturing this carbon," he said.


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