Politics & Government

Sonoma County, Bay Area to Reap Energy from New $388M Power Plant

Lodi Energy Center natural gas-fired plant unveiled today for Healdsburg and 12 other cities and public entities.

 

State and local elected officials -- including those from Healdsburg and 12 other towns and public entities -- are joining today with the Northern California Power Agency to mark completion of the 300-megawatt Lodi Energy Center.

A natural gas-fired power plant, the Lodi Energy Center is being touted as the "cleanest and most efficient combined-cycle natural gas-fueled power plant in the State of California, if not the nation," according to NCPA leaders.

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“LEC is the future of clean, reliable energy, not just for the individual communities and agencies represented [in the project], but for the entire state of California,”  NCPA General Manager James H. Pope said at Friday's ceremony.  “This facility will come online quickly, burn less fuel and produce fewer emissions.”

Healdsburg Mayor and NCPA Commission Chairman, said the ultimate beneficiaries of the Lodi plant are the residents of the communities that will be served by the facility -- such as Healdsburg.

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“It’s been very gratifying,” Plass said, “to be associated with a project that will directly benefit my community. 

"For my community, as well as others associated with LEC consumers, keeping electricity rates affordable for our residential and business customers, while at the same time maintaining our excellent record of environmental leadership, has always been our goal,” Plass said.

, headed by Terry Crowley. Crowley and Plass both participated and monitored the new Lodi plant during its two years of construction.

“California has set very ambitious carbon reduction and renewable energy goals,” Crowley said, referring to the landmark 2006 climate change act, and 2011’s 33 percent renewable portfolio standard requirement. 

“Our participation in LEC will help ensure that Healdsburg will continue to lead the way toward a cleaner, greener energy future for California," Crowley added.

As the owner and operator of the LEC, NCPA partnered with 13 public power utilities and other agencies to construct the $388 million project in Lodi during the past two years. 

When it comes online next month, the facility will serve millions of Californians by providing electricity to several participating municipal utility communities, BART and the California Department of Water Resources.

Nine of NCPA’s 16 members, along with four other public entities, are sharing in LEC’s investment and benefits. 

The City of Santa Clara’s Silicon Valley Power is a major participant in the LEC with a 25 percent share of the project. The San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District (BART) will use its portion of LEC’s output to help power its transit system trains, Pope said. 

The Modesto Irrigation District and the municipal utilities serving Lodi, Gridley, Ukiah, Healdsburg, Biggs, Lompoc, and Azusa will receive LEC energy, along with the Plumas-Sierra Rural Electric Cooperative, and the Power and Water Resources Pooling Authority.

What makes the LEC unlike any natural gas-fueled generation facility in operation today is the “fast-start” turbine at the heart of the plant, Pope said. 

This state-of-the-art Flex- Plant™ 30 combined cycle technology, designed and built by Siemens, A.G., provides a number of economic and environmental advantages over traditional natural gas-fueled plants, he added.

Since most conventional plant emissions occur during start-up, the LEC’s ability to significantly reduce the amount of time needed, up to 50 percent less than other units, to bring the facility up to full generating capacity increases overall efficiency and dramatically reduces emissions, Pope said.  

Overall, greenhouse gas emissions are being cut by 30 percent, compared to traditional combined-cycle plants.

Another important advantage of the LEC’s technology is its ability to rapidly ramp production up and down to match market conditions.  LEC participants will be able to quickly respond to changing consumer power demand, reducing overall costs to the consumer.

The operating flexibility of the new LEC also will facilitate greater use of renewable sources of electricity, such as wind and solar resources, which have been more difficult to integrate into California’s energy resources because of their weather-dependent nature.  This flexibility will allow the LEC to serve as a reliable back-up when changing weather conditions reduce electrical output.

According to Mario Azar, President of Energy Solutions Americas for Siemens the "fast-ramping, gas-fired plant was specifically designed by Siemens as a solution to balance fluctuations on diverse power grids managing both renewable and traditional energy sources,” he said.

“The Lodi Energy Center will provide grid reliability to the Central Valley, while integrating renewable resources,” said Energy Commission Chair Robert B. Weisenmiller. “This is the future for fast-start gas-fired combined cycle power plants in the country."

During the more than two years it was under construction, the LEC created hundreds of high-paying jobs for Central Valley workers.  At its peak, more than 300 skilled laborers, tradesmen and managers worked full time at the LEC site, located just west of Interstate 5 in southwest Lodi.

At any time during construction, a minimum of 80 percent of LEC workers resided within 50 miles of the Lodi area, ensuring that the local area economy directly benefited from the project’s construction.  The focus on local employment was a key part of the appeal of the LEC project, both for NCPA and for the City of Lodi.

Also, LEC will only use reclaimed water in its steam generating and power plant cooling systems.

Because of that, NCPA has partnered with Lodi to purchase wastewater from the its White Slough Water Pollution Control Facility, turning a water disposal liability into a valuable local economic asset. 

In addition, sales tax on the generating equipment and a multi-decade lease for city-owned land, on which LEC is sited, will generate substantial additional revenue for Lodi.

Lodi Energy Center Project Participants

The City of Azusa, Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART), the City of Biggs, California Department of Water Resources (CDWR), the City of Gridley, the City of Healdsburg, the City of Lodi, the City of Lompoc, Modesto Irrigation District (MID), Plumas-Sierra Rural Electric Cooperative (PSREC), the Power and Water Resources Pooling Agency (PWRPA), Silicon Valley Power (The City of Santa Clara), and the City of Ukiah.

About Northern California Power Agency (NCPA)

The Northern California Power Agency (NCPA) is a joint-action agency serving public power entities located throughout Northern and Central California, including municipal and cooperatively-owned utilities and special districts. NCPA has built, and currently owns and operates, a portfolio of electricity generation resources that is 95 percent carbon-emission free.  Drawing upon NCPA’s diverse mix of resources, our members collectively serve 750,000 California electricity consumers with a 20 percent eligible renewable resource portfolio.

 

 

 

     


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