Tomorrow, July 6th is the last day to leave comments with the DOE
concerning NIETC at http://nietc.anl.gov/involve/comments/index.cfm .
How important is this? If the National Interest Electric Transmission
Congestion Corridors becomes a reality, then even if WVPSC rejects
TrAIL we will still have to contend with the fact that FERC may
implement TrAIL. TrAIL won't be the last transmission line we end up
fighting due to the fact that every large power utility in the United
States has signed up for an early inclusion in Section 1221(a) of the
Energy Policy Act of 2005.
How can you comment?:
Many feel the comment period should have been extended, so at the very
least send in a comment saying NO to the question "
Would
designation of one or more National Corridors in these areas be
appropriate and in the public interest?," and
request that the comment period be extended for the public.
I used these guidelines provided by DOE in their Congestion Study
document to provide comments to questions they have for the public:
1.
Would designation of one or more National Corridors in these areas be
appropriate and in the public interest?
A.
Does
a major transmission congestion problem exist?
B.
Are
key transmission constraints creating the transmission
congestion?
C.
What is the
magnitude of the problem?
D.
What
are the relevant transmission or non-transmission solutions?
2.
How and where should DOE establish the geographic
boundaries for a National Corridor?
3.
How would the costs of a proposed transmission facility
be allocated?
It's a lot of fun answering these questions, but I must admit I haven't
had enough time to perform adequate research, however I'm giving it my
best try. Keep in mind that the deregulation
of the
electricity market in 1996 is a key factor in today's congestion, due
to shoddy practices by Power Utilities like Enron. It's not clear to
me as a Citizen of the United States of America that we actually have a
congestion problem, but what we do have are businesses very interested
in making money under the guise that the National Security of America
is under threat. In that case, the DOE should be interested in
creating a decentralized electricity solution, and should recognize
that Global Warming is a much greater threat to National Security than
the energy economics of congestion. Here's how I answered 1(C).
C.
What is the
magnitude of the problem?
It's
an insignificant problem compared to Global Warming. This is a perfect
time for the DOE to become a significant part of the Global
Warming solution. In the process of applying practices that reduce
Global Warming, the transmission congestion problem will dissipate and
eventually disappear.
Jonathan