January-February 2007

In Erie, the Answer Is in the Wind

An Illinois school district plans to use one turbine to power all its facilities.

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By Elizabeth Cutright

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The foundation promotes “environmental best practices.” Programs supported by the foundation generally focus on energy efficiency, pollution reduction, protection of natural resources, and renewable energies. The foundation limits funding to charitable, nonprofit organizations and local government agencies serving Illinois residents.

Ed Miller, the foundation’s program director, outlines its main focus: “We believe that any renewable source should be tapped in sites where it’s appropriate,” he says. “We have frequently provided funding to school districts and other public and nonprofit organizations to determine whether or not they have an appropriate site for a wind power project. If they do, we are eager to see them move ahead with the project.”

According to Miller, the foundation found more than enough reason to approve the Erie district’s initial request for funding: “Erie had sent in a grant request describing the project, and we then invited a much more detailed project proposal. I’d say it was one of the most thorough proposals that we have had from any grant applicant.”

The district tapped Johnson Controls to head up the feasibility study. Based in Milwaukee, Johnson Controls focuses primarily on interiors, power options, and energy efficiency. The company provides batteries for traditional automobiles as well as hybrid vehicles. It also supplies innovative interiors designed to promote comfort and safety for automobiles and office buildings. All of the company’s products and services highlight an overall commitment to energy efficiency. Johnson Controls became involved with the Erie project after conducting a five-year energy savings program with the district.

“Mike Ryan happened to go to a seminar, and he was interested in wind,” recalls Kirk Heston, a representative from Johnson Controls, “and he just called me—we’d been friends for several years—and wanted to know what I knew about wind. From that we started forging ahead and looking into it and building on that. It’s been about an 18-month process from beginning to close.”

The feasibility study gathered information about site evaluations, established wind patterns, and met tower readings in and around the district’s locale. Studying the district’s current usage enabled Johnson Controls to construct a turbine able to generate sufficient energy to meet the district’s needs now and in the future. The study also analyzed the amount of energy the wind tower can produce over its life span. A significant aspect of the feasibility study was its ability to generate a usage-by-meter ratio, allowing for a calculation of the project’s potential savings and the expected payback duration. Heston explains the process involved in conducting a feasibility study: “First, you need to figure out just how much wind there is. So we had to do a feasibility study, which includes gathering wind data: when it blew, how much it blew, and averaging it out. You find the site, and then the site must be matched up with the zoning requirements. Can they actually put one here, and what are the fallbacks and what are the setbacks?”

Based upon the data gathered in the feasibility study, the district submitted its formal request to the Illinois Clean Energy Community Foundation for an additional grant to help build the actual wind tower. Ultimately, the foundation awarded Erie an additional $720,000 for completion of the project. Although the grant covers only a portion of the project’s estimated $3.5 million cost, Ryan says the school district will fund the remainder of the project by generating debt certificates.

With funding secured, the district and Johnson Controls set about beginning the actual construction of the project. According to Ryan, the district benefited greatly from information provided by the Bureau Valley School District. In 2005, the Bureau Valley High School located in Manlius, IL, became the first school in the state to own and operate a utility-sized wind turbine. The turbine generates 660 kW and, when at full capacity, can power the district’s high school. Bureau Valley was able to pursue the project in part through Illinois Clean Energy Community Foundation grants totaling $351,678. Significant assistance also came from the law firm of Robbins, Schwartz, Nicholas, Lifton, and Taylor, the same firm used by the Erie district.

“I believe one of the major plusses for us is that the same attorney group that represents Bureau Valley school district represents us,” says Ryan.

“Those attorneys have been through the process once with Bureau Valley,” continues Ryan, “and that really enabled us to avoid a lot of the steps that Bureau Valley had to go through in working with the same attorney group. They had been through the wars, if you will.”

As with any construction endeavor involving large installations, the Erie project jumped through a series of hoops in order to comply with federal, state, and local regulations. Although the process was not arduous, each step along the way had to be completed, resulting in incremental progress toward the ultimate goal of a fully operational wind power project.

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“A lot of the minutia details were in and of themselves challenging,” states Heston. “The FAA report, the microwave tower search—you can’t have these things in the area of a flight pattern. You have to watch out for avian migratory bird paths.”

The project consists of a single 1-MW turbine able to generate twice as much energy as the one installed at Bureau Valley. The acquisition of the turbine provided the project with one of its many challenges. A quick Internet search generates a hearty list of turbine suppliers and manufacturers: GE Energy, Energy Transfer Corp., Carbide Burrs4less, Dutch Pacific LLC, Intercrop LLC, Ameritech Wind Systems, Northern Power Systems, Ohio Alternative Power LLC, Select Systems Inc., Specialized Power Systems Inc., Salon Wind Energy Corp., The Wind Turbine Co., Took Asia Wind Energy, Tower Tech Systems Inc., and US Wind Turbine LLC. Nevertheless, Heston says that currently the United States has no major manufacturers of large wind turbines interested in the sale of one large turbine. Although Johnson Controls ultimately was able to acquire a turbine for the district, it was not without difficulty. “I can also tell you coming up with a single turbine in incremental sizes is difficult,” Heston says. “Turbines today are pretty much sold out two years in advance, and there are not a lot of manufacturers that want to talk to a person, an entity, or a company that wants one. They’re selling them 600 at a time.” Next Page >

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