New York state wants a green energy ‘superhighway.’ Hydro-Québec says it can help

New York state wants a green energy ‘superhighway.’ Hydro-Québec says it can help

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo stands in front of a chart showing electricity connections with Canada during his “State of the State” address on Jan. 13, 2021 in Albany, NY. Photo by Don Pollard / Office of Governor Cuomo. Carl Meyer, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter

By Carl Meyer, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Canada’s National Observer

Jan 15, 2021

Hydro-Québec wants to help New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo build a green energy “superhighway” from Canada to New York City.

The provincial utility said it would participate in a solicitation announced by the governor on Jan. 13 for “transmission arteries to bring renewable energy from upstate and Canada” to the Big Apple.

During his “State of the State” address Wednesday, Cuomo unveiled plans for a 400-kilometre, $2.5-billion “Green Energy Transmission Superhighway,” part of a larger strategy to foster a “green economy” in the Empire State.

The governor characterized the state transmission grid as “antiquated,” and said it was leading to “bottlenecks,” which he argued were ultimately passed on to New Yorkers as “congestion costs” on their utility bills.

The transmission plan, said Cuomo, would “create opportunities to maximize the use of renewable energy for the parts of the state that still rely on polluting fossil-fuel plants.”

“Supercharging the new transmission superhighway will be vital to completing New York’s nation-leading green economic recovery and accelerating renewable energy development programs,” he said.

Cuomo’s plan is the latest push in a years-long public and private effort to connect more of Canada’s abundant and largely non-emitting electricity with New York City — the most populous city in the United States — and the neighbouring Long Island region. The two regions collectively eat up two-thirds of the state’s power demands.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s 2019 Green New Deal, for example, envisioned all city operations running on 100 per cent “zero-emission Canadian hydropower” within five years.

Quebec Premier François Legault‏ also put forward a strategy to become the “battery of the American northeast.”

Meanwhile, in the private sector, Transmission Developers, a subsidiary of the Blackstone Group, has been proposing the Champlain Hudson Power Express, that would run a 536-kilometre high-voltage line under Lake Champlain and the Hudson River.

Organizations have faced opposition, however, as to whether hydropower is as non-emitting as once previously thought, as well as questions over the best route for any transmission lines and whether they would interfere with wilderness.

Riverkeeper, which advocates for clean water in the state, has raised concerns that the Quebec utility would have to create new hydro dams in order to provide enough power to New York City.

Hydro-Québec spokesperson Lynn St-Laurent told Canada’s National Observer that the utility was “in a position, today, that it can serve new contracts without new build-out of hydropower facilities.”

She also noted that New York’s expansion of its Clean Energy Standard in October 2020 meant that “all forms of hydroelectricity, including hydro from Québec, are recognized as clean and renewable sources.”

St-Laurent said the utility welcomed Cuomo’s announcement. “Hydro-Québec will participate in the solicitation that was issued by the state, and will offer its full support to New Yorkers in achieving their decarbonization goals,” she said.

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“A new transmission interconnection between Québec’s hydropower system and New York City can lead to extensive environmental and reliability benefits for New York.”

Cuomo’s green-economy strategy also involves the “largest offshore wind program in the nation,” a 2,490-megawatt project involving two wind farms off Long Island, as well as facilities for manufacturing, operating and maintaining offshore wind turbines.

And the governor plans to build “nearly 100 renewable energy projects,” from solar farms to onshore wind farms, and one hydroelectric facility. New York is also looking at deploying storage technologies, such as large-scale battery storage.

Asked how it saw the “power express” project working in relation to the governor’s public push for transmission lines, Jennifer Laird-White, vice-president of external affairs at Transmission Developers, said the company has “long been dedicated to the development of privately funded clean energy transmission.”

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“We commend Governor Cuomo’s bold commitment to reducing pollutants and improving public health by investing in important green infrastructure that will diminish our dependence on fossil fuels while creating thousands of clean energy construction jobs for New Yorkers,” said Laird-White.

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