Current:Home > FinanceSan Diego, Calif’s No. 1 ‘Solar City,’ Pushes Into Wind Power -NextFrontier Finance
San Diego, Calif’s No. 1 ‘Solar City,’ Pushes Into Wind Power
View
Date:2025-04-16 22:51:21
Clean energy groups in San Diego County are hoping to spark a wind energy rush in a region far better known for its abundant solar power.
Advocates say that California will have to accelerate the use of utility-scale wind power to meet its aggressive renewable portfolio standard, which requires at least 33 percent of the state’s electrical generation to come from clean energy by 2020. And many are banking on a future wind energy boom in San Diego County to help it succeed.
So far, however, the county’s efforts to promote wind production have been sluggish, largely because of limited permitting experience and a reluctance of rural communities to embrace turbines due to aesthetic and noise concerns.
“There is wind-generation capacity out in the eastern portion of San Diego County,” said Jason Anderson, vice president of CleanTECH San Diego. “But development … is not what it could be right now, and a lot of that [is due to] political and regulatory issues.”
The trade association organized its first San Diego Wind Energy Symposium on June 14 for industry officials, policy experts and community members to address the county’s opportunities for wind power and the unique challenges it faces.
The City of San Diego is already an established solar leader among American cities. It has more than 6,700 solar installations totaling just over 90 megawatts — ranking first and second in California in those categories, respectively, according to Solar-California, a service that promotes solar energy.
Anderson said that adding wind farms to the county’s renewables profile would be a “positive” for a region that already boasts a burgeoning wind energy equipment industry.
San Diego and surrounding counties are home to more than 40 companies that work in the wind industry supply chain, he said. CleanTECH believes that coming wind installations will be an engine for adding more green jobs.
“As these [wind] projects get off the ground, we see and hope for potential job growth and job creation in San Diego.”
Iberdrola Provides Spark
Portland, Ore.-based Iberdrola Renewables, the U.S. division of the Spanish wind giant, is seen as providing a vital spark to San Diego’s still-embryonic wind industry.
The company is in the permitting stages of its 200-megawatt Tule Wind Project in the McCain Valley in San Diego’s East County, which will produce enough power to serve about 60,000 local homes when it goes online in 2012.
“This is the first wind farm that the county is having to permit, so they’re learning the process of how to permit this as we all go through it for the first time together,” Harley McDonald, Iberdrola’s U.S. business developer, told SolveClimate News.
Iberdrola is the second-largest wind developer in the United States behind Juno Beach, Fla.-based NextEra Energy Resources, with 4,600 megawatts of wind projects up and running. In California, the firm has a 45-megawatt wind farm in Palm Springs and a 150-megawatt farm in Solano County.
It has also proposed the 246-megawatt Manzana Wind Project in the Tehachapi region of Eastern Kern County, which will become the first wind project owned by Pacific Gas & Electric, California’s biggest utility.
San Diego County has up to 6,900 megawatts in potential wind power resources, of which up to 1,530 megawatts — enough to power roughly 380,000 households — is available for development, according to a 2005 report by the California Energy Commission.
The county’s only existing wind farm is the 50-megawatt Kumeyaay Wind Farm. Its developer, Invenergy, has teamed up with San Diego Gas & Electric to add another 160-megawatt installation called Kuymeyaay Wind II in the same area. The projects are on Campo tribal land and thus not within San Diego County’s permitting purview.
Statewide, nearly 3,200 megawatts of wind power are online, representing about 8 percent of the nation’s total installed capacity, with another 600 megawatts under construction, according to the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA).
The majority of projects are located around the San Francisco Bay Area and Palm Springs, where wind resources are considered to be among the best in the state, and where land is already dotted with turbines, McDonald said.
“Those areas have been developed for years, so if there was any land available for development, it was easy to go [there] because the county already understood what the process was,” she said. “The developer knew what they needed to do, and landowners were familiar with what it meant to have a wind farm on their property.”
But now, she explained: “Developers are looking around the state at other spots that have good wind resources, and it just so happens that East County San Diego has a great wind resource.
“There are many places where you can put solar farms, but there are only so many places where you can put wind, and we have to go where the wind is.”
Familiar Permitting Hiccups
Iberdrola began its Tule wind project in 2005 and recently wrapped up its environmental impact and wind resource studies. The wind farm spills across county, tribal and federal lands, and the developer is aiming to finalize its permits with agencies in all three jurisdictions by early next year.
McDonald said the project has faced challenges typical of any wind farm, namely having to manage residents’ concerns about environmental and visual impacts, noise from turbines and overall uncertainty of what to expect.
Scott Anders, director of the Energy Policy Initiatives Center at the University of San Diego’s School of Law, noted that the majority of San Diego County’s 3 million residents live along the Pacific Coast or in the county’s 18 cities, while the unincorporated lands to the east remain sparsely populated.
“The people who live out there live out there for a reason, and some people feel like ‘You’re screwing up our scenery here'” by installing wind turbines, he said.
Not Yet ‘Open for Business’
Anders said that while San Diego County has taken an active approach to easing the permitting process for residential and business solar energy systems, it hasn’t done much with regard to streamlining large-scale wind power projects.
“Our county hasn’t embraced wind to say, ‘Let’s go after it, let’s put up a sign that says we’re open for business,'” he said.
Lisa Bicker, president and CEO of CleanTECH San Diego, said that tapping the county’s wind resource is key to San Diego one day leading the state’s clean energy economy.
“Our job at CleanTECH San Diego is to make sure that San Diego is … providing more green jobs and better jobs for the entire spectrum of our citizenry,” she said in opening remarks at the June wind symposium.
“We need to have a constructive, productive, solution-oriented conversation about how we can access those wind resources, whether they are micro-wind opportunities … or larger scale projects.”
Adding wind power to its solar-dominated portfolio could also help San Diego Gas & Electric meet its required 11.9 percent of renewable electricity generation by 2020.
McDonald of Iberdrola said: “All renewable energies are going to be needed. I don’t think that wind is the ultimate answer, but it is definitely part of the equation that is going to answer the state’s need.”
veryGood! (55)
Related
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Fossil Fuel Development and Invasive Trees Drive Pronghorn Population Decline in Wyoming
- Shooting outside a Mississippi nightclub kills 3 and injures more than a dozen
- Inter Miami stars Lionel Messi, Luis Suarez won’t play in MLS All-Star Game due to injury
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Higher tax rates, smaller child tax credit and other changes await as Trump tax cuts end
- What to know about Kamala Harris, leading contender to be Democratic presidential nominee
- Wildfires: 1 home burned as flames descends on a Southern California neighborhood
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Officials to release video of officer shooting Black woman in her home after responding to 911 call
Ranking
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- New Orleans civil rights icon Tessie Prevost dead at 69
- Vice President Kamala Harris leads list of contenders for spots on the Democratic ticket
- Ice cream trucks are music to our ears. But are they melting away?
- 2024 Olympics: Gymnast Ana Barbosu Taking Social Media Break After Scoring Controversy
- Lightning strikes in Greece start fires, kill cattle amid dangerous heat wave
- 12-year-old girl charged with killing 8-year-old cousin over iPhone in Tennessee
- 'This can't be real': He left his daughter alone in a hot car for hours. She died.
Recommendation
Everything Simone Biles did at the Paris Olympics was amplified. She thrived in the spotlight
Cleveland-Cliffs will make electrical transformers at shuttered West Virginia tin plant
3,000 migrants leave southern Mexico on foot in a new caravan headed for the US border
Homeland Security secretary names independent panel to review Trump assassination attempt
Paris Olympics live updates: Quincy Hall wins 400m thriller; USA women's hoops in action
'A brave act': Americans react to President Biden's historic decision
Evacuations lifted for Salt Lake City fire that triggered evacuations near state Capitol
Oregon woman with flat tire hit by ambulance on interstate, dies