America's search for cleaner
electricity has developers studying dozens
of government flood-control dams from North
Carolina to Oregon to see if it makes
financial sense to retrofit them with
hydroelectric turbines.
The studies are part of a
broader trend that has developers looking at
everything from millpond dams in New England
to locks and dams on navigable waterways
such as the Mississippi and Ohio rivers.
Factors ranging from the
difficulty in obtaining permits for new
coal-fired power plants to government
renewable energy mandates and tax credits
have created a potential market for new
hydroelectric projects.
"You've created both the
stick and the carrot," said David Sinclair,
president of Advanced Hydro Solutions.
Sinclair's Ohio-based company is focusing on
four potential hydropower projects involving
government dams in Pennsylvania and West
Virginia.
Sinclair says government
dams often lend themselves to hydropower.
Some, such as the Tygart Dam near Grafton,
were even built with hydropower in mind: the
Corps of Engineers' designed it in the 1930s
with twin 15-foot-diameter tunnels. The
tunnels have been capped ever since, but
Sinclair's company is studying whether it's
economical to pull the plugs, install
turbines and start generating electricity.
"I could kiss the engineer
that did that," Sinclair said.
Despite its advantages,
Tygart is no sure thing for conversion.
Neither are dozens of other government dams.
The process requires years of careful
planning, chiefly to avoid disturbing a
dam's original purpose or from damaging the
environment.
Developers have been
trying for years to develop the Corps'
Bluestone Dam near Hinton, for instance, and
have yet to get past the initial stages
despite government support.
"There's a reason that
hydro isn't on a lot of these dams right
now," said John Seebach, who directs the
hydropower reform initiative for Washington,
D.C.-based environmental group American
Rivers. "It was because it just didn't make
financial sense."
That's starting to change.
Developers now have a
potential market for hydropower from
utilities more interested in upping the size
of their renewable energy portfolios than
increasing generating capacity, said Jeff
Herholdt, director of West Virginia's
Division of Energy.
"The power ends up in our
markets, but the green credits are being
sold."
As a result, West
Virginia, which is far better known for its
vast coal reserves, is enjoying a bit of a
hydropower renaissance. Tygart and other
projects hold the promise of increasing the
state's 264-megawatt hydropower capacity
almost 50 percent, according to Herholdt.
"We're certainly not
talking about new dams," he said. "Our
intent is trying to making sure that, with
the dams we have, that they are being
advanced. It would look like that's
happening."
That's happening elsewhere
as well.
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission figures show permit applications
from would-be developers of conventional
hydroelectric dams jumped to 177 last year
from 78 in 2006. Through late November, the
commission had received another 132
applications this year.
"The FERC right now is
inundated," Sinclair said.
A fair number of those
permit applications involve federal flood
control dams.
FERC records list about
two dozen permits for possible hydro
projects on federal flood control dams
across the country. A review by federal
agencies found about 64 of 871 federal dams
merited further study as potential hydro
sites, according to a 2007 report.
Combined, the agencies say
they have the potential to generate 1,230
megawatts of electricity. That's roughly 42
percent as much as American Electric Power's
John Amos coal-fired plant produces, or
enough for a month's worth of electricity
for more than 1.2 million homes.
FERC records show dams
under consideration are scattered across the
country: permits have been issued to
investigate sites in Kentucky, West
Virginia, Oregon, Iowa, Texas and
California. Going from a permit to an actual
hydroelectric dam, however, is a lengthy
process.
Firms like Sinclair's have
to figure out how they can add hydropower
without damaging the environment - or
altering a dam's original purpose. That's a
lengthy process that can cost upward of $1
million, Sinclair said.
However, the process ends
up with a project designed to cause no
additional harm and, perhaps, even improve a
river, said Seebach, whose group is better
known for trying to remove dams than
supporting them. American Rivers has,
however, been working with the hydropower
industry on converting existing dams.
"I'm not too worried about
them as a class," he said. "They don't want
to develop projects that are going to hurt
the environment."