New transmission line to create customer savings, provide access
to clean energy
CHICAGO -- (Business Wire)
The Illinois Commerce Commission today announced it has approved ComEd’s
Grand Prairie Gateway Project, a new transmission line that will extend
for 60 miles across Ogle, Dekalb, Kane and DuPage Counties. The new line
will create immediate customer savings by reducing grid congestion,
increasing customers’ access to lower-cost generation, including wind
power, and will reduce carbon emissions by 473,000 tons over 15 years.
Construction is scheduled to begin in the second quarter of next year
and the line is expected to be in service in 2017.
“As the competitive electricity market expands, transmission lines
become congested over time, just like highways do as the communities
around them grow,” said Terence Donnelly, ComEd executive vice president
and COO. “This congestion impedes the flow of low-cost energy,
increasing the cost of delivering that energy to our customers, and
we’re obligated to solve that problem. We are pleased that the
Commission has recognized the need for this important new line, which
will offset those increases just as soon as it’s energized.”
The line will expand ComEd customers’ access to generation by
approximately 1,000 megawatts, providing greater access to clean energy.
“Congestion on the system is inhibiting the lowest cost generating
plants – like wind – from getting power to customers that want it,” said
Sean Brady, regional policy manager of Wind on the Wires. “These
bottlenecks force wind farms to operate less efficiently and restrain
the future development of more environmentally friendly wind generation
in Illinois, so this project will further promote a competitive
marketplace and the continued growth of wind power.”
The 345,000 volt (345kV) electric transmission line will be constructed
between ComEd’s existing substations near the communities of Byron and
Wayne. The route would begin at the Byron substation and run east until
east of Plato Center in Kane County, where the line would run southeast
along railroad corridors to the substation near Wayne. The project adds
a third major transmission path across the ComEd territory, which also
enhances reliability, particularly during extreme weather events.
The need for the Project was first identified as part of the annual
regional planning process managed by PJM, the independent Regional
Transmission Organization that plans and operates the ComEd transmission
system. PJM is responsible for ensuring that the competitive wholesale
market operates appropriately and fairly for customers and it’s
regulated by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC).
Commonwealth Edison Company (ComEd) is a unit of Chicago-based Exelon
Corporation (NYSE: EXC), the nation’s leading competitive energy
provider, with approximately 6.6 million customers. ComEd provides
service to approximately 3.8 million customers across northern Illinois,
or 70 percent of the state’s population.
Contacts:
ComEd Media Relations
(312) 394-3500
Source: Commonwealth Edison Company
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