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Draft Environmental Assessment for the Center for Commercialization of Electric Technology (CCET), Reese Technology Center (RTC) Wind and Battery Integration Project, Lubbock County, Texas (DOE/EA-1939D) (Paperback)
Loot Price: R504
Discovery Miles 5 040
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Draft Environmental Assessment for the Center for Commercialization of Electric Technology (CCET), Reese Technology Center (RTC) Wind and Battery Integration Project, Lubbock County, Texas (DOE/EA-1939D) (Paperback)
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Loot Price R504
Discovery Miles 5 040
Expected to ship within 18 - 22 working days
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DOE prepared this EA to evaluate the potential environmental
consequences of providing a financial assistance grant under the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Recovery Act;
Public Law 111-5, 123 Stat. 115) to the Center for
Commercialization of Electric Technology (CCET) to demonstrate
battery technology integration with wind generated electricity by
deploying and evaluating utility-scale lithium battery technology
to improve grid performance and thereby aid in the integration of
wind generation into the local electricity supply. This EA analyzes
the potential environmental impacts of DOE's proposed action of
providing the Recovery Act funding and of the No-Action
Alternative. In this EA, DOE evaluated potential environmental
consequences from a portion of the overall project that would
involve land disturbance. Other portions are described as major
elements of the project, but because they involve only installation
of equipment in existing facilities, they do not involve potential
for significant environmental impact and are not evaluated further.
With regard to the land disturbing actions considered in this EA,
DOE evaluated impacts to air quality, noise, aesthetics and visual
resources, surface water resources, biological resources, and areas
of environmental concern. After performing a screening analysis of
other environmental resource areas, DOE concluded that impacts to
some aspects of the environment would not be likely to occur or
would be negligible. The proposed project would be designed in
compliance with federal and state air quality regulations, would
reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and would have a net beneficial
impact on air quality in the region. New construction would
involve: (1) above ground and underground 12.5 kV distribution
lines, (2) 1.5 MW storage battery facility and foundation, (3) an
access road, and (4) site clearing. Two wind turbines and
foundations would also be constructed as part of the proposed
action. Although DOE is not funding the wind turbines, the effects
will be assessed as a connected action, as it is part of the
overall action. Operation of the proposed project would not result
in any increase in noise in the vicinity. The aesthetics of the RTC
and along the easements would change with the addition of the above
ground distribution lines, which would be along 5.5 miles of
right-of-way utility easements, storage battery facility, access
road, and wind turbines. There are two alternatives for the
aboveground distribution lines; Option A extends through
agricultural fields and Option B along county roads. The storage
battery facility is proposed to be 20 by 40 feet with a 20 foot
wide by 600 foot long access road. The wind turbines will not
adversely affect the aesthetics as the location since it is in an
open field with limited development in the area, and there is an
existing wind turbine already on-site at the RTC along with several
transmission and meteorological towers near the proposed location.
Clearing of 3 acres for the proposed project on the RTC site would
not significantly impact any plant or animal species population
because: (1) the project site has previously been disturbed; (2)
the project site is currently vacant land that is isolated from
larger tracts of undisturbed land; and (3) because plant and animal
species found there are expected to be widespread in the region or,
for sensitive species, the area is not unique habitat. The whooping
crane, which is an endangered species under the federal Endangered
Species Act, occurs in Lubbock County. However, the habitat needed
for the whooping crane is not located within the vicinity of the
project.
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