California Governor Commissions New Transmission Line, Signs Green Building Initiative
California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger recently commissioned Path 15, California's newest transmission line.
California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger recently commissioned Path 15, California's newest transmission line. He also signed Executive Order S-20-04 to encourage energy efficiency in state buildings, and urged Californians to continue energy conservation efforts.
Path 15, an 84-mile stretch of power line, was built by a public/private partnership between the federal and state government agencies, the Western Power Administration, the Pacific Gas and Electric Company, and Trans-Elect. Path 15 is the third 500-kiloVolt transmission line in California designed to relieve the energy bottleneck between southern and northern California.
The addition of this third line and other upgrades allows 1,500 megawatts of additional power to be transmitted across the state (enough power to supply approximately 1.5 million households) and will save Californians approximately $100 million per year in energy costs in normal years and $300 million during dry years when the line will help mitigate lacking hydro-electric resources. The project was completed for approximately $250 million, about 18 percent less than original projections, and was completed ahead of schedule.
Executive Order S-20-04 creates the Green Building Initiative, a public/private partnership that demonstrates the governor's commitment to aggressive action in pursuit of two overall goals for energy and resource efficiency. The first goal is to reduce electricity purchased from the grid by existing government and private commercial buildings by 10 percent per square foot by 2010 and 20 percent by 2015.
The second goal involves state leadership in retrofitting, building, and operating the most energy and resource efficient and healthful public buildings in the country. At the governor's direction, state buildings will seek to use environmentally sustainable management practice. The executive order also encourages cities, counties, schools and commercial building owners to do the same.
The governor also underscored the need for continued energy conservation, urging all Californians to "flex their power" by using energy wisely, buying energy-efficient homes and appliances, or joining a demand-response program. He said that to keep the lights on and lower energy costs, California must move aggressively on several fronts. The state needs to continue to expand and upgrade its transmission system, build more power plants, and invest in energy efficiency and conservation programs.
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