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Notes from APP and NMDC
Volume 1, Issue 28
Dec. 21, 2012
In This Issue
Wind Update
Year in Review
Meeting Educators
Oakfield wind project update in the Shiretown  

 

   HOULTON - Progress continues to be made on the latest wind farm in Aroostook County. That word from Matt Kearns, First Wind vice president of business development, who was the keynote speaker at the Southern Aroostook Development Corporation's annual meeting held Dec. 12 in Houlton.

   Oakfield Wind is a proposed 50-turbine, 150 megawatt wind farm development by First Wind. First Wind already operates a 42 megawatt wind farm in Mars Hill, which went online in 2007.

Mars Hill Wind Farm
Photo courtesy Aroostook County Tourism
First Wind turbines on Mars Hill.

   "Our Oakfield project is a more than $400-million dollar project and will deliver significant benefits to the host community," Kearns said.

   Some of those economic benefits include:

  • Nearly 300 direct, on-site full time jobs for the duration of the construction phase.
  • Approximately $660,000 per year in levelized tax revenues for Oakfield.
  • An additional $600,000 a year in community benefit funds above and beyond the tax base.

   "One of the key reasons we think it is worth doing wind in Maine is the economic benefit left behind in the host communities but also regionally in the supply chain," he added.

   Situated approximately 2.5 miles from the center of Oakfield the project will consist of 50-turbines that have the capacity to produce enough renewable energy to power more than 50,000 homes. In its four years of development, First Wind has worked closely with the town to solicit significant community input in designing the project. A timetable for completion of the project has not been released.

   First Wind currently has five Maine wind farms in operation and four under development, including Oakfield and a project in Hancock County.

   Kearns told the gathering that First Wind is also generating electricity in Hawaii, Utah, Washington, New York and Vermont. Kearns joked that a good tag line for the company would be "From Maui to Mars Hill."

   He added the future of wind power is looking promising despite some uncertainty from a political perspective.

   "Wind companies are asking Congress for predictability in how wind power is taxed, which means a tax credit extension now and a plan to gradually phase out the credit over multiple years," said Kearns. "The industry has told Congressional leaders that they're willing to discuss phasing it out as they take up tax reform in 2013. First Wind has been an advocate for talking about a phase out."

   A federal subsidy known as the production tax credit, which is worth 2.2 cents per kilowatt-hour to wind-energy producers, is set to expire at the start of 2013.

   First Wind, which is an investor in the Aroostook Partnership for Progress, is an independent wind energy company focused on development, financing, construction, ownership and operation of utility-scale wind energy projects in the United States.

 

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APP Year in Review 

   Season's Greetings,

 

   2012 was an exciting year for the Aroostook Partnership for Progress and we made a great deal of progress in numerous areas - Biomass, Compressed Natural Gas, the Jobs Projection website, Mining, Wind, holding a Rail/Shipper's improvement update, meeting the Aroostook legislature and updating the Mobilize Northern Maine 2017 Goals.

   In Biomass, APP held the first ever Biomass Fair at UMPI hosting 20 vendors and five speakers from Maine and New Brunswick. The Biomass Working Group tackled and improved pellet demand, pellet home delivery, insurance coverage and Biomass financing in the span of a few short months. We also explored manufacturing options and talked with a couple companies about the possibility of building a manufacturing plant here in Aroostook.

   The APP Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) Working Group held numerous meetings, sponsored several companies to educate us on the nature, challenges & advantages of heating with CNG, met and worked with Mr. Ken Fletcher, the Maine State Energy Director, to ease permitting obstacles and establish safety guidelines. We also worked closely with Xtreme Natural Gas to get CNG trucked to Aroostook County for the first time in history. About 10 large companies and hospitals intend to convert to CNG and this will save many millions of dollars in heating costs as well as keep more money in the Aroostook economy.

   The APP Jobs Projection Website project identified >1800 jobs in the next five years, was featured in newspaper articles and on WAGM, and most importantly has identified salaries, required skills, and benefits for our younger generation and people looking for new opportunities. It is the intent of this key effort to retain more junior workers as well as attract former county workers back.

   Mining is a great potential industry for Aroostook County! APP testified in Augusta in support of LD-1853 which streamlined the permitting process through the Department of Environmental Protection which will hopefully pave the way for 300 to 600 new jobs in the County with an investment of >$800M in capital and provide an additional $45M in GDP growth annually for our area.

   Wind is another exciting area. First Wind plans to build a $400M fifty generator site in Oakfield which will provide Southern Aroostook with over $1M a year in tax revenue and assistance as well as approximately 20 new jobs.

   The Mobilize Northern Maine 2017 goals update process provided an opportunity for APP to meet and discuss workforce trends and needs with many companies in Aroostook and discover many exciting trends. First, we expect nearly 30,000 acres of farm land to become available from recovery efforts. The Forest industry appears to be picking up with the advent of more housing new starts across the nation and that will further help our woody Biomass production efforts. And Manufacturing appears to be steadily growing to the tune of over 350 new jobs are projected over the next few years. The key focus for the next five years will be to retain and grow the County's 18 to 44 year old work force so that we can maintain a more sustainable work force to meet all the upcoming job needs.

   There is much work to do to make the most of our opportunities and one key to retention appears to be the need for Education and Industry to work closer together to educate students on occupation content and the skills needed to excel in those jobs.

 

 

 

 

   Robert D. Dorsey

 

Fort Kent educators briefed by APP official 
APP President Bob Dorsey talks to educators in Fort Kent
   APP President and CEO Bob Dorsey briefs educators in SAD 27 about projected jobs in Aroostook County in the next five years and what skills will be needed.

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