Lassen Municipal Utility District is one step closer to connecting with NV Energy to increase system reliability and stabilize power costs, after the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission announced that the two utilities have submitted an amended Network Integration Transmission Service Agreement naming NV Energy as transmission provider and LMUD as Customer.
The request was submitted by NV Energy and LMUD on September 11th, it has been approved by FERC and will be effective November 10th, 2023.
According to LMUD Public Relations Manager Theresa Phillips, LMUD and NV Energy partnered on the amended transmission agreement to add transmission service that will include power delivered to LMUD from the Fish Lake Geothermal project located in Dyer Nevada and operated by Open Mountain Energy.
The Fish Lake project will deliver three megawatts of eligible renewable energy to LMUD customers and will help LMUD achieve their renewable energy goals.
“This resource will supply LMUD customers with renewable, baseload energy over the 15-year contract term,” said LMUD’s Interim General Manager, Nick Dominguez.
“This project demonstrates our commitment to stable and sustainable service and is in line with one of LMUD’s key strategic goals of maintaining long-term power supply arrangements with reasonable costs.”
The transmission agreement is also part of LMUD’s long-range planning that includes the construction of the Skedaddle Substation.
“The substation,” explains Phillips, “which is expected to come online in the last quarter of 2025, will allow LMUD to connect to NV Energy’s balancing authority enabling the district to receive power over the NV Energy system increasing reliability and stabilizing power costs.”