NASEO State Project Highlights
Maryland Energy
Administration celebrates completion
of western Maryland wind farm
Maryland
Energy Administration (MEA) Director
Malcolm Woolf joined representatives
from Gestamp Wind and Delmarva Power at
the recent dedication ceremony for the
Roth Rock Wind Energy Farm on Backbone
Mountain in Garrett County.
The wind farm will convert wind to
energy, creating an estimated 50
megawatts of electricity per year,
providing enough power for all of the
residences in Garrett County. Delmarva
Power purchased 80 percent of the power
generated by the wind farm, and the
remaining 20 percent support the
University System of Maryland and the
Maryland Department of General Services.
"To create jobs, a modern economy
requires modern investments. In
Maryland, we’ve made wind energy a
priority because it provides clean, much
needed electricity, creates jobs, and
locks in affordable power for years to
come," said Director Woolf. "We’ve set
some of the most aggressive goals in the
country for reducing our energy
consumption, and increasing our use of
renewable energy. Wind energy will
diversify our energy portfolio and make
us a leader in renewable energy
generation and policy."
The Gestamp Wind project is part of
MEA’s Generating Clean Horizons program
in which the State and University System
of Maryland committed to purchase 78
megawatts of energy produced from two
wind farms and one solar installation
over 20 years. The program, which powers
16 percent of the State’s own load
through renewable sources, was also
recently recognized by Harvard
University as one of the top 25
innovations in American government. The
Roth Rock Wind Energy Farm, which
involved 150 local construction jobs,
consists of 20 turbines of 2.5 megawatts
each with a total capacity of 50
megawatts.
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