- Farmers Irrigation District Ending Deliveries
- Dry Bean “Alternative” Harvest Demonstrations
- NC Foundation’s Steer Roundup is Underway
- Kupper Parker Communications Acquires Americas BioTech
- Sheep producer is angry 'the wolves win'
- Pork Board's Profitability Challenge
- NAWG newsletter
- New Conservation Incentives Will Aid America’s Farmers
- Pace of Soybean Rust Confirmations Increases
- Informa releases new crop estimates
- Prairie Pothole Benefiting from Conservation Programs
- NCGA to Present Land Use Change Webinar
- Poultry Industry Challenged by Economic Influences
- USDA Encouraging Public Access to CRP Acres
- Farm Bill Implementation Meetings Scheduled
- Trade Preference Legislation Moving Forward
- Bailout Helps Soy Biodiesel Industry
- 2009 KS, NE, & CO Crop Insurance Workshop
- Get a flu shot if you work with pigs
- Study highlights benefits conservation and wetlands
- National 4-H week
- Focus On Agriculture column
- Farmers should weigh all of their options before deciding to harvest crop residue
- Should you grow cattle to heavier weights?
- Kansas Farm Bureau "Insight"
- Kansas Ranch Rodeo title announced
- IDAIRY advises 840-RFID tags
- Nebraska Agri-Facts
- CRP payments begin
- New UNL web site on fertilizer recommendations
- Kansas is Saudi of wind
- Shortage of large animal vets taxes farmers
- Australia-Russia-Canada crop forecasts
- Sorghum Newsletter
- Camelina Could Produce Jet Fuel
- USDA Distributes 1.3 Billion in Electric Loans
- NCGA Internet Seminar to Focus on Land Use Patterns
- New WTO NAMA Group Leader Named
- Retail Food Prices Rise Again in 3rd Quarter
- U.S. Grains Council Global Update
- Lame Duck Session
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) _ Industry and government officials agree the U.S. needs what amounts to a new interstate highway system for electricity if it is to fully harness wind power.
They're looking to utilities and other companies to build new transmission lines, and a fight has started in Kansas for the right to build _ and profit from _ the first stretches of a regional, high-voltage circuit.
Two rival projects, each expected to cost $2.2 million a mile, are in the works to link Wichita to southwest Kansas through the region's highest-voltage lines. Their backers have competing applications before state regulators.
One project is from ITC Great Plains, a Topeka-based subsidiary of a Michigan transmission company. The other involves Westar Energy Inc., the state's largest electric utility; an Ohio-based energy company, and another firm with ties to billionaire investor Warren Buffet.
Whoever prevails, the new lines could carry up to six times as much electricity as the biggest existing lines in the area. Those lines would allow large volumes of power to move from wind farms to consumers and help meet a growing demand for electricity.
``We need more transmission all around the country,'' said Jim Owen, spokesman for the Edison Electric Institute, a trade group for investor-owned utilities. ``Even the face of an economic downturn, we'll still have growth in electricity demand.''
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