- 4-H volunteer celebrates 50 years of service
- Oprah talks about animal welfare
- Upcoming K-State Agricultural Events
- Catch-A-Calf applicants wanted
- Seed sorting technology developed
- Seed Summit held
- Operation Missing Cookie launched
- Kansas honey production down
- Nebraska 4-H Foundation recieves gift
- R-CALF drops lawsuit against former directors
- Soy newsletter
- NACD newsletter
- Dairymen of the year selected
- R-CALF Suggests National Policy Changes to Soften Blow of Financial Crisis
- Number of E85 Sites Tops 1800
- Oprah and Agriculture
- Senate Ag Talks About the Financial Crisis
- Gov. Heineman Discusses Ag Policy during Visit to Brussels
- New Biodiesel Blend Specifications
- Oklahoma farmers doing well in tough economy
- Beef Exports Strong in August
- UNL workshops target water use by center pivots
- Ag at the Crossroads Conference Nov. 6
- Report dampens optimism over Kansas corn
- Senate Ag Meeting
- Meat Exports Show Continued Strength
- Heineman on European Trade Mission
- NAFA's alfalfa ratings now available
- CWT accepts six dairy export bids
- ISU developing wireless soil sensors
- Cargill quarterly earnings up 62 percent
- Ag Insurance workshops scheduled
- County harvest reports...
- Nebraska harvest progress: 14% corn, 62% soybeans
- Grimes on hog herd reduction, exports
- MN TB split state status approved
- Dairy carbon footprint getting smaller
- Farm production expenses up
- Western Sugar fire in Billings quickly contained
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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