Construction begins on $854M transmission project between Mohawk Valley and Capital Region

MARCY, N.Y. — Construction is underway on a $854 million project to upgrade energy transmission along 93-mile, 345-kilovolt (kV) line in the Mohawk Valley and Capital Region.

The Marcy to New Scotland transmission-upgrade project is designed to increase transmission capacity and help deliver more renewable energy to higher-demand areas across the state. Marcy is located near Utica and New Scotland is in Albany County.

In addition, the project will “stimulate the local and regional economies by creating and supporting hundreds of clean energy construction jobs,” the office of Gov. Andrew Cuomo said. The governor highlighted the project in his 2021 State of the State address.

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The project — managed jointly by New York City–based LS Power Grid New York and the New York Power Authority (NYPA) — puts New York “on track to meet its goals” under the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act, Cuomo’s office said in a news release. The goals include a zero-emissions electricity sector by 2040, 70 percent renewable-energy generation by 2030, and economy-wide carbon neutrality.

This effort seeks to upgrade 93 miles of transmission lines and includes construction of two new substations between NYPA’s central transmission hub in Marcy and New Scotland. The project uses existing electric-transmission corridors and replaces “aging and outdated” transmission towers with the “latest technologies to increase energy efficiency.”

The New York State Public Service Commission approved a certificate of environmental compatibility and public need for the project at its Jan. 21 meeting.

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Cuomo first unveiled the proposal in his 2021 State of the State as part of a package of transmission projects across the state that will form what his office is calling “New York’s Green Energy Superhighway” — 250 miles of “planned investments that will create opportunities to maximize the use of renewable energy for parts of the state that rely heavily on fossil-fuel plants.”

Eric Reinhardt

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