- Project Owner
- Reclaimed Wind, LLC
- Docket Number
- 25-OPT-01
- Capacity
- 90.7-megawatt (MW)
- Location
- Alameda County, California
- Technology
- Energy Storage System
- Project Status
- Under Review
- Project Type
- Opt-in
Reclaimed Wind, LLC (applicant), proposes to construct, own, and operate the 90.7-megawatt (at the Point of Interconnection) Viracocha Hill Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) Project (project). The project site is located in eastern Alameda County in the Altamont Pass Wind Resource Area. The project would be located on a 443-acre parcel (APN 99B-7300-1-5) and would consist of a 17-acre area that would include an approximately 14-acre BESS yard, which will include a 362.8 megawatt-hour (MWh) BESS facility, laydown area, substation, and retention pond. The exact design and location of these features would be refined as the project moves forward. Additionally, the project includes improvements to a 0.3-mile-long access road, a 0.15-acre road improvement, and an approximately 1,325-foot-long gen-tie line connecting to the Ralph Substation. If expanding the Ralph Substation is unavailable, a new switching station or a line-tap would be developed adjacent to the existing substation.
Opt-In Certification
Prior to the June 30, 2022, signing of Assembly Bill (AB) 205, the CEC’s powerplant licensing jurisdiction was limited to thermal powerplants 50 megawatts (MW) or larger. To accelerate the state’s transition to renewable energy and to maintain electrical system reliability under this transition and during extreme climate-change-driven events, AB 205, as modified by AB 209 expands the types of facilities that can be certified by the CEC. This “Opt-in” certification process is available to solar photovoltaic and terrestrial wind energy powerplants of 50 MW or more, energy storage facilities of 200 megawatt-hours (MWh) or more, the electric transmission lines from these facilities to the first point of interconnection, and facilities that manufacture or assemble clean energy or storage technologies or their components with a capital investment of at least $250 million. In addition, thermal powerplants of 50 MW or more that do not use fossil or nuclear fuels may choose the Opt-in process rather than the CEC’s Application for Certification process. AB 205 authorizes the CEC to accept applications for these facilities and provides a new, streamlined process for their review and a decision by the CEC. The CEC is the “lead agency” under the California Environmental Quality Act and is required to prepare an environmental impact report for any facility that elects to opt-in to the CEC’s jurisdiction. With exceptions, the issuance of a certificate by the CEC for an eligible facility is in lieu of any permit, certificate, or similar document required by any state, local, or regional agency, or federal agency to the extent permitted by federal law, and supersedes any applicable statute, ordinance, or regulation of any state, local, or regional agency, or federal agency to the extent permitted by federal law. The CEC’s authority under the opt-in certification program does not supersede the authority of the California State Lands Commission to require leases and receive lease revenues, if applicable, or the authority of the California Coastal Commission, the San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission, the State Water Resources Control Board or applicable regional water quality control board, or, in the case of manufacturing facilities, the applicable local air quality management district or the Department of Toxic Substances Control.
Contacts
Project Manager
Renee Longman
STEPsiting@energy.ca.gov
(Please enter project name in the email subject line)
(916) 937-3538
Public Participation Questions
Public Advisor
publicadvisor@energy.ca.gov
916-269-9595
Media Inquiries
Media & Public Communications Office
mediaoffice@energy.ca.gov
916-654-4989