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JETx project was in planning stages before Applied Digital’s projects, Otter Tail Power official says

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Aug. 28—ELLENDALE, N.D. — The JETx transmission line project was in the planning stages before Applied Digital built facilities in Jamestown and Ellendale, and the project would provide many benefits to the state, according to Jason Weiers, transmission project development manager for Otter Tail Power Co.

Weiers said Applied Digital first started construction in 2021 on a hosting facility about 7 miles north of Jamestown near the substation owned by Otter Tail Power. The facility is co-located with the substation.

“Applied Digital’s load additions were not part of the justification that went into identifying the JETx project,” Weiers said. “Even without the Applied Digital load, the JETx project still provides multiple types of value to the regional grid.”

Weiers spoke at an Energy Development and Transmission Committee meeting Wednesday, Aug. 27, in Ellendale.

Weiers said the Midcontinent Independent System Operators (MISO) initiated a long-range transmission line planning study in 2020 to identify future transmission line needs on the system in the next 10 to 20 years.

“They had the objectives of enhancing reliability, increasing resiliency, reducing transmission congestion and increasing access to low-cost energy so when the announcement came out about MISO initiating the long-range transmission planning study, Otter Tail and MDU (Montana-Dakota Utilities Co.) got together and worked on performing some transmission planning studies to identify transmission projects that they believe would benefit North Dakota.” he said.

MISO manages the power grid for a 15-state area and parts of the province in Manitoba.

JETx is a transmission line project that covers 95 miles and connects the Otter Tail Power substation north of Jamestown along North Dakota Highway 20 to the MDU substation near Ellendale. The line will have a 345-kilovolt capacity and will be capable of moving electricity in either direction as needed.

Weiers said the estimated cost of the JETx project and the substation expansions at Jamestown and Ellendale is $406 million.

He said project planners hope to start construction in 2026 with completion slated for 2028.

Landowners along the proposed JETx route have voiced health and safety concerns about the transmission line project being near their property. Landowners say the the transmission poles won’t be aesthetically pleasing, will impede the natural beauty of the outdoors and make it more difficult for farmers to spray crops or navigate around.

The Stutsman County Commission has approved a zoning ordinance for transmission lines that adds a setback distance of 1,000 feet between any occupied dwelling and a high-voltage transmission line.



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