AES Ohio Proposes $145M Project for EV Manufacturing Loads
AES Ohio has proposed to construct two new substations and expand the installation of a third to meet high load growth in the Jeffersonville, Ohio, region.
AES Ohio has proposed to construct two new substations and expand the installation of a third to meet high load growth in the Jeffersonville, Ohio, region. | AES Ohio
AES will spend $145 million to build substations and new transmission lines to meet over 1,000 MW in expected load growth from EV manufacturers.

AES Ohio (NYSE:AES) presented the PJM Transmission Expansion Advisory Committee on Dec. 6 with a $145.1 million supplemental project to build two new substations and 13 miles of double circuit 345-kV lines to meet over 1,000 MW in expected load growth from electric vehicle manufacturers in the Jeffersonville area. The area is currently only served by a radial 69-kV extension.

The proposed solution would expand the planned $27 million Madison substation, which is to be built along the Green-Beatty 345-kV line, with a new 345-kV substation. The expansion would step down to 69 kV to feed into the South Charleston substation and also have four 345-kV line exits.

The Fayette Substation would become the primary source for the region, stepping down from 345 kV to 138 kV and 69kV. It would include a quarter-mile 138-kV extension to serve a 140-MW committed development. It is estimated to cost $33.9 million. Adding 13 miles of double circuit lines to connect it to the Madison substation would cost an estimated $51.2 million.

“This substation is located central to the largest developing load center in the AES Ohio area supporting the electric vehicle manufacturing industry developing in the area,” the AES presentation says.

A 69-kV line from the Fayette substation would run approximately 1.5 miles to the new Panther substation, which is proposed to replace the existing Jeffersonville 69-kV substation — which is located in a floodplain and impractical to expand any further. The new substation, designed as a “69-kV breaker and a half station” would step down to 12 kV.

The Panther substation comes with a projected $15.5 million cost, while the 69-kV line and rerouting around 5.5 miles of lines from Panther to the existing Octa substation, which was previously connected to the Jeffersonville substation, is estimated to cost $17.5 million.

The project would add to an existing supplemental project, S0323, that would construct a 69-kV line from South Charleston to Jeffersonville. AES said the expected load exceeds the capabilities of that line.

Other Supplemental Projects

  • PECO (NASDAQ:EXC) has proposed to upgrade obsolete relays, communication and metering equipment, as well as remove a wave trap on the Heaton-Jarrett line in Montgomery County, Pa. The estimated cost is $1.77 million with an in-service date of April 1, 2023.
  • Dominion Energy (NYSE:D) has identified three facilities with low voltage issues caused by a contingency with the loss of two lines in Norfolk, Va.
  • Dominion submitted a distribution point request for a new substation, which would be named Edsall, servicing a total load of approximately 100 MW in Fairfax County.
  • Dominion also submitted a request for a distribution request for a new substation, to be named Tropical, serving a data center campus with a load over 100 MW in Henrico County. The requested in-service date is Jan. 1, 2025.

Generator Deactivation Update

PJM has determined that there are no reliability concerns associated with a deactivation request from a 14-MW Lorain County landfill facility, which has requested to go offline on April 1, 2023, according to Phil Yum of PJM’s system planning modeling and support department.

Company NewsPJM Transmission Expansion Advisory Committee (TEAC)Transmission Planning

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