Transmission line developer asks for narrower corridor through Kansas, nearby states

A visualization shows what the Grain Belt Express transmission line would look line running across a farmer’s land. Invenergy has asked federal officials to narrow a “National Interest Electric Transmission Corridor” along Grain Belt’s route. (Invenergy)

Developers of the Grain Belt Express transmission line have asked the federal government to narrow a 780-mile route energy officials proposed as a transmission corridor of “national interest.”

The Department of Energy is working to designate “National Interest Electric Transmission Corridors” in parts of the country where officials have found consumers are harmed by a lack of electric transmission and where additional lines would boost reliability and cut costs.

One of those corridors runs through Kansas, Missouri and Illinois before ending at the Indiana border, encompassing the route of the Grain Belt Express high-voltage transmission line being built by Invenergy, a Chicago-based clean energy developer.

The corridor proposed by the Department of Energy is five miles wide, but Invenergy has called on federal officials to reduce it to 0.5 miles, arguing in a blog post on the Grain Belt Express website that the narrower route “will balance the needs of states to access additional power while also addressing the concerns and uncertainty stakeholders along the path of the project are expressing.”

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