Army awards third technology, wind, under $7 billion renewable energy MATOC

Published Sept. 10, 2013
Wind turbines, similar to the three 275 kilowatt wind turbines erected in May on Fort Buchanan, Puerto Rico, are an important piece of the Army’s renewable energy/energy reduction effort.  
The U.S. Army Engineering and Support Center, Huntsville, worked with the Army Energy Initiatives Task Force for renewable energy task orders issued under the $7 billion renewable energy MATOC.

Wind turbines, similar to the three 275 kilowatt wind turbines erected in May on Fort Buchanan, Puerto Rico, are an important piece of the Army’s renewable energy/energy reduction effort. The U.S. Army Engineering and Support Center, Huntsville, worked with the Army Energy Initiatives Task Force for renewable energy task orders issued under the $7 billion renewable energy MATOC.

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (Sept. 9, 2013) – Today, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Engineering and Support Center, Huntsville, working with the Army Energy Initiatives Task Force (EITF), awarded Multiple Award Task Order Contracts (MATOC) to a group of qualified wind technology contractors.     

The contractors qualified through this process will be able to compete for future wind renewable energy task orders issued under the MATOC by the Army or Department of Defense (DoD). The MATOC leverages the DoD authority to contract up to 30 years under Title 10 USC 2922a.

           The 17 companies receiving contracts are: 

·       Acciona Energy North America Corporation, Chicago, Ill. 

·       Cobra Industrial Services, Inc., Houston, Texas

·       Dominion Energy, Inc., Richmond, Va.

·       Duke Energy, Charlotte, N.C.

·       EDF Renewable Energy, San Diego, Calif.

·       Emerald Infrastructure, San Antonio, Texas

·       Enel Green Power North America, Andover, Mass.

·       EverPower Wind Holdings, Inc., Pittsburgh, Pa.

·       First Wind, Boston, Mass.

·       Iberdrola Renewables, LLC, Portland, Ore.

·       LTC Federal, LLC, Detroit, Mich. 

·       NorthlandPower, Inc., Toronto, Ontario

·       Siemens Government Technologies, Inc., Arlington, Va.

·       Stronghold Engineering, Inc., Riverside, Calif.

·       Turn Key Power Consortium, LLC, Orlando, Fla.

·       VERT Investment Group, Houston, Texas

·       West Texas Power Company, San Angelo, Texas

 

This MATOC will be used to procure reliable, locally generated, renewable and alternative energy for DoD installations through power purchase agreements (PPA). The $7 billion contract capacity will be expended for PPAs to procure energy during a period of up to 30 years from renewable energy generation systems that are designed, financed, constructed, operated and maintained by contractors using private sector financing. 

      “Today we awarded the wind technology as part of the $7 billion renewable energy MATOC. We have one remaining technology left to award which is biomass,” said Col. Robert Ruch, commander, U.S. Army Engineering and Support Center, Huntsville. “Awarding these contracts in the four distinct technologies, geothermal, solar, wind, and biomass, will allow us to more quickly award task orders for individual future projects as they are identified. We look forward to working with the EITF and other potential DoD organizations to help implement renewable energy projects.”

These contracts will place the Army one step closer to meeting its Congressionally mandated energy goal of 25 percent production and consumption of energy from renewable sources by 2025 and improving installation energy security and sustainability.

Wind is the third of four technologies being awarded under the $7 billion Renewable and Alternative Energy for Department of Defense Installations MATOC.

            In April 2012, the White House and the Defense Department made one of the largest commitments to clean energy in history, by setting a goal to deploy three gigawatts total of renewable energy – including solar, wind, biomass or geothermal – on Army, Navy and Air Force installations by 2025. These efforts support the broader DoD goal to enhance installation energy security and reduce installation energy costs.


Release no. 13-033