Page added on September 28, 2009
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Want some solar energy with your geothermal?
In Utah, state officials are fielding various combinations of energy proposals, a list that includes solar and geothermal installations and an energy storage project that would turn salt caverns into a kind of giant battery. The caverns would hold compressed air when they’re not storing natural gas.
Together, the 15 projects in the works, planned or being talked up amount to “a land rush of alternate energy” projects, said John Andrews, the No. 2 official at Utah’s trust-lands administration, which manages about 5,500 square miles of land left over from a federal grant at statehood.
It’s a land rush across much of the West, which offers an abundance of wide-open public lands, steaming geothermal resources, blazing sunshine and unconstrained wind corridors.
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