News

LEC Supports Lordstown Schools With Donation for New Track & Field

December 13, 2016

The Lordstown Energy Center will make a $1 million donation earlier than planned to enable the Lordstown school district to build a new soccer field, surrounded by an eight-lane all-weather track.

Full story below by WYTV.

LORDSTOWN, Ohio (WYTV) – The Lordstown Local School District is getting a big benefit from the Lordstown Energy Center.

The district is already getting financial contributions for school operations through an agreement with the Energy Center. Tuesday, the district announced that it is also getting a new playing facility for the soccer and track teams earlier than expected.

The Lordstown Energy Center will make a $1 million donation in February, instead of September. That will allow the district to build a new soccer field, surrounded by an 8-lane all-weather track.

The field is expected to be finished next fall, in time for the soccer season.

Lordstown soccer player Kaylynn Higinbotham said the new facility is more than needed, because the team has been playing on an old grass field.

“I’m more than excited. It’s a really cool experience to get something new in the little town of Lordstown,” she said.

Superintendent Terry Armstrong said it’s an exciting time for students.

“Students have always asked about, you know, ‘We don’t have a track,’ and ‘We can’t host events like other schools,’ and ‘Our soccer fields just doesn’t measure up to other schools that we compete with,’ so we always kept that in mind, so when the opportunity came where the Energy Center could fill that need, we’re happy to say that it’s going to be filled now,” he said.

The first phase will be to build the soccer field and track. A building for concessions and storage will then be added.

News

Lordstown Energy Center Will Soon Begin Construction

April 8, 2016

The paperwork for the Lordstown Energy Center, a gas-fueled power plant in the Lordstown Industrial Park, is finalized, preparing the way for construction to start next week.

Full story below from Kallanish Energy.

Macquarie Infrastructure Partners III and Siemens Financial Services on Wednesday said they will construct the Lordstown Energy Center (LEC), a 940-megawatt (MW) combined-cycle gas turbine (CCGT) power plant.

The LEC site is located roughly 50 miles southeast of Cleveland, Ohio, in the village of Lordstown, sitting astride the Marcellus and Utica Shale gas plays, Kallanish Energy reports.

Project developer Clean Energy Future will retain an interest in the project. Siemens will serve as the engineering procurement construction (EPC) contractor and provide the gas turbines, steam turbine, and generators.

“Lordstown Energy Center is a very high quality energy infrastructure project with which we are proud to be associated,” said Chris Leslie, CEO of Macquarie Infrastructure Partners (MIP) III.

MIP III will provide 73% of the equity investment and Siemens Financial Services will provide the remaining 27%. A consortium of banks led by Industrial & Commercial Bank of China, Credit Agricole, Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Investec, will provide the $445 million term debt to fund the construction.

LEC is a “shovel ready” project, having received all required approvals and permits. Construction will begin immediately.

Power produced by LEC will be delivered into the PJM market, which serves more than 60 million customers, and will be capable of producing enough power to supply roughly 800,000 homes.

The plant will replace a portion of the more than 18,000 MW of coal-fired generating capacity in the region that has been retired since 2012.

The facility is expected to begin commercial operations in the summer of 2018.

News

Financing Finalized for Lordstown Energy Center

April 6, 2016

The village announced that the financing of the Lordstown Energy Center Project has been finalized and construction will begin soon.

Full story below by the Business Journal.

LORDSTOWN, Ohio – Construction on an $890 million electrical power plant just off state Route 45 is set to begin immediately, an executive says.

The deal to build a 940-megawatt natural gas-fueled power plant — named the Lordstown Energy Center — closed Wednesday morning, said Bill Siderewicz, president of Clean Energy Future, LLC, the developer behind the project.

“Today and tomorrow, you’ll see heavy construction equipment at the site,” Siderewicz said in a phone interview Wednesday.

Siderewicz said the deal involved a 65-member conference call connecting attorneys and executives in the United States, France, the United Kingdom and China. “It’s an interesting process,” he reflected. “This closing incorporates more than 5,000 pages of documentation.”

The major lenders of the project include Bank of America, London-based Investec, Credit Agricole of Paris, and ICBC, based in China, Siderewicz said. This consortium will provide the $445 million term debt to fund construction.

Macquarie Infrastructure Partners III, a division of Australia-based Macquarie Infrastructure and Real Assets with a portfolio of $100 billion, and Siemens Financial Services partnered on the project. Macquarie will provide 73% of the equity investment and Siemens Financial will provide the remaining 27%.

“Siemens is proud that we were able to support this project by leveraging our financial services capabilities alongside our power generation solutions,” Kirk Edelman, CEO of Energy Finance, Siemens Financial Services, said in a statement. “Siemens funded the development loan as well as an equity investment in Lordstown, underscoring our commitment to the long-term success of this project.”

The turnkey solution for Lordstown will include two SGT6-8000H gas turbines, one SST-5000 steam turbine, two SGen-1200A generators as part of the gas turbine packages, one SGen-2000H generator as part of the steam turbine package, and a Siemens SPPA-T3000 integrated plant control system, according to Siemens.

Excavation crews have already cleared trees at the 17-acre site along Henn Parkway, Siderewicz said. That’s because crews needed to evacuate the trees before April 1, since the area is a seasonal habitat for Indiana bats. “We had to get out there the last couple of days of March to clear the place out, about five or six acres.”

Once finished, the natural gas-fueled power plant will be able to generate 940 megawatts of electricity, enough to power about 800,000 homes. The plant will replace a portion of the more than 18 gigawatts of coal-fired generating capacity in the region that has been retired since 2012.

Construction jobs could number upwards of 450 total throughout the course of the 2-year-build project. Officials have said they want to complete work and have the plant in operation by mid-2018. Once operational, the plant would employ about 20.

Initially, principals wanted to get started on the project toward the end of last year. But Siderewicz says the late start would not delay the project since the primary contractor, Siemens Electric, has already started to perform engineering and equipment work offsite.

“They’ve invested about $22 million to do detailed engineering and were way out over their skis hoping that today would happen,” he said. “We look to be up and running by May 2018.”

Lordstown was selected in part because it sits in the heart of the Utica and Marcellus shale natural gas play, which ensures a long-term supply of low-cost natural gas to fuel operations.

Mayor Arno Hill says the village first learned of the project more than two years ago, noting it’s been one of the more complicated development projects the village has ever undertaken. “There were a lot of ‘i’s and a lot of ‘t’s to cross. Good things come to those who wait,” he said. “The trade unions are ecstatic.”

Among the major institutions that will benefit from the project is the Lordstown School District, Hill said. “This project saved our schools,” he remarked.

Under an agreement approved last year, Clean Energy Future will provide Lordstown schools with a 15-year tax payment plan once the plant becomes operational. The deal calls for Clean Energy paying the school district $1 million a year for the first five years, $1.25 million for the second five years, and $1.5 million for the remaining five years of the plan.

The school district is to receive another $500,000 once the project breaks ground. It will receive another $400,000 to go toward the demolition of the vacant middle school at the corner of Salt Springs and state Route 45.

Kokosing Construction of Fredricktown, Ohio, is the general contractor on the project under Siemens’ direction, and MJ Electric is the lead contractor on an electric switchyard that will also need to be built.

As for a second plant at the site, Siderewicz says the partners over the next six months or so will conduct an analysis that includes capacity, water resources and other variables before any decision is made. “It’s certainly technically feasible,” he said.

For now, Siderewicz said he’s concentrating on developing this project and expressed gratitude to all of the parties that made the project happen, including the Village of Lordstown, the Youngstown Warren Regional Chamber, the lenders and the building trades.

“There are a lot of anxious contractors that will be running out there with a lot of heavy equipment starting today,” Siderewicz said.

News

LEC Receives Approval for New Facility

March 22, 2016

Property transfers and financial closings are expected to be finalized and the village anticipates construction on the new energy facility to begin.

Full story below by the Tribune Chronicle.

LORDSTOWN – Village officials are expecting to receive good news Friday as all necessary paperwork, money and property transfers for the $890 million Lordstown Energy Center are expected to be finalized.

Mayor Arno Hill said at Monday’s Village Council meeting that officials also will be approving all necessary ordinances related to the project this week.

”This is a really exciting time for the village. There are a lot of other communities around us who are looking at us and wondering what we are doing right,” he said.

He said all financial closings are to be finalized Friday in New York City. Hill said the village anticipates construction of the project to begin 10 days after Friday. Work will begin in early April 2016 and is expected to be completed in June 2018.

Council approved an ordinance entering into an enterprise zone agreement with Clean Energy Future Lordstown LLC for a 100 percent tax abatement for 15 years on the assessed value of real and tangible property tax.

Hill said the company is planning to have 19 full-time employees with an annual payroll of $3.4 million.

The Trumbull County commissioners also are scheduled to act on the tax abatement agreement at their meeting Wednesday.

Solicitor Paul Dutton said the company agreed to a tax donation agreement with Lordstown schools

”They are giving them cash in lieu of the taxes. Over the 15 years of the project, the schools will receive $18 million, which is spelled out in the agreement,” said Dutton.

Hill said as part of the tax donation agreement, once operations have started at the center, the first five years the schools will receive $1 million annually, the second five years, $1.25 million per year, and the third five years, $1.5 million per year.

”While the project is under construction, the schools will receive three $500,000 payments. They will have their first one after the financial closing this Friday,” he said.

Among the needed ordinances passed unanimously by council on Monday were:

l Water service and supply agreements with Niles and Warren cities to provide water to the village, which in turn will provide water to the energy center;

l Wastewater agreements with Warren to provide sewage treatment for the center and also operations and maintenance of the Eastside sanitary sewer district if there are any sewer issues. The Eastside sanitary sewer will get the water from the center to the treatment plant in Warren ;

l A permanent easement for running powerlines over Penn-Parkway Road to the center;

l A reimbursable agreement for engineering, legal, and construction costs related to the project.

Hill said money will given by the company to the school district to tear down the old elementary school at the corner of Salt Springs Road and Tod Avenue, which is no longer used by the district.

In other action Wednesday, council:

l Heard from Hill of plans to meet with fire officials and council’s safety committee about staffing the ambulance full-time because of an increased volume of calls, including from General Motors;

l Purchased a 2017 International Truck from Rush Truck Centers in Cincinnati at $77,139 through the Ohio Department of Transportation’s cooperative purchasing program;

l Approved an agreement with Metalico of Youngstown to serve as the village’s salvage yard. Officials said the company will pay the village $100 per ton;

l Were informed by Street Superintendent Dale Grimm that 900 feet of 12-inch pipe was installed in the village to replace aging sewer lines on Lyntz Road;

l Heard from Recreation Director Marty Gilbert of having background checks on new employees be done by the Bureau of Motor Vehicles at the Eastwood Mall;

bcoupland@tribtoday.com