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Tech Firms Go Mining for Megawatts

Although farming in the Columbia Basin boomed, thanks to irrigation water diverted by Grand Coulee, major industry, for the most part, ignored Wenatchee and towns such as Quincy for most of the past seven decades.

Companies could get plenty of cheap power in Seattle and Portland without having to build in the boondocks -- until now.


Wilfred Woods with a painting of his father, Rufus, who pushed for the Grand Coulee Dam.
Wilfred Woods with a painting of his father, Rufus, who pushed for the Grand Coulee Dam. (By Blaine Harden -- The Washington Post)

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"Everything is finally coming together for us," said Curt Morris, a commissioner of the Port of Quincy. "By taking that calculated risk to build those dams years ago, we have an asset that is going to start performing for us."

He said that data-center investment by Microsoft and Yahoo would more than double the $300 million tax base in Quincy. The price of vacant lots in Quincy has jumped fourfold since word of Yahoo and Microsoft leaked early this year.

At the Wenatchee World, though, there are doubts about how many jobs will come with the server farms that are going to suck up the region's electricity. Yahoo has told planners it will have between 8 and 25 employees in Wenatchee, while Microsoft and Yahoo together have said they will employ about 150 in Quincy.

"The numbers of employees are so small," said Wilfred Woods, 86, chairman of the board at the newspaper and son of the late Rufus Woods. "We are not backing the coming of the data centers like we backed Grand Coulee."

The Woodses -- Wilfred and his own son Rufus, the current publisher -- say they are worried about the prudence and competence of the mid-Columbia utilities to manage the sale of power to the Internet behemoths in a way that maximizes local economic development and minimizes incompetence and waste.

The recent management history at Chelan County Public Utility District, which serves Wenatchee, and Grant County Public Utility District, which service Quincy, is checkered.

When power prices soared during the Western energy crisis of 2001, Chelan PUD paid two of its power traders $285,000 each. Salaries for several managers at the utility also rose to $100,000-plus levels, causing widespread irritation in a county where median family income is $38,000 a year. Top managers have since been replaced.

"They have money coming out their ears," Rufus Woods said. "There has been an attempt to take that money and put it into the hands of the people who work there."

Grant County PUD, too, has weathered management scandals and been forced to replace top managers. It is now being challenged by the Internal Revenue Service for issuing tax-free bonds to build a fiber-optic network that could benefit private business. The fiber-optic network has been a major selling point for Microsoft and Yahoo, whose server farms need redundant, high-speed data pipelines.

Managers at the two utilities say they, too, are worried about how much cheap power should be allocated to companies such as Microsoft and Yahoo -- and how many jobs are likely to come of it.

"It is a real concern of the commissioners," said Tim Culbertson, general manager at Grant County PUD, referring to the five elected local officials who make policy for the utility. "They don't necessarily like the low jobs and high megawatts situation that goes with the data centers. But the utility has an obligation to serve. It has no ability to require jobs."

For millions of electricity consumers in the Northwest, the unfolding power machinations in the mid-Columbia region are likely to create upward pressure on monthly electricity bills. As high-tech companies use more low-cost electricity in places such as Quincy, less will find its way to homes around the region.

"When I have to replace it in the marketplace, that power will be more costly," said Eric Markell, senior vice president for energy resources at Puget Sound Energy, the largest utility in Washington.

Markell said that while there are many other forces putting upward pressure on power costs, the loss of cheap power from the mid-Columbia dams "will be a factor in rising electricity bills."


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