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Agency overview | |
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Formed | August 20, 1937; 83 years ago |
Jurisdiction | U.S. government |
Headquarters | Portland, Oregon, U.S. |
Agency executive | |
Parent agency | U.S. Department of Energy |
Website | www.bpa.gov |
The Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) is an American federal agency operating in the Pacific Northwest. BPA was created by an act of Congress in 1937 to market electric power from the Bonneville Dam located on the Columbia River and to construct facilities necessary to transmit that power. Congress has since designated Bonneville to be the marketing agent for power from all of the federally owned hydroelectric projects in the Pacific Northwest. Bonneville is one of four regional Federal power marketing agencies within the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).
The power generated on BPA's grid is sold to public utilities, private utilities, and industry on the grid. The excess is sold to other grids in Canada, California and other regions. Because BPA is a public entity, it does not make a profit on power sales or from providing transmission services. BPA also coordinates with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation to regulate flow of water in the Columbia River and to carry out environmental projects such as salmon restoration.
Although BPA is part of the DOE, it is self-funded and covers its costs by selling its products and services at cost.[1] The BPA provides about 28% of the electricity used in the region.[1] BPA transmits and sells wholesale electricity in eight western states: Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Utah, Nevada, and California.[1]
BPA now markets the electricity from thirty-one federal hydroelectric dams on the Columbia River and its tributaries, as well as from the Columbia Generating Station, a nuclear plant located on the Hanford Site in eastern Washington. BPA has more than 15,000 miles (24,000 km) of electrical lines and 261 substations in the Pacific Northwest and controls approximately 75 percent of the high-voltage (230 kV and higher) transmission capacity in the region.[1] BPA also maintains connection lines with other power grids, the California high-voltage transmission system by Path 66, which consists of the two 500 kV AC lines of the Pacific AC Intertie, plus a third 500 kV AC line of the California-Oregon Transmission Project (COTP) (managed by the Balancing Authority of Northern California). Together these three lines are operated as the California-Oregon Intertie (COI) (managed by the California Independent System Operator). An additional DC ±500 kV line, the Pacific DC Intertie, links BPA's grid at the Celilo Converter Station near The Dalles, Oregon to the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP) grid 800 miles (1,300 km) away at the Sylmar Converter Station in Los Angeles.BPA uses helicopters to sling load maintenance workers inspecting and repairing power lines.[2]
The Northern Intertie crosses the Canada–US border in two locations at Blaine, Washington and Nelway, British Columbia and connects to two BC HydroAC 500 kV lines and several lower voltage lines.[3]
BPA's first industrial sale was to Alcoa in January 1940, to provide 32,500 kilowatts of power.[4] This, and the following 162,500 kilowatt order, led to complaints of the Bonneville Power Act's anti-monopoly clause.[4] The cheap price of aluminum from Alcoa helped aluminum sales grow in the post-World War II market.[4]
Overly optimistic estimates of future electricity consumption by BPA in the 1960s led the agency to guarantee some bonds for the disastrous Washington Public Power Supply System nuclear power project. Out of five nuclear power plants started, only one was completed. BPA is still making payments on three of the abandoned plants. In 2003, BPA's debt for the nuclear project totaled $6.2 billion.[5]
In 1973, Bill Gates and Paul Allen were hired by Bob Barnett to write software for the PDP-10 computer that managed BPA's power grid and remained in operation until 2013.[6]
In 2014, the BPA Library discovered a collection of old films made by the agency and began posting digital versions of them on the agency's website.[7] Included in the collection is the award-winning documentary 'River of Power' which covers the Agency's history from its beginning to the present.[8]
The BPA gives its name to the BPA Trail in Federal Way, Washington, a walking trail built beneath the power transmission lines.
Administrator[a] | Dates[b] |
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James D. (J. D.) Ross[c] | Oct. 10, 1937 – March 14, 1939 |
Charles Carey | Feb. 2 – May 4, 1939 (acting)[d] |
Frank Banks | May 4 – Sept. 15, 1939 (interim / acting) |
Paul J. Raver[e] | Sept. 16, 1939 – Jan. 14, 1954 |
William A. Pearl | Jan. 15, 1954 – Feb. 14, 1961 |
Charles F. Luce | Feb. 15, 1961 – Aug. 30, 1966 |
David S. Black | Aug. 31, 1966 – Sept. 7, 1967 |
H.R. Richmond | Sept. 8, 1967 – Oct. 19, 1967 (acting) |
Donald P. Hodel | Dec. 1, 1972 – Dec. 19, 1977 |
S. Sterling Munro, Jr. | Jan. 1978 – Feb. 1981 |
Earl Gjelde | Feb. – May 1981 (acting) |
Peter T. Johnson | May 1981 – July 1986 |
James J. Jura | July 1986 – Aug. 1991 |
Jack Robertson | Aug. – Oct. 1991 (acting) |
Randall W. Hardy | Oct. 1991 – Sept. 1997 |
Jack Robertson | Oct. 1997 – June 1998 (acting) |
Judith A. Johansen | June 1998 – Sept. 2000 |
Stephen J. Wright | Sept. 2000 – Feb. 2002 (acting) March 2002 – Feb. 2013 |
William K. Drummond | Jan. 2013 – Jan. 2014 |
Elliot Mainzer | July 2013 – Jan. 2014 (acting) Jan. 2014 – Sept. 2020 |
John L. Hairston | Sept 2020 - (acting) |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bonneville Power Administration. |
This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Government document: 'BPA Fast Facts - Fiscal Year 2006'.