As of 2023, LBWL's power utility has 86,789 residential customers and 12,368 commercial and industrial customers for a total of 99,137 customers. The plant located in
Delta Township on Canal Road just south of Mt. Hope Road. This
coal-fired plant had a single generating unit with a capacity of 159 MW connected to the power grid by three 138 kV lines. The utility's power plant inventory once included the 25 megawatt
Ottawa Street Station on the
Grand River in downtown Lansing. This steam and electrical plant operated from its completion in 1940 until 1992, when it was decommissioned as a power station, with steam and electrical production transferred to the Eckert Station. The station was put back into partial usage as a water chiller plant for the utility in 2001 to cool downtown buildings. In late 2007, LBWL sold the mostly vacant station to
Accident Fund Insurance Company, which was renovated into their headquarters. At the end of December of that year, in preparation for the renovation, the iconic smokestack portion of the building was taken down.
Current facilities As an eventual replacement for the aging Eckert Station, the utility began operating the REO Town Cogeneration Plant on July 1, 2013. The eight-story,
cogeneration facility located on Washington Avenue in
Lansing's
REO Town district has a capacity of 100 MW, and burns natural gas to generate electricity and steam. It also includes the utility's headquarters and a restored
Grand Trunk Western Railroad depot, which is used as the boardroom for the utility and as meeting space. The LBWL announced in December 2017 that they would be replacing Erickson Station with a $500 million
natural gas-fired power plant capable of generating 250 MW. The Delta Energy Park opened in March 2022 with a
nameplate capacity of 260 MW on the site of the former Erickson Station. To achieve the state-mandated 10%
renewable energy requirement by 2015, the company has built or acquired power through purchase agreements from several new sources. They contracted for 19.2MW from eight new
wind turbines at the Beebe Wind Farm in
Gratiot County. Lansing Board of Water and Light owns the 0.5MW Moores Park hydroelectric plant on the
Grand River and the 0.16MW Cedar Street Solar Array. It also purchases power from the Tower/Kleber Hydro plant near Cheboygan and the Granger Landfill Energy plant. Lansing Board of Water & Light has issued a request for proposals for 20MW of additional solar power. During periods of high demand, the Lansing Board of Water and Light purchases electricity from
MISO. The BWL has two 138KV interconnections (Davis-Oneida line and the Davis-Enterprise line) with
Consumers Energy/
METC from its substation on Jolly Road just east of Pennsylvania Ave on Lansing's south side. The utility also owns a portion of Detroit Edison's
Belle River Power Plant near
St. Clair, Michigan.
Generation mix For the
fiscal year that ended with June 2023, LBWL consumed 464 GWh of renewable energy, out of a total of 2,883 GWh for a total of 16% renewable energy. In 2023, they announced plans to build 160 MW of battery storage generating capacity, 65 MW of solar, and 433 MW of wind power by end of the 2027. LBWL received $12 million from the
MPSC to install 10 MW of solar and 4 hours of 40 MW battery storage (160 MWh capacity) on the Delta Energy Park site. Although it claims to have met its self-imposed goal to use 30% clean energy by 2020, the metrics they used to determine this are unclear. LBWL has described natural gas as "clean," despite the fact that it is a significant source of CO2 emissions. Critics allege that they have engaged in misleading messaging and
greenwashing. == See also ==