Utah Stories from the Beehive Archive

The Energy Transition Powered by Rural Utah

2024-12-02 Windmills - Energy Transition.png

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Title

The Energy Transition Powered by Rural Utah

Description

When you flip your light switch, do you know which part of rural Utah your electricity is coming from? Historically, fuel for the energy grid came from rural areas in the form of fossil fuels. But even as utilities transition to alternative energy, that energy is still sourced in rural Utah.

Coal-fired power plants became the dominant source of electricity in Utah in the late twentieth century. Because coal mines, almost by definition, exist in rural places, Utah’s cities have long been powered by a rural product. A shift toward renewable energy has changed the way we produce electricity, but rural places are still responsible for most of our power.

What we now think of as "alternative energy" was actually the precursor to coal-fired power. While coal was used as fuel in industrial processes in the nineteenth century, it was actually hydropower turbines that were the state’s first electrical generators. As the state’s electrical capacity increased through the 1920s -- mostly by building hydropower dams -- residential homes in cities began electrifying. Electrification in rural areas was a slower process, however, even though dams in rural areas were providing all the power. 

In 1954, the Utah Power & Light Company built a coal-fired power plant in Carbon County. It was a signal of things to come. As recently as the year 2000, coal provided 94% of Utah's electricity. Since then, a combination of diminishing coal reserves, enhanced environmental regulations, and concern about global warming have contributed to a transition away from coal. 

In its place, new technology has made it possible to generate power from several other sources. For example, geothermal energy harnesses the heat from naturally occurring volcanic activity. Milford, in Utah's west desert, is home to an experimental field site known as FORGE dedicated to researching geothermal energy. Although Utah does not have any nuclear power plants, uranium mined in Utah is used as fuel. Then there are contemporary wind farms built in places with steady wind currents that now provide renewable energy in several of Utah’s counties. While windmills in the nineteenth-century also provided power – it was to pump groundwater, not generate electricity. 

In the past, and today, rural communities have depended on jobs from coal mining and the extraction of other fossil fuels. As coal deposits run out, those communities are in a tough spot. The energy transition may provide a silver lining, however, as alternative sources are still located in rural areas around the state. Living in rural Utah has always required the ability to adapt, and the energy transition is no exception.

Creator

By Nate Housley for Utah Humanities © 2024

Source

Image: Windmills old and new, Milford, Utah. The Milford area supports a diversity of renewable energy sources, from wind, geothermal, solar, and biogas. This old windmill is now only functional as a bird’s nest, but it represents a valuable technology for the old West. The first “self-governing” windmill, like the one in the photo, was patented in 1854. This type swivels to face the direction of the wind, providing power to a pump that would fill a stock pond with groundwater. The newer generation of windmills produces electricity for urban power grids. Photo by David Crane.
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See John S. McCormick, The Power to Make Good Things Happen: The History of Utah Power & Light Company (Salt Lake City: Utah Power & Light Company, 1990); John S. McCormick, “Electrical Development in Utah,” Utah History Encyclopedia (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1990); Obed C. Haycock, "Electric Power Comes to Utah,” Utah Historical Quarterly 45 (1977); Nancy J. Taniguchi, “Coal Mining in Utah,” Utah History Encyclopedia (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1990); “Utah’s Energy Resources,” Utah Geological Survey and Utah Office of Energy Development, accessed November 2024.

Publisher

The Beehive Archive is a production of Utah Humanities. Find sources and the whole collection of past episodes at www.utahhumanities.org/stories.

Date

2024-12-02