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Faribualt, Minn., Nov. 15, 2002 - A Faribault Energy Park featuring a 250-megawatt
electric generating facility is being planned for the north edge of Faribault, Minn., project
developers announced today. To be operated as Faribault Energy Park LLC, the facility will
use combined-cycle technology that uses natural gas and steam to generate electricity to make
the facility among the most efficient and most environmentally friendly power plants in
Minnesota. A certificate of need has been filed with the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission.
The project developers are the Minnesota Municipal Power Agency (MMPA) and its management
company, Dahlen, Berg & Co. MMPA will own Faribault Energy Park LLC. MMPA is an association
of eight of the state's municipal power organizations with a goal of providing reliable,
reasonably priced energy to its customers.
"We are going far beyond building a power plant," said Derick Dahlen of Dahlen, Berg & Co.
"The Energy Park concept will be a model of environmental responsibility and innovation. We'll
use clean-burning natural gas as the primary fuel, and we'll create a learning center for area
school children to see how the plant works as well as study alternative forms of energy production
such as wind and hydro technologies."
Faribault Energy Park will be a major economic stimulus for Faribault because of its
construction and operations jobs, its improvement in capacity of electric lines in the area, and
its ability to attract other business that can use the plant's ready-made hot water supply. The
Faribault site's proximity to an existing electric transmission corridor and natural gas pipeline
were major factors in site selection, Dahlen said.
"We see the Faribault Energy Park as playing an important role in helping MMPA and Minnesota
meet their future energy needs, as well as providing an economic boost to Faribault," said Dave
Pokorney, MMPA Chairman and City Administrator of Chaska, Minn.
At a cost of approximately $150 million, the Faribault Energy Park will require more than 200
workers during construction, which is expected to take two years to complete. The facility,
which is subject to numerous state and local approvals, will create at least 17 full time, skilled
jobs and contribute to the local tax base.
The combined-cycle Faribault Energy Park will use natural gas, with fuel oil as a backup, to
fire a combustion turbine generator and produce electricity. The excess heat from the turbine is
collected to produce steam, which, in turn, is used in a steam turbine generator to produce
additional electricity. This combined-cycle approach allows for the most efficient use of a fuel
source and protects the environment by limiting emissions.
The Faribault Energy Park will be located on a 35-acre site two miles north of Faribault and
just east of I-35 in an area being zoned for industrial development. The facility will generate
approximately two percent of the electricity produced within Minnesota.
According to projections by Mid-Continent Area Power Pool, an association of electric utilities,
the Upper Midwest will need 2000MW in additional electric production by the year 2010. The
Faribault Energy Park will contribute 250 megawatts to the system and be online by late 2005.
Minnesota Municipal Power Agency provides wholesale electricity to its members and customers for
retail sales and distribution by the individual electric utilities. In 1992, the cities of Anoka,
Arlington, Brownton, Chaska, LeSueur, North St. Paul, Olivia and Winthrop formed MMPA. Steele-Waseca
Cooperative Electric, which provides electricity for much of Rice County and parts of Faribault, is
a wholesale customer of MMPA. Other customers are Shakopee and East Grand Forks. For more
information visit www.mmpa.biz.
MMPA's management company, Dahlen, Berg & Co., has been providing energy supply management
services since 1984. More information is available at www.dahlen-berg.com.

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