Supporters of one of the most-debated power transmission projects in New Hampshire history say approval is essential for economic and energy development in the state.

The backers of the $1.6 billion Northern Pass hydropower project filed their final brief with the New Hampshire Site Evaluation Committee on Friday. The project would include a 192-mile transmission line from Pittsburg to Deerfield.

Northern Pass Transmission LLC is a subsidiary of Boston-based Eversource, and the submission of the final brief is a key step in the project’s approvals process.

Northern Pass backers said in the executive summary of the brief that the proposal would have no view impacts in the White Mountain National Forest, Appalachian Trail or Franconia Notch areas.

They also wrote that the proposal “has received the most extensive review of any electric transmission project in the history of New Hampshire” and would “deliver clean, affordable hydropower into the New England power grid.”

The project is designed to carry hydropower from Canada to southern New England markets, providing power for about a million homes. Opponents who are skeptical of the economics and environmental impacts of the project have rallied against it and called on state regulators to prevent it from moving forward.

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The Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests filed a memo earlier this month stating the project would “pervasively and permanently scar the northern two thirds of our state with towers and transmission lines that cut through unique forest ecosystems and rise well above the tree canopy.”

New Hampshire regulators completed hearings on the project in December.

The Site Evaluation Committee is expected to begin deliberations about the Northern Pass application in the final days of January.

Then, state regulators are expected to announce their final decision on the project by the end of March.

Project supporters would like to begin construction by the spring.

Their final brief says that the project would “create or generate 2,600 jobs during construction, with a commitment to hire NH workers first.”


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