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Duke Energy unveils plans for electric transmission line from Auburndale to Kathleen

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Duke Energy
Duke Energy

As the population in Polk County grows, so does its appetite for electricity.

Construction recently started for a new Duke Energy electric utility substation in Auburndale. The project is one of the initial steps toward moving electricity for 48 miles in two directions from the Osprey Energy Center along new transmission lines to Kathleen and Haines City.

The project is set for completion by the summer of 2024. Dodge Data & Analytics listed the value of the Polk County Reliability Enhancement Project at $52 million.

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The two new 230-kilovolt transmission lines “will help avoid overloads on the existing Duke Energy transmission system," said Ana Gibbs, spokeswoman for Duke Energy. “The new transmission infrastructure will also provide the opportunity for future economic development and growth in the region.”

Clean energy

The Osprey to Kathleen transmission line will extend from the Osprey Energy Center approximately 26 miles northwest to the existing Kathleen substation in Polk County. Substations reduce the voltage from the transmission lines to a grid of poles and wires on a distribution system spanning neighborhoods that provide power to homes and businesses.

The project would not impact Lakeland Electric customers.

Vegetation removal and construction of the transmission line began in the spring. Construction of a new Osprey Substation at 1708 Derby Road began in 2021 near the Duke Energy-owned Osprey Energy Center in Auburndale. The project covers areas in Polk County, Kathleen, Haines City, and Auburndale, among others.

The support structures will be single-poles made of steel or concrete at approximately 90 to 110 feet high. Easement acquisitions will continue through early 2023 with line construction set for completion by summer 2024.

“Duke Energy is committed to providing reliable, safe and increasingly clean energy,” Gibbs said. “We’re improving our transmission infrastructure – the backbone of our state’s energy system – powering communities and helping to build the smarter, cleaner energy future.”

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The Duke Energy-owned Osprey Energy Center is located in a region experiencing high population growth.

The project to construct a new Osprey Substation and two new transmission lines was announced in 2018.