Skip to main content

Minnesota roads could go electric

Transportation infrastructure can evolve to support clean vehicle electrification, study finds
By Adam Hill April 26, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
HVDC transmission lines buried in the highway are a cost-effective option for electric and communications infrastructure (© Valeriya Luzina | Dreamstime.com)

High-voltage, direct current (HVDC) transmission lines buried in the highway are a cost-effective option for electric and communications infrastructure, according to a new report.

The Ray and NGI Consulting's NextGen Highways Feasibility Study for the Minnesota Department of Transportation (MnDoT) looks at co-locating lines in the highway right-of-way (ROW).

“Federal policy not only authorises building electrical transmission and fibre along our roads, but it also strongly encourages state DoTs to approach infrastructure planning with a wide lens, taking into account both immediate and future public needs that could be met by leveraging transportation ROW,” said Laura Rogers, deputy director of The Ray.

“To support clean vehicle electrification, our existing transportation infrastructure will need to evolve to incorporate the infrastructure to power and connect these vehicles."

This issue has come to prominence as authorities look at projects such as renewable energy generation, electrical transmission and distribution projects, broadband, vegetation management, inductive charging in travel lanes and alternative fuelling facilities.

In April 2021, Federal Highway Administration guidance said highway ROW “can be leveraged by state DoTs for pressing public needs relating to climate change, equitable communications access and energy reliability".

“The findings from this study demonstrate that buried HVDC transmission is cost-effective and can be feasibly sited in interstate and highway ROW after making appropriate consideration for existing and future transportation system needs,” said Morgan Putnam, founder of NGI.

“This means that our existing highway system can enable transportation and grid decarbonisation and strengthen grid reliability and resilience – all while delivering billions of dollars in societal benefits.”

The NextGen Highways team worked with an internal working group at MnDoT to examine policy, regulation and projects, analysed MnDoT-specific concerns, examined HVDC transmission line requirements, and looked at the cost-benefits ratio.

It found that good practice is already available: utilities and regulators in Wisconsin have successfully collaborated with the Wisconsin DoT to place more than 800 miles of electric transmission infrastructure within and along state and interstate highway ROW over the last 20 years.

The NextGen Highways team is planning to continue its work with MnDoT in 2022 and to launch a coalition of state DoTs, utilities and transmission developers to support the co-location of buried fibre and transmission in highway and interstate ROW. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • US eyes European model for Illinois toll road upgrade
    May 30, 2014
    David Crawford welcomes the adoption of European-style ITS technology by the US. The Jane Addams Memorial Tollway in Illinois, US is well on the way towards becoming a ‘smart traffic corridor’, taking full advantage of active traffic management (ATM or ‘managed lanes’) technology that originated in Europe. It is one of the first American toll roads to do so; preliminary work began in 2014 and will continue through to 2016. Jane Addams is one of four toll roads operated by the publicly-owned Illinois State T
  • The sunshine subsidy for Colorado’s tollways
    January 10, 2014
    David Crawford reports on energy cost cutting on US highways. Just over a year after switch-on and with two global awards under its belt, the longest solar-powered toll road in the US is generating heightened interest in highway applications of alternative energy. The E-407, which loops around the eastern perimeter of the Denver metropolitan area in Colorado, won the International Bridge, Tunnel and Turnpike Association (IBTTA) President’s Overall Award for Excellence at its September 2013 Annual Meeting in
  • Cost-effective alternatives to traditional loops
    February 1, 2012
    Traffic signal control is a mainstay of urban congestion management. Despite advances in vehicle detection sensors, inductive loops, which operate by using a magnetic field to detect the metal components in vehicles, are still the most common enabler for intelligent signalised junctions.
  • Rural roads ‘critical to moving people and goods’
    June 25, 2015
    In his opening statement at the US Subcommittee on Highways and Transit Hearing on Meeting the Transportation Needs of Rural America, chairman Sam Graves said that even today, 71 per cent of all lane-miles of public roads and 73 per cent of all of the nation's bridges are located in rural areas. In his home state of Missouri, the role of rural roads is even more pronounced: 82 per cent of the public roads and 81 per cent of bridges are in rural areas, and these roads carry over 40 per cent of all travel in