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Whatcom County votes emergency moratorium on wind power
February 24, 2010 by John Stark in Bellingham Herald
February 24, 2010 by John Stark in Bellingham Herald
The 6-1 vote, taken late Tuesday, Feb. 23, with little public notice, is meant to give the council some time to review and perhaps stiffen the county's 2008 ordinance regulating wind power systems. If the council had not taken quick action by declaring an emergency, anyone who submitted a permit for a wind power project would have acquired the right to have that project evaluated under the 2008 land use rules.
Gov. Chris Gregoire has approved the Desert Claim wind project in Kittitas County, eight miles north of Ellensburg.
Gregoire acted on a recommendation from a state energy facility siting council.
Desert Claim, which becomes the fourth wind farm approved in Kittitas County, will have a capacity of 95 turbines across 5,200 acres.
Bellingham waterfront wind gear is first step to wind power
January 8, 2010 by John Stark in Bellingham Herald
January 8, 2010 by John Stark in Bellingham Herald
Wind instruments were installed Thursday, Jan. 7, on the Bellingham waterfront to gauge the feasibility of installing power-generating turbines on the site.
The $8,000 project is a partnership of the Port of Bellingham, Bellingham Technical College and Western Washington University.
Wind plan gets a 'no' from Kittitas County commisioners, for now
December 17, 2009 by Mike Johnston in The Daily Record
December 17, 2009 by Mike Johnston in The Daily Record
Although Kittitas County commissioners on Tuesday turned down a proposal to establish land-use rules for large-scale community wind energy projects, they still like the idea and want to see more work on guidelines to make it possible in rural areas of the county.
A recommendation to approve the 95-turbine Desert Claim Wind Power Project reached Gov. Chris Gregoire's office on Friday.
Starting at that point, the governor has 60 days to approve or reject the estimated $330 million wind farm proposed for eight miles northwest of Ellensburg.
A public meeting Wednesday evening about a proposed $230 million wind farm in the Willapa Hills of West Lewis and East Pacific counties brought a crowd of about 50 people with concerns and questions about the development.
The Coyote Crest Wind Park is a project by the EverPower Wind Holdings Company Inc. on land leased by Weyerhaeuser's McDonald tree farm.
EFSEC member: review process flawed; Ian Elliot wants state to do better
November 21, 2009 by Mike Johnston in Daily Record
November 21, 2009 by Mike Johnston in Daily Record
Ian Elliot wanted to raise the issue of turbine density in the state's review of the Desert Claim Wind Power Project, but couldn't.
The issue wasn't officially entered into evidence by an intervener in the Desert Claim review process, nor was there any expert testimony, studies or other data submitted on the issue by an intervener or the project applicant. ..."I believe the process is flawed because the rights of the local citizens and the obligations of EFSEC do not align," Elliot stated
A state energy council on Monday recommended approval of the 95-turbine Desert Claim Wind Power Project but also put conditions on its future construction and operation eight miles northwest of Ellensburg.
The approval is a recommendation to Gov. Chris Gregoire who will make the final decision on the project, which has been sought since January 2003 by the French-owned firm of enXco USA Inc.
Gregoire is expected to formally receive the recommendation in early December and has until early February to make her decision.
The state Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council, or EFSEC, will meet at 5:30 p.m. Monday at the Hal Holmes Community Center to consider a recommendation to Gov. Chris Gregoire on whether to approve the 95-turbine, $330 million Desert Claim Wind Power Project.
EFSEC officials estimate a final decision by the governor could come in early February 2010 at the latest.
The wind farm, proposed by the French-owned firm of enXco USA Inc., is planned for eight miles northwest of Ellensburg spread on 5,200 acres north of Smithson Road.
Behind closed doors: council ponders Desert Claim Wind Power Project
October 22, 2009 by Mike Johnston in The Daily Record
October 22, 2009 by Mike Johnston in The Daily Record
The state Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council, or EFSEC, today resumes deliberations on whether to approve the 95-turbine, $330 million Desert Claim Wind Power Project proposed for eight miles northwest of Ellensburg.
EFSEC's seven members were scheduled to gather again behind closed doors in Olympia at 1 p.m. today, according to EFSEC Manager Allen Fiksdal.
John Lodahl held the torpedo-like instrument steady while Max Holder calibrated it from inside a metal-skinned microwave station on this cold, windswept hill north of Sunnyside.
Satisfied with the readings, Lodahl climbed down from the top of the 30-foot tower on a recent morning, marking the end of a tour that has taken the pair from Astoria, Ore., at the mouth of the Columbia River, to the Horse Heaven Hills in Benton County over the past five weeks.
State lands commissioner wants to branch out to wind, biomass energy
September 18, 2009 by Erik Robinson in The Columbian
September 18, 2009 by Erik Robinson in The Columbian
Biomass growing on 2.1 million acres of state forests could be burned to generate electricity or converted to a liquid fuel called methanol, he said. Further, he endorsed the careful expansion of the state's burgeoning wind energy business to the west side of the Cascades - provided the massive towers won't imperil wildlife. ...Wind is not the only renewable energy resource on state lands, he said. Goldmark will sort through 30 proposals for two biomass pilot projects
Today the Bonneville Power Administration will install the first of fourteen anemometers to better track where and how hard the wind is blowing.
The BPA, which markets power from the Northwest's network of federal hydroelectric dams, has struggled to incorporate increasing amounts of variable wind energy into the region's electric grid.
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