Category:
Wyoming
The mining industry must fight the federal climate legislation Congress is now considering and seek investment in carbon capture technology, National Mining Association President Hal Quinn said Thursday.
Quinn addressed the Wyoming Mining Association convention in Laramie.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
USA]
Ranchers want rules in wake of growing wind energy
June 6, 2009 by J. D. Stetson in Gillette News-Record
June 6, 2009 by J. D. Stetson in Gillette News-Record
Regulation of wind energy is a step that ranchers and landowners can agree needs to happen before it becomes a thriving industry in Wyoming.
They've seen what has happened before with coal, oil and coal-bed methane when those industries popped up in the last century, and they want to forego the same troubles as before.
Also filed under [
General]
Wind farm neighbors respond to Global Chevron, county
June 5, 2009 by Tom Morton in Casper Star-Tribune
June 5, 2009 by Tom Morton in Casper Star-Tribune
Neighbors of the proposed wind farm northeast of Evansville reasserted their claim this week that they did not receive adequate notice of the county's final vote to approve conditional use permits for the project, according to court documents.
They still want 7th District Court to review and declare invalid the Natrona County Board of County Commissioners' approval of the permits because the county violated the terms of its own Wind Energy Conversion System Emergency Regulations approved last fall.
Also filed under [
General]
Wyo. wind power boom could drive sage grouse to endangered list
June 3, 2009 by Scott Streater in New York Times
June 3, 2009 by Scott Streater in New York Times
Development of wind energy and sage grouse protection are on a collision course in Wyoming, where state officials are worried that a future Endangered Species Act listing for the chicken-like bird could ruin the golden egg laid by the Obama administration's renewable energy mandates. ..."The bird does well in the existing conditions that are out here. It's the new threat from wind energy that has got us so worried," said Aaron Clark, special adviser on energy infrastructure to Wyoming Gov. Dave Freudenthal (D). "I don't think you could justify a [federal endangered species] listing for that bird in Wyoming without the threat from wind development."
In the high-stakes game of preserving sage grouse, biologists say they're still figuring out how the birds will react to the influx of wind turbines rising up from the wide-open sagebrush plains where the birds evolved.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 15 months ago commenced a review of whether sage grouse should be protected under the Endangered Species Act.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Birds]
Anschutz Corp. among believers in Wyo. wind power, WY
May 25, 2009 by Matt Joyce in Product Design and Development
May 25, 2009 by Matt Joyce in Product Design and Development
Power Company of Wyoming, an affiliate of Denver-based Anschutz Corp., wants to build 1,000 wind turbines ...The influx of wind developers has raised hopes for jobs and economic development, but has also prompted concerns about erecting hundreds of 230-foot-tall turbines on largely undeveloped land.
Locals and land managers, many of them veterans of the decade-long gas boom that brought a frenzy of development to Wyoming, point to the wind boom's potential downsides for wildlife, landscape vistas and local infrastructure.
Also filed under [
General]
A task force began a study Wednesday of what Gov. Dave Freudenthal described as the "gold rush" of wind energy development.
Representatives of the governor's office, all affected state and federal agencies, industry and various conservation and landowner groups over-filled the large meeting room on the third floor of the Capitol Building for the organizational meeting.
Sen. Jim Anderson, R-Glenrock, was chosen chairman of the task force and Rep. Rodney Anderson, R-Pine Bluffs, was named vice chairman.
Also filed under [
General]
Chevron Global Power Co. will begin construction on its 11-turbine wind farm project northeast of Evansville despite the litigation from its neighbors, a spokeswoman said Friday.
"Our plan is to proceed with the project unless instructed not to," Jennifer Silva said Wednesday. ...The neighbors filed a petition on April 24 asking 7th District Court to review and invalidate the county commission's approval of two conditional use permits and for a variance.
They claimed the county violated its own Wind Energy Conversion System Emergency Regulations approved last fall, according to the petitioners' attorney Michael McGrady.
Also filed under [
General]
Alliance vows to fight power line, wind farm projects here: Willox: County lacks zoning regs needed to help landowner battle
May 12, 2009 by Justin Pittman in Douglas Budget
May 12, 2009 by Justin Pittman in Douglas Budget
About 200 concerned citizens flocked to Douglas May 7 for the first meeting of the Northern Laramie Range Alliance, an organization of landowners and citizens bent on stopping the development of wind turbines and the construction of a segment of Rocky Mountain Power's proposed Gateway West Transmission Line in the northern Laramie Mountains.
"The main objective of the (Northern Laramie Range Alliance) is that we want to successfully oppose both of these things," Kenneth Lay, one of the alliance's founding members, explained.
Also filed under [
General]
Dozens of rural landowners want to "curb enthusiasm for" and ultimately kill plans to plant wind turbines and string a green-field power line segment across the northern Laramie Range in Converse and Albany counties.
The areas in question are mostly private lands described as pristine mountain wilderness and home to some of the best elk herds in the state.
"It's finally dawned on us what the scale of wind development plans is in the state," said Kenneth C. Lay, a Laramie Range landowner and organizer of the new landowners group, Northern Laramie Range Alliance.
Also filed under [
General]
The Natrona County Commissioners formally voted on Feb. 3 to approve a zoned use control area and the conditional use permits that would allow wind turbines within the former north tank farm area of the closed refinery.
Construction was planned to start in May.
But last week, the preparations for the county's first WECS (Commercial Wind Energy Conversion System) generated a gust of concern from the Natrona County Commission.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on People]
Residents remain cautious about White Mountain wind farm
April 28, 2009 by Jack H. Smith in Green River Star
April 28, 2009 by Jack H. Smith in Green River Star
The proposed wind power project on the top of White Mountain has generated tremendous interest locally in wind energy. Local residents were able to hear a variety of view points on the topic last Wednesday, at a wind forum hosted by the Sweetwater County Commissioners.
Mark Kot, Sweetwater County Planning and Zoning Director, and organizer of the event, opened by saying this was neither a forum on the White Mountain project, or a public hearing.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
A community meeting to clear the air about Houston-based Chevron Global Power's proposed wind farm kicked up clouds about county regulations and company behavior at the Evansville school on Tuesday evening. ..."The issue is about you," responded Charlie Miller of the Elkhorn Creek Ranch LLC, whose property shares the southern fence line of the site.
"Nobody wants this except you people," Miller said later. "Take it back to Houston with you."
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on People]
Sweetwater County debates impact of wind energy development
April 24, 2009 by Jeff Gearino in Casper Star-Tribune
April 24, 2009 by Jeff Gearino in Casper Star-Tribune
The wind energy boom blowing through Sweetwater County will be a gale force soon and could threaten the region's quality of life, a host of speakers said this week.
Officials urged residents to get involved early and often in the decision-making process. To be determined is where, how and how much energy development will occur in the county's mostly undeveloped wind power industry.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Landscape]
Brent Lathrop, Southeast Wyoming program director for The Nature Conservancy, said that while conservation groups are excited about an alternative to traditional energy development in the state, turbines could be just as damaging to a landscape as oil and gas development.
"We could be facing a bigger impact on our wildlife than oil and gas ever thought about doing," he said.
Also filed under [
General]
A state board has approved a special-use lease for a $4 billion wind farm in Converse County, the latest -- and biggest -- of several wind power projects in the area.
Before their vote Thursday, the State Board of Land Commissioners heard a complaint about a lack of information provided by Clipper Windpower Development Co. officials to its new neighbors. ...The total project will encompass 109,740 acres, including 7,614 acres of state land.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Wind farm construction could begin as early as 2010
March 13, 2009 by Carrie Haderlie in Laramie Boomerang
March 13, 2009 by Carrie Haderlie in Laramie Boomerang
Windmills may soon dot the prairie in southern Albany County, if all goes as planned for a company that places large-scale wind farms in rural areas.
Ridgeline Energy, a Washington-based company focused on utility-grade wind projects, has been studying the region for about three years and plans to begin building a wind farm in 2010, Randy Gardner, project manager, said Tuesday before the Laramie City Council.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Council approves wind energy ordinances
February 21, 2009 by Christine Robinson in Casper Star-Tribune
February 21, 2009 by Christine Robinson in Casper Star-Tribune
Casperites can now turn wind into energy without the prior approval of the Planning and Zoning Commission.
Through a simple building permit process, homeowners with land that meets the qualifications are now allowed to install wind turbines in their yards or building-mounted turbines on their houses.
The Casper City Council approved unanimously the new ordinances for a final of three necessary votes in a recent meeting. Only Council member Paul Bertoglio expressed dissension for the ordinances in prior meetings, but did not attend this meeting.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
One paragraph in the regulations states wind turbines and their towers must be at least a quarter-mile away from any primary structure such as a residence, while another says they must be a half-mile away if the primary building is in certain zoning districts.
Interim county attorney Heather Duncan-Malone sees the apparent contradiction.
"The language there has been ambiguous," Duncan Malone said. "So we're looking at it to see if it poses a problem."
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
"We are not surprised that the PSC ruled in favor of Beech Ridge. We've been expecting it. We're deciding on whether we're going to file for a motion to reconsider." Michael Rosalina with Mountain Communities for Responsible Energy says they've opposed the project since its inception in 2004.
Despite a loud chorus of voices against the 119 giant wind turbines planned for 23 miles of ridge line, and against the advice of their own staff, the PSC went ahead on Friday and gave Beech Ridge the final approve to move forward with the $300 million project.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
West Virginia]
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