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Impact on Birds and California
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The dirty little secret about the windmill farm at Altamont Pass is that it slaughters thousands of birds every year while politicians turn a blind eye. Four years ago, environmental groups filed suit after the Alameda County Board of Supervisors effectively allowed the farm's several owners to keep killing birds despite evidence that the deaths could be greatly lessened.
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Impact on Wildlife]
Report paves way for wildlife-friendly wind power in Monterey County
October 27, 2009 by Sandra M. Chung in The Californian
October 27, 2009 by Sandra M. Chung in The Californian
The thousand of birds killed by the wind turbines at Altamont Pass tainted the reputation of the renewable energy source.
But according to a recent report by the Ventana Wildlife Society and the Stanford Solar and Wind Energy Project, smaller wind-power projects may be able to harvest energy in some parts of Monterey County without harming the endangered California condor.
"The condor is the main thing that's been holding up the development of wind-power projects in Monterey County," said John Roitz.
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Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Bats]
Bird is the word in the windfarming faceoff between turbines and condors
May 28, 2009 by Zachary Stahl in Monterey County Weekly
May 28, 2009 by Zachary Stahl in Monterey County Weekly
Soledad wants to build a seven-turbine wind farm to power its wastewater treatment plant. Sounds simple enough only the few remaining California condors frequently fly over the city and the Department of Fish and Game doesn't want to take the chance for one endangered bird to be pureed.
"Even though it's a relatively low risk," says David Hacker, staff environmental scientist for DFG, "it's still a risk and any risk can be significant for this species."
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Impact on Wildlife]
Protestors oppose wind turbines effects on bald eagles
February 26, 2009 by Britt Carlson in KHSL-TV 12
February 26, 2009 by Britt Carlson in KHSL-TV 12
Wildlife researcher Jim Wiegand says "Green energy is a cover up and a lie because birds of prey are getting killed, people wouldn't believe how these turbines chop them up."
Many members of the Pit River Tribe were among the protestors outside the Shasta County Administration Center touting the deadly effects wind turbines have on birds, particularly bald eagles.
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Impact on Wildlife]
Protest planned over Hatchet Ridge Wind Project
February 26, 2009 by Dylan Darling in Record Searchlight
February 26, 2009 by Dylan Darling in Record Searchlight
Saying its blades will leave eagle blood in the air and on the ground, opponents of the Hatchet Ridge Wind Project are planning a protest rally.
"It just really needs to be relooked at," said Radley Davis, a member of the Pit River Tribe and one of the protest organizers.
The protest will be at noon Friday in front of the Shasta County Administration Center, organizers said.
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Impact on Wildlife]
Suit over bird deaths at Altamont Pass dismissed
October 2, 2008 by Chris Metinko in Oakland Tribune
October 2, 2008 by Chris Metinko in Oakland Tribune
"While we are gratified that the Court of Appeal reaffirmed the traditional public trust ownership of wildlife, we are disappointed that it rejected the possibility of a lawsuit directly against those who are illegally killing wildlife," said Rick Wiebe, the attorney representing the Center for Biological Diversity. "A lawsuit against those who are killing wildlife is the most direct and effective means of protecting wildlife and vindicating the public trust in wildlife."
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Impact on Wildlife]
A lawsuit contending the whirling blades on the hundreds of windmills in the Altamont Pass area are killing birds has been rejected by the First District Court of Appeal.
"Permitting the action to proceed as presented would require the court to make complex and delicate balancing judgments without the benefit of the expertise of the agencies responsible for protecting the trust resources and would threaten redundancy at best and inconsistency at worst," the appellate court decision says.
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Impact on Wildlife]
Efforts to reduce bird kills in the Altamont Pass Wind Resource Area may not be working, new data released this week show.
The mortality rate increased 27 percent over two years among raptors targeted in an ongoing monitoring study, according to an executive summary of the data issued by Alameda County's Scientific Review Committee. The five member panel advises the county on progress being made to mitigate bird deaths in the Altamont Pass windmill area. ...The increase in the kills of the four targeted raptors - the golden eagle, red-tailed hawk, American kestrel and burrowing owl - is in comparison with a baseline study that took place between March 1998 and May 2003.
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Impact on Wildlife]
Alameda County supervisors approved on Tuesday a new three-month, bird-monitoring contract to study the impacts of the Altamont Pass wind turbines on scores of birds, including golden eagles, red-tailed hawks, burrowing owls and other protected species.
Supervisors approved the $450,000 contract with environmental consulting firm Jones & Stokes by a 3-2 vote.
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Impact on Wildlife]
Peter Gross of Babcock and Brown presented a request for a permit to put up another meteorological tower in the town of Westfield.
According to Gross, after the public meetings about the possibility of wind farms in the Westfield-Ripley area, several families approached him about how they could become involved in the project.
"They came to us which started us looking at the possibilities in that area," Gross said. "We won't know for sure until we have the readings from the met tower but we're proceeding with hopeful caution."
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Zoning/Planning|
New York]
Windmills increase raptor deaths; Eagles, owls, migratory songbirds caught in blades
March 6, 2008 in The Union
March 6, 2008 in The Union
Long before wind turbines sprouted on Altamont Pass, it was home to the highest density of golden eagles in the world and their major breeding area in the United States.
Almost as soon as the first turbine started rotating, the bird carcasses started piling up: Golden eagles, burrowing owls, red-tailed hawks, other raptors, western meadowlarks and migrating songbirds. ...On Feb. 12, an interim report on raptor mortality during 2005-2007 was released.
Instead of a reduction in raptor mortality, the study found deaths had risen except for that among golden eagles, which had fallen to the sustainable level of 49 deaths per year.
Burrowing owl mortality suffered the greatest increase - more than 300 percent - and the overall raptor deaths almost doubled.
As the Santa Clarita Valley continues to grow and expand, there is a concern and movement to sustain growth without exhausting natural resources. Finding ways to balance growth with the environment has come to a crossroads. That crossroads can be found in Saugus, where a proposed renewable energy project may threaten the nesting grounds of federally-protected Red-tailed hawks. ...The new renewable power lines through Saugus would end at the Tehachapi Wind Resource Area in Kern County, which is a wind farm that will allow Edison to keep up with demands for renewable power.
Yet Manwaring said she has no problem with Edison's renewable energy plan. She just wants to be sure the hawks are protected until they are done nursing.
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Impact on Wildlife]
VVC windmill could pose threat to birds; Environmentalists labels wind turbines as bird blenders
February 18, 2008 in Daily Press
February 18, 2008 in Daily Press
As the Victor Valley College board of trustees gears up to consider erecting a 314-foot wind turbine, the project may face some unlikely opponents: birds and bats living in the nearby Mojave River bottom. ...A new study on a northern California wind farm at Altamont Pass shows that efforts have failed to protect birds from wind turbine blades which some environmentalists have dubbed "bird blenders," according to Environment & Climate News.
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Impact on Wildlife]
Altamont Pass Settlement Fails to Reduce Bird Kills
February 18, 2008 by H. Sterling Burnett, Ph.D. in The Heartland Institute
February 18, 2008 by H. Sterling Burnett, Ph.D. in The Heartland Institute
A January 2007 settlement agreement intended to reduce the number of bird deaths from wind turbines at Altamont Pass, California is failing, scientists report.
As a result, environmental groups are calling for additional restrictions on wind power generation at the nation's largest wind farm. ...Many of the affected bird species are protected by state and federal laws. Some of the birds killed are protected by federal laws so stringent they do not allow the taking or killing of even a single member of the species.
Wind farm critics say the failure to enforce federal wildlife protection laws in the Altamont wind farm case is a result of environmentalists' pressure for wind power.
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Impact on Wildlife]
Despite efforts, Altamont bird toll rising
February 2, 2008 by Charles Burress in San Francisco Chronicle
February 2, 2008 by Charles Burress in San Francisco Chronicle
The Altamont wind farms saw an apparent increase in bird deaths last year in spite of efforts to reduce the bird kills, according to a new report.
Bird-carcass surveys at about half of the nearly 5,000 Altamont wind turbines found a striking jump in deaths among many species in the year ending last September over the previous year.
The report - produced by a consortium of consultants who are coordinated by Brian Latta of the UC Santa Cruz Predatory Bird Research Group - cautioned that the results are preliminary and that the cause of the increase in bird deaths is not known.
The number of bird deaths does not appear to be decreasing despite measures to reduce the deaths, the report said. Those efforts include shutting down all the turbines for two months in the winter and a not-yet fully-accomplished process of relocating or permanently shutting down the windmills suspected of causing the most deaths.
Audubon Society requests study on danger to birds
January 27, 2008 by Dylan Darling in Reddington.com
January 27, 2008 by Dylan Darling in Reddington.com
A green power project proposed for the north state has drawn questions and concerns from nature lovers about how many birds it could kill.
In comments on the Hatchet Ridge Wind Project's draft environmental impact report filed last week, the Wintu Audubon Society asks for additional studies on the effect that 44 turbines would have on migrating birds. Of the 16 comments received as of Friday afternoon, a quarter touched on that issue, said Bill Walker, senior planner for Shasta County.
The EIR estimated that the turbines proposed for a ridge near Burney would kill a bald eagle every two to three years, as well as about seven birds a year.
"It would be a significant impact," Walker said.
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Impact on Wildlife]
Committee suspects little progress in reducing Altamont bird deaths
January 25, 2008 by Chris Metinko in Inside Bay Area
January 25, 2008 by Chris Metinko in Inside Bay Area
A scientific review committee monitoring avian death rates in the Altamont Pass Wind Resource Area has concerns about progress being made to reduce them -- although a report confirming those concerns likely will not be out until next month.
Alameda County's Scientific Review Committee -- a five-member panel that advises the county on progress being made to mitigate bird deaths in the Altamont Pass windmill area -- concluded late last year measures taken by wind companies in the area have not done enough to reach a 50-percent reduction in raptor deaths by November 2009. ..."It's alarming to hear they're not going to make the proposed reduction," said Elizabeth Murdock, executive director of the Golden Gate Audubon Society, a plaintiff in the 2006 lawsuit that led to the settlement. "They're saying they've made a zero to negligible reduction in the mortality rate out there."
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Impact on Wildlife]
The safety (for birds) of the Altamont wind turbine farm is at issue during a meeting today.
A judge will meet today with environmental groups, wind energy businesses and Alameda County officials to determine what must happen next to protect birds of prey from wind turbines in the Altamont Pass.
Californians for Renewable Energy claims that wind power companies have not complied with the conditions of permits that the Alameda County Board of Supervisors approved in September 2005. ...Peter Weiner, an attorney who represents some of the power companies, said the companies' position is that they have complied.
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Impact on Wildlife]
Altamont Pass turbines still killing birds of prey
January 12, 2008 by Jake Armstrong in Recordnet.com
January 12, 2008 by Jake Armstrong in Recordnet.com
Environmentally friendly efforts aren't so kind to each other in the rolling hills of the Altamont Pass.
For years, whirling rotors on some of the 5,000-plus wind turbines that line the pass have minced and otherwise killed thousands of golden eagles, red-tailed hawks and other birds of prey at a rate alarming to groups on a mission to protect them. ...Now a year into the settlement agreement, there has been little progress in reducing bird deaths to levels called for in the settlement.
The Golden Gate Audubon Society, a party to the lawsuit that triggered the settlement, backs scientists' recommendation that hundreds more turbines need to be relocated and the shutdown extended in order to reach the reduction mark.
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Impact on Wildlife]
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