Category:
Impact on Wildlife
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Concerns over proposed Hounsfield Wind Farm on Galloo Island
May 17, 2009 by Katie Gibas in News 10 Now
May 17, 2009 by Katie Gibas in News 10 Now
More than 90,000 households could be powered by the proposed Hounsfield Wind Farm on Galloo Island in Jefferson County.
"This is a real opportunity for renewable energy in New York State. It's a very unique site. There are not too many islands that, I think, in the New York waters that would be suitable for a wind farm," said Jack Nasca, Department of Environmental Conservation.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
New York]
Campaigners fighting plans for a wind farm near the Naseby battlefield site say new proposals to move the turbines further east will make no difference to their visual impact for villagers. ...the latest plans place the turbines on lower ground further east, still south of the A14 but closer to Kelmarsh Hall.
Eon says this will create less visual impact on the villages of Naseby and Haselbech.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Army Corps of Engineers will formally review whether the endangered Indiana bat and migratory birds could be harmed by 30 big wind turbines proposed for ecologically sensitive Shaffer Mountain in northeastern Somerset County. ...The federal review, requested by three state environmental groups, is the first U.S. Endangered Species Act assessment of the impacts of wind projects in the Eastern U.S. on bats and migratory birds.
Also filed under [
Pennsylvania]
In 2007, Gamesa Energy USA agreed to allow the Windber Area Authority to oversee the impact the proposed 30-turbine Shaffer Mountain Wind Farm would have on the watershed.
As part of the deal, the authority imposed certain conditions on the development.
Now, as the state Department of Environmental Protection is considering Gamesa's permit for the wind project, the authority wants to make sure the state is taking those conditions into account.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Pennsylvania]
Birds present obstacles for wind turbine permits at Kilauea farm
May 12, 2009 by Danny Brown in The Garden Island
May 12, 2009 by Danny Brown in The Garden Island
Kilauea farmer Sam Pangdan sensed change was in the air when it came to erecting wind turbines on his property.
Nearly a year and a half later, he is still waiting for that change to blow through the county Planning Commission, which worries the alternative energy resource could be a hazard for endangered birds and bats.
"We have competing interests between clean energy and birds," said Commissioner Hartwell Blake, at a commission meeting last month.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds|
Hawaii]
Iberdrola Renewables bat study shows more than 70 percent reduction in bat mortality at wind energy facilities
May 12, 2009 in Yahoo News
May 12, 2009 in Yahoo News
The first year of a ground-breaking effort to study the interaction between bats and wind turbines at the Casselman Wind Power Project shows that turning off the turbines during low wind periods reduced bat mortality by more than 70 percent.
Iberdrola Renewables, the owner of the Casselman wind farm, partnered with independent conservation group, Bat Conservation International (BCI), for wildlife data collection at the southwestern Pennsylvania wind power project.
Also filed under [
Impact on Bats|
Pennsylvania]
"Hundreds and thousands of migratory birds, including many that are protected under international wildlife treaties such as the African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbird Agreement, are killed in growing numbers by man-made barriers," said Bert Lenten, executive secretary of AEWA and initiator of the World Migratory Bird Day campaign.
"Some of these cases could quite easily be avoided by introducing technical measures for reducing this often avoidable cause of destruction," he said.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds]
Although the Public Service Board granted the Deerfield Wind Project a certificate of public good, there remains a lot of work ahead. Now the wind project must obtain approval from federal and state agencies, and officials say it may be another year before construction of the wind turbines can commence. ...According to U.S. Forest Service supervisor Meg Mitchell, the forest service is reviewing the PSB decision. Mitchell said the forest service is also looking at submitted comments from the draft environmental impact statement.
Contact Energy is prepared to take the risk of building multimillion-dollar turbines at its proposed Waikato wind farm even if they might not be able to operate under consent conditions. ...the tension evident between Contact's plans and the Conservation Department which says there is not enough evidence to make a decision on the project has already emerged as one of the pivotal issues for the hearing.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds|
Australia / New Zealand]
Wind farm's radar system stops birds getting the chop
May 1, 2009 by Suzanne Goldenberg in The Guardian
May 1, 2009 by Suzanne Goldenberg in The Guardian
US wind farms kill about 7,000 birds a year, according to a recent study. Other studies of individual wind farms suggest a higher toll on bats and birds, which crash into towers, blades, power lines and other installations. Estimates from a single wind farm in Altamont, California showed as many as 1,300 birds of prey killed each year - or about three a day.
Such direct threats to wildlife, and concern for habitats, have increasingly pitted conservationists against the renewable energy industry. A handful of wind power projects in the US have been shelved because of wildlife concerns.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds|
Texas]
North Harmony Debates Projects; Town Asks For Public's Opinion
April 27, 2009 by Sharon Turano in The Post Journal
April 27, 2009 by Sharon Turano in The Post Journal
Town officials would like to regulate wind energy and adult entertainment, asking for the public's opinions regarding both issues. ...Supervisor Sally Carlson said about seven people from the Jamestown Audubon Society raised concerns during Tuesday's wind energy hearing about the possibility of commercial windmills within two miles of Chautauqua Lake affecting migratory birds.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
New York]
The Vermont Public Service Board has issued a certificate of public good for the Deerfield Wind Project, but the work must still be approved by the U.S. Forest Service.
"They've cleared a major hurdle, but there's still a good bit of the race left to run," Meg Mitchell, supervisor of the Green Mountain National Forest, said Tuesday.
Wind farm deliberations to wrap up on April 29
April 24, 2009 by Edith Tucker in Coos County Democrat
April 24, 2009 by Edith Tucker in Coos County Democrat
Dr. Kent also said he believed it would be important for the state Fish and Game Department and scientists from the Appalachian Mountain Club to verify - ground-truth - the condition of the 1,700 acres that would be set aside as a mitigation package to compensate for habitat loss on Mt. Kelsey and Dixville Peak.
"We need to know the details, what's really on the ground, to understand if it's "tit-for-tat" - that is, the same spruce-fir habitat that will be lost on those ridgelines," Dr. Kent said. "No evidence has been presented."
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 Landscape|
Wyoming]
Park Service warns of solar projects' impacts to Mojave Desert
April 23, 2009 by Scott Streater in New York Times
April 23, 2009 by Scott Streater in New York Times
A National Park Service official has warned the Bureau of Land Management that approving dozens of solar power plants in southern Nevada could dramatically impact water supplies across the arid region.
An estimated 63 large-scale solar projects are proposed for BLM lands in the region, and the plants are expected to use a large amount of groundwater to cool and wash solar panels.
Wind farm plan clears ‘major hurdle'; DEP OKs $130M Rollins Mountain wind farm
April 22, 2009 by Nick Sambides Jr. in Bangor Daily News
April 22, 2009 by Nick Sambides Jr. in Bangor Daily News
The Maine Department of Environmental Protection issued First Wind of Massachusetts a permit Tuesday to build a 40-turbine industrial wind site for $130 million on Rollins Mountain in Burlington, Lee, Lincoln and Winn.
"The Department finds that the applicant has demonstrated that the proposed project will provide significant tangible benefits to the host community and surrounding area,".
Concerns about the safety of birds and bats were voiced at a state hearing yesterday on a proposal to construct a wind-energy park in Coos County. ...A subcontractor for the developer conducted a study of the birds and bats in the project area, but Don Kent, a member of the site committee and the Natural Heritage Board, said it was inadequate.
A "wind farm" that would take advantage of the gusts that have been blowing through the Central Coast at 30 to 50 mph is moving right along despite a lawsuit filed against the county's approval of the project.
Construction won't begin for at least a year, but in the meantime officials of the developer say they are working to meet all the requirements imposed by the county with the intention of protecting the environment surrounding the "clean energy" project.
Health issues, migratory bird patterns among concerns with proposed wind farm
April 18, 2009 by Ron Giofu in The Amherstburg Echo
April 18, 2009 by Ron Giofu in The Amherstburg Echo
Town administration is expected to provide more information to council in coming weeks about the proposed South Side Wind Farm and members of council are joining members of the Advisory Committee on the Environment (ACE) with questions of their own.
Councillor Bob Pillon brought up the issue of potential health impacts ..."We need answers," said Pillon.
Renewable energy's environmental paradox; Wind and solar projects may carry costs for wildlife
April 16, 2009 by Juliet Eilperin and Steven Mufson in Washington Post
April 16, 2009 by Juliet Eilperin and Steven Mufson in Washington Post
The SunZia transmission line that would link sun and wind power from central New Mexico with cities in Arizona is just the sort of energy project an environmentalist could love -- or hate. And it is just the sort of line the Interior Department has been tasked with promoting -- or guarding against.
If built, the 460-mile line would carry about 3,000 megawatts of power, enough to avoid the need for a handful of coal-fired plants and to help utilities meet mandated targets for use of renewable fuel.
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