Category:
Impact on Views
Environmentalists decry Black Pt. turbine plan
October 20, 2009 by Alex Kuffner in Providence Journal
October 20, 2009 by Alex Kuffner in Providence Journal
Save The Bay, the leading environmental organization in Rhode Island, is opposing a plan to erect a wind turbine at Black Point, a coastal property in Narragansett that was preserved two decades ago using state open-space bonds.
The Providence-based organization joined Tuesday with five other environmental advocacy groups - all supporters of green energy - to send a letter to Governor Carcieri that raises questions about the project. The plans being developed by the state Department of Environmental Management and the Town of Narragansett include the installation of up to six large wind turbines at various sites in the town.
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Impact on Landscape|
Rhode Island]
State agency reviewing wind developer's analysis
October 16, 2009 by Anne Adams in The Recorder Online
October 16, 2009 by Anne Adams in The Recorder Online
Late last Friday, before a hearing scheduled for Tuesday this week, Highland New Wind Development submitted further analysis of its wind project to the Virginia Department of Historic Resources.
The hearing was set by the State Corporation Commission following a complaint from DHR that a condition attached to HNWD's state permit for Virginia's first wind utility were not being met. DHR said it believed the SCC's condition to "coordinate with DHR for guidance regarding the potential need for archaeological and architectural surveys, recommended studies and field
surveys to evaluate the project's impacts to historic resources," had meaning, and that HNWD was not coordinating with the agency as ordered.
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Impact on Landscape|
Virginia]
The SCC had scheduled the hearing on a complaint from the Virginia Department of Historic Resources, which had accused Highland New Wind Development of failing to consult with it on how the wind farm will affect the nearby Camp Allegheny battlefield.
But on Friday, Highland New Wind provided two preliminary studies to the Department of Historic Resources, according to a motion filed with the SCC late in the day.
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Impact on Landscape|
Virginia]
Pioneering wind farm faces another delay, this time over Indian sites
October 5, 2009 by Evan Lehmann in New York Times
October 5, 2009 by Evan Lehmann in New York Times
Final approval for Cape Wind is stalled, aggravating developers of the Massachusetts offshore wind project and igniting concerns that the latest roadblock -- over American Indian ceremonies -- could jeopardize other ocean-based energy proposals. ..."There's great concern. It should have been finished months ago," said Mark Rodgers, a spokesman for Cape Wind, noting that the delay is disrupting efforts to arrange construction contracts, line up installation barges and find buyers for the anticipated electricity.
Big name backing has come forward in opposition to two proposed wind farms at Spaldington who claim the turbines would be "visually horrific, inappropriate and ineffective".
Throwing their weight behind the STOP (Spaldington Turbines Opposition Project) group is not only Howden and Haltemprice MP David Davies but MEP Godfrey Bloom and international best-selling author Frederick Forsyth. ...David Davis told the Courier this week: "Both of these proposed wind farms would seriously blight the lives of people who live nearby.
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Impact on Landscape|
UK]
Virginia to consider visual impact in wind turbine approval
September 29, 2009 by Geoff Hamill in The Pocahontas Times
September 29, 2009 by Geoff Hamill in The Pocahontas Times
The company planning an industrial wind facility on Tamarack Ridge didn't want to talk about visual impact on Camp Allegheny when it seeks approval to build the 19 gigantic turbines.
But a Virginia State Corporation Commission (SCC) hearing examiner ordered on September 23 that visual impact will be considered when the SCC hears arguments over the company's compliance with permit conditions.
SCC gives go-ahead to Highland County wind farm foes
September 24, 2009 by Michael Sluss in Roanoke Times
September 24, 2009 by Michael Sluss in Roanoke Times
State regulators will consider the impact that a planned Highland County wind farm will have on a nearby Civil War battlefield, despite objections from the project's developer.
A State Corporation Commission hearing examiner ruled Wednesday that a state agency could present evidence of the visual impacts the 400-foot-tall towers would have on Camp Allegheny, a historic battlefield just across the state line in West Virginia. A hearing has been set for Oct. 13.
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Impact on Landscape|
Virginia]
While Virginia's State Corporation Commission starts hearing legal arguments this week about the actions of Highland New Wind Development, officials and citizens are telling Richmond officials that Camp Allegheny, the nearby battlefield, needs to be protected from the 19-tower project. ...Allegheny is part of an historic and scenic landscape that belongs to the American people Highland New Wind Development may be located in Virginia and Camp Allegheny in West Virginia, but it is the citizens of the entire country who stand to lose if the 400-foot tall, 285 foot wide turbines are allowed to be built where they are currently sited.
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Impact on Landscape|
Virginia]
Highland Wind motion denied; Battlefield impacts relevant in Oct. 13 SCC hearing
September 24, 2009 by Anne Adams in The Recorder Online
September 24, 2009 by Anne Adams in The Recorder Online
Highland New Wind Development filed a motion Friday, Sept. 18 to exclude any discussion of Camp Allegheny Battlefield from a state hearing originally set for Wednesday.
Attorneys for HNWD, the Virginia Department of Historic Resources, and the State Corporation Commission argued for an hour before SCC hearing examiner Alexander Skirpan in Richmond. Skirpan denied HNWD's motion, and rescheduled the original hearing on DHR's allegations against the developer for Tuesday, Oct. 13.
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Impact on Landscape|
Virginia]
Community opinions beginning to form on turbines
August 21, 2009 by Juley Harvey in Estes Park Trail-Gazette
August 21, 2009 by Juley Harvey in Estes Park Trail-Gazette
Community development director Bob Joseph told the Estes Valley Planning commissioners Tuesday night that a public meeting held last Thursday night regarding residential wind turbine regulations has led to some useful discussions.
"We're starting to see people's opinions form," he said. "We're hearing them. We will continue with this effort to get some kind of code adopted during the moratorium."
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Impact on People|
Colorado]
Aberdeenshire councillors were cheered when they agreed to throw out plans for a windfarm on a scenically important hill between the Don and Dee valleys.
The response came from campaigners opposed to a Welsh company's plans, attending a meeting at the Stewart's Hall in Huntly on Tuesday.
Members of the Marr Area Committee accepted the view of their planners that the proposed wind turbines would have an unacceptable impact, on a sensitive site, close to the Cairngorms National Park.
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Impact on Landscape|
UK]
Wind farms are becoming a familiar site along Wyoming's interstates and highways.
Residents know wind development is out there and that there is a lot of it. What they do not know is how the industry will alter the state's landscape in the future.
Nearly 600 letters of objection have been sent to Aberdeenshire Council calling for the refusal of plans for seven wind turbines on the ridge of Pressendye hill, near Cushnie.
Council planners have agreed with objectors and recommended the proposal for refusal over fears that the 410ft turbines would have "unacceptable adverse visual impacts" on the surrounding countryside.
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Impact on Landscape|
UK]
"Wyoming is not only a recipient for proposals for transmission, we're also (electricity) generators," Lahti said.
And wind turbines, which can reach 400 feet, will dominate the views in parts of Wyoming unless state and federal governments, historical preservation organizations, tribes and industry avoid cluttering the landscape before they build, he said.
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Impact on Landscape|
Wyoming]
Got wind turbines? Helpful website provides custom viewsheds
August 12, 2009 by Geoff Hamill in Pocahontas Times
August 12, 2009 by Geoff Hamill in Pocahontas Times
Giant wind turbines are coming close to Pocahontas County and many residents are curious if the windmills will be visible from their homes.
A helpful website with a strange name lets you find out with just a few clicks of the mouse.
Heywhatsthat.com works in conjunction with Google Maps and provides custom viewsheds from any point on the globe.
The man who says Palmerston North is on the verge of saturation point from wind turbines has come under fire for his methodology.
The Turitea Wind Farm board of inquiry hearing resumed yesterday, and after giving evidence earlier in the proceedings, social impact assessment specialist James Baines returned to the witness stand.
The board is tasked with deciding if the 121-turbine wind farm should go ahead.
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Impact on Landscape|
Australia / New Zealand]
New hope for ‘devastating' wind farm campaigners
August 10, 2009 by Stephen Hurrell in Click Green
August 10, 2009 by Stephen Hurrell in Click Green
The wind farm has faced opposition from environmental groups Plans for a massive Shetland Islands wind farm which campaigners believe will have a devastating effect on the environment could be blocked by a landmark report.
A report by the Scottish Parliament last week warned of the "significant adverse" impact of another wind farm on Lewis in the Hebrides.
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Impact on Landscape|
UK]
It is a baroque masterpiece designed by one of the world's greatest architects and among the north of Scotland's biggest tourist attractions.
Looming above are pieces of 21st-century engineering kit that rise to 330 feet above the skyline.
Now, Scotland's cultural watchdog, Historic Scotland, has been accused of failing to protect the 18th-century Duff House from the effects of massive wind turbines.
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Impact on Landscape|
UK]
Woodbury homeowner associations an obstacle to city's hopes for alternative energy
August 8, 2009 by Bob Shaw in Pioneer Press
August 8, 2009 by Bob Shaw in Pioneer Press
Woodbury wanted to think green.
But now, it is having to think again.
The city's ambitious plans to promote renewable energy are hitting a wall that is blocking green efforts coast-to-coast - homeowners' associations.
The associations are fighting city efforts to allow solar panels and wind turbines. ...Because associations control about 70 percent of the homes in Woodbury, the resistance of the associations could cripple alternative-energy efforts.
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Impact on Landscape|
Minnesota]
Landmark report bounces wind farm plans and sets a precedent for scenic areas
August 7, 2009 in GreenWire.org.uk
August 7, 2009 in GreenWire.org.uk
Isle of Lewis is an area of outstanding beauty Conservation campaigners have welcomed a Scottish Parliament report that has slated plans for Lewis wind farm because it would destroy the scenic view. ...The Report - commissioned by Scottish Ministers - concluded: "Support for renewable energy development and the need to protect and enhance Scotland's natural and historic environment must be regarded as compatible goals.
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Impact on Landscape|
UK]
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