Category:
New Mexico
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape]
N.M. power up for grabs; Company wants to access various energy sources in New Mexico
November 1, 2009 by Elva Österreich in Alamogordo Daily News
November 1, 2009 by Elva Österreich in Alamogordo Daily News
Moving renewable energy resources from where they could be produced to where they have a market is the goal of one of the biggest electric transmission projects conceived of in the United States.
The name of the project is SunZia Southwest and what the company wants to do is take a fiber cable 460 miles from the southeastern New Mexico area to the Phoenix area. ...The ballpark figure for the completed power transmission line is $1.5 billion, Crane said. "This is a very big project," Crane said. "It is important to understand the primary purpose is to enable renewable resources.
Also filed under [
Transmission]
SunZia power transmission line could run through White Sands, Las Cruces
October 27, 2009 by Steve Ramirez in Silver City Sun-News
October 27, 2009 by Steve Ramirez in Silver City Sun-News
A power transmission line that could be the first in the United States to transport renewable energy might pass through Las Cruces and White Sands Missile Range, according to preliminary plans of the SunZia Transmission Project.
A public scoping meeting was conducted Monday at Court Youth Center to provide interested residents with information about the project. Plans call for wind energy generated in east-central New Mexico, near Clovis, to be transported 460 to 560 miles to a substation in south-central Arizona.
Also filed under [
Transmission|
Arizona]
Bayshore environmental group the Hazlet Area Quality of Life Alliance (HAQLA) is opposing a proposal that would place a 380-foot-tall windmill near a residential area along the coastline.
HAQLA President John M. Curran III has written to the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) and the Monmouth County Freeholders in opposition to the wind turbine project proposed for Union Beach ...Curran calls for a countywide moratorium on wind towers/turbines "until the county and towns establish effective, controlling ordinances and regulations" governing renewable energy projects.
Should the lesser prairie chicken become listed as threatened or endangered - and it's close now - there would be significant restrictions on companies hoping to plant towering turbines across a five-state region believed to have some of the nation's best wind energy potential.
"We've never seen the likes of this," said Texas Parks and Wildlife Department wildlife biologist Heather Whitlaw, who is part of conservation efforts with the other states and believes the bird could be listed within two years. "Anybody who puts anything on our landscape would be evaluated in one form or another."
Mike Newman from First Southwest Company in Dallas, an investment banking firm that specializes in public finance, told commissioners at their special meeting earlier this month wind farms in northern areas of the county appears to be on horizon. He explained the advantages of an ordinance, the use of industrial revenue bonds for financing a project and providing tax breaks, and the dollar savings of coordinating with a neighboring county.
Also filed under [
General]
Under state regulations, utility companies in New Mexico must produce 20 percent of total energy needs from renewable resources by 2020, at least 20 percent of that from wind.
For all the support of wind energy, some people still worry about the impact of a string of massive wind farms across New Mexico. They believe the rules governing wind farm placement need to carefully consider the impacts.
Also filed under [
General]
Santa Fe County installed a 12-kilowatt wind turbine at its newly constructed Public Works facility last October. But the machine is not up and running yet.
Community Project Division Director Paul Olafson said the 100-foot-tall windmill is ready to start providing power to the new Public Works building and back into the power grid "pending a windy day." Public Service Company of New Mexico inspectors need to see the turbine in action before they can certify that it's safe to connect it to the power grid.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
The proposed SunZia Southwest Transmission Project seeks to deliver wind-generated electricity to western area markets and load centers. The proposed parallel lines would run through federal, state and private lands. ...According to a U.S. Bureau of Land Management news release, SunZia's proposed route for the 460-mile lines would originate at a substation to be constructed in Socorro County or nearby Lincoln County.
Wind-testing towers removed after county threatens court
June 30, 2009 by Matthew van Buren in The Taos News
June 30, 2009 by Matthew van Buren in The Taos News
Two wind-testing towers came down this week after Taos County threatened to prosecute Taos Wind Power if it did not remove them.
One located on private property approximately 8.2 miles southeast of Tres Piedras and another 3.5 miles north of Tres Piedras, the towers were approved by the county Dec. 4, 2007.
Also filed under [
General]
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.
Fueling controversy: As researchers debate wind turbine impact, residents want more study
January 10, 2009 by Staci Matlock in Santa Fe New Mexican
January 10, 2009 by Staci Matlock in Santa Fe New Mexican
Wind power offers the potential of clean, inexhaustible, if intermittent, energy.
But where to site wind turbines in relation to homes and communities is a major and growing point of controversy around the world and in the U.S.
Here's why.
Wind chill: Rural residents worry about impact of lightly regulated industry
January 10, 2009 by Staci Matlock in Santa Fe New Mexican
January 10, 2009 by Staci Matlock in Santa Fe New Mexican
More turbines are in windy New Mexico's future, making many renewable energy advocates cheer. ...But a battle is brewing over where wind energy facilities should be built in New Mexico, and the first battleground is in rural villages. ...Hugh Ley, a former San Miguel County commissioner, said it is critical for counties to have specific ordinances for wind energy facilities. "Otherwise they will be making arbitrary and capricious decisions based on which way the wind is blowing," he said.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape]
The potential impacts of placing such tall wind turbines near communities was among topics at a meeting Tuesday in Santa Fe hosted by two community groups concerned about large-scale, wind-energy farms proposed in New Mexico.
More than 50 people - among them rural residents, clean energy advocates and state officials - packed a room at the State Library.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy]
In a heated meeting that lasted until 11 p.m. Tuesday, the Taos County Planning Commission approved variances for a proposed wind farm, contrary to the county planning staff's recommendation.
The commission voted 5-2 to grant Taos attorney and Centinel Bank founder Eliu Romero height and landscape variances and a major land-development permit for a 27-turbine wind farm west of Taos.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
The city's planning and zoning commission is recommending to the city commission an ordinance regulating residential wind turbines within city limits.
The Planning and Zoning Commission discussed the proposal Wednesday during its monthly meeting. ...The ordinance includes regulation of tower height and design standards. The ordinance also requires a building permit to construct a wind energy system on residential property.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Living off the grid doesn't necessarily mean you want to live next to a wind farm, even if it is designed to generate electrical power from a renewable energy source.
A well-known Taos attorney's proposal to develop a wind farm has angered some residents near the site, including people in the Cielito Lindo subdivision, where homes rely primarily on solar energy.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
A Chicago-based energy company has signed a two-year option on more than 7,000 acres of state trust land on a mesa top in San Miguel County for a potential wind farm.
Some residents oppose the plan by Invenergy to place up to 50 wind turbines on the mesa that borders radio shock jock Don Imus' ranch off Interstate 25 near Bernal.
Mark Jacobson, director of business development for Invenergy, said the company is still completing environmental studies required by the State Land Office and must obtain approval for the project from San Miguel County.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on People]
Commission discusses proposed wind turbine ordinance
October 7, 2008 by Gabriel Monte in Clovis News Journal
October 7, 2008 by Gabriel Monte in Clovis News Journal
Commission Chairman Tom Martin said the need for an ordinance addressing wind turbines surfaced because the city Building Safety Department has received numerous inquiries from residents who want to install wind towers on their properties.
The ordinance regulates the allowable height of wind towers and appropriate the square acreage of properties where they could be installed.
"We just didn't want them in the center of town," said Department Director Pete Wilt.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
According to the loyal opposition's attorneys, the proponents "slipshod" application was short on facts and long on "trust us" promises. Due to the major development status of the projected $150 million wind turbine field and a lack of information and time to digest it, the P&Zers voted to continue the hearing until Dec. 9.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
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