Category:
Pennsylvania
Two Fayette County commissioners voted to sign an agreement Thursday that addresses neighbors concerns regarding the location of wind turbines in a $100 million project proposed for Wharton, Georges and Springhill townships.
Commissioners Vincent Zapotosky and Vincent A. Vicites voted to sign the agreement between PPM Atlantic Renewable Energy Corp./Iberdrola Renewables, the county and property owners that petitioned the court to be included in the case. Commissioner Angela M. Zimmerlink voted against the action, saying she doesn't believe the commissioners have the authority to approve changes to the proposed project.
Also filed under [
Impact on People|
Zoning/Planning]
Logan Township Supervisors heard a request from Gamesa Energy USA Thursday evening for an overlay expansion to its proposed wind farm in the Chestnut Flats area.
The board unanimously directed the request to the township Planning Commission for review and discussion.
Chairman Frank Meloy said he would like to know who will be able to see the windmills from their homes.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
During the agenda meeting, Commissioners Vincent Zapotosky and Vincent A. Vicites voted to place a motion on Thursday's agenda to approve an agreement between PPM Atlantic Renewable Energy Corp./Iberdrola Renewables, the county and property owners that petitioned the court to be included in the case. Commissioner Angela M. Zimmerlink voted against the action, saying she doesn't believe the commissioners have the authority to approve changes to the proposed project.
Zapotosky said the agreement eliminates one of the proposed sites and also does not include any mention of a scholarship fund funded by PPM and administered by the county that was part of a prior agreement.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
With at least two energy companies eying area ridge tops for construction of massive wind turbines, the Potter County Board of Commissioners has plenty to think about before putting its final approval on amendments to the county's Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance.
At least 125 people crowded into the courtroom last Thursday night, the majority attending to learn, rather than speak, during the two-hour public hearing.
Also filed under [
General|
Zoning/Planning]
While the open sky is big enough for 400-foot-high wind turbines and migratory birds, animal conservationists are airing their concerns about the threat windmills pose to wildlife.
"Any place thinking about installation (of wind turbines) should take years studying the issue," Keith Bildstein, director of conservation science at Hawk Mountain Sanctuary, said Friday. "That is a prescription the wind industry apparently finds distasteful."
Bildstein and other local conservationists and bird-watchers say the wind industry fails to adequately study bird migration patterns before wind projects break ground.
Three Pennsylvania men have filed a federal lawsuit against a Spanish wind turbine manufacturer, saying that they were illegally replaced by younger workers.
The three also claim the company gave Spanish workers preferential treatment. ...Their federal lawsuit filed in Johnstown says the men were all replaced by younger employees and that two of the three replacements were also Spaniards.
Also filed under [
General]
Tyrone Borough Council opts to have its watershed property evaluated
September 9, 2008 by Kris Yaniello in Tyrone PA
September 9, 2008 by Kris Yaniello in Tyrone PA
...the evaluation will trace the root of the water to its origin, beginning at the bottom of the drainage and then walk up the stream valley taking length and depth measurements of the water sources. All of the measurements will have GPS coordinates, and the key product will be map based.
"We'll take that information and be able to craft plans to protect the water," said Casselberry. "We're trying to increase protection."
Ultimately, the complete two-phase evaluation would map out the watershed and show where natural gas drilling and wind turbine construction could be done, or it will show that one or the other, or both, can't be done.
Also filed under [
General]
Company seeks help harnessing power of sun, wind
September 8, 2008 by Dom Cosentino in Bucks County Courier Times
September 8, 2008 by Dom Cosentino in Bucks County Courier Times
An Upper Moreland company is seeking a $1 million state grant to develop a combination solar and wind turbine that it is touting as "the world's first hybrid renewable energy technology."
Precision Assembly Inc., on the 2300 block of Computer Avenue, is partnering with Bluenergy Solarwind Inc., to develop the turbines, which would harness both wind and solar energy and would be sold to owners of commercial or residential buildings to provide clean energy, according to Paul Stepanoff, the company's chief executive officer.
Also filed under [
Technology]
Officials say it's too early to tell if turbine works well
September 7, 2008 by Sam Allen in Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
September 7, 2008 by Sam Allen in Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
The wind turbine in Pine erected two months ago to help power the township's new community center has not had any major problems, director of land development Larry Kurpakus said, but it may be too early to definitively call the turbine project a success.
The turbine cannot turn without winds of 10 mph or stronger, and it has only operated sporadically this summer.
Also filed under [
General]
Washington Township puts limits on wind turbines; Law targets height, location and number per property
September 5, 2008 by Andrew C. Martel in The Morning Call
September 5, 2008 by Andrew C. Martel in The Morning Call
Washington Township, Lehigh County, officials see wind power as a potentially clean and affordable source of energy.
They also worry that it could be ugly and unneighborly.
Earlier this week, township supervisors voted to limit where residents can set up wind turbines on their properties and restricted their height. The new ordinance also limits turbines to one per property, and requires the energy from them to be used only by the owner, although excess power can be sold back to PPL Electric Utilities.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
The Cattaraugus County Legislature will vote on a local law next week that is expected to trigger wind farm construction proposals in some areas of the county.
The law would provide no tax exemption for alternative energy systems including wind, solar and farm waste. By opting out of tax exemptions for alternative energy systems, most notably wind farms, the law would open up the option of payments in lieu of taxes (PILOT payments) ...Legislators in July tabled a resolution to hire Hiscock & Barclay, a law firm with offices in Buffalo, to advise county lawmakers on legal issues surrounding wind farms.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Wind-turbine maker fined for emissions, poor records
August 30, 2008 by Sandy Bauers in The Inquirer
August 30, 2008 by Sandy Bauers in The Inquirer
A wind-turbine company that has been credited with bringing green jobs to Pennsylvania and restoring an abandoned Bucks County steel plant has been fined $639,161 by the state Department of Environmental Protection for problems that included emissions violations and "substantial" record-keeping lapses.
The agency announced yesterday, before a holiday weekend, that Gamesa USA had paid the fine. ... one of the biggest issues was with emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from the paints, solvents and adhesives used to make the giant blades and other components of the turbines.
Also filed under [
General]
Jackson Township resident Frank M. Piccolella Sr. said he still believes he can win the war against a wind farm proposed in northern Lycoming County. ...Piccolella filed an appeal Friday in county court asking it to overturn a decision by the county Zoning Hearing Board that cleared the way for Vermont-based Laurel Hill Wind Energy LLC to build up to 35 electricity-generating wind turbines on the Laurel Hill ridge in Jackson and McIntyre townships.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Specter stops in Bedford, Johnstown; Alternative energy hot topic of the day
August 27, 2008 by Jessica VanderKolk in Altoona Mirror
August 27, 2008 by Jessica VanderKolk in Altoona Mirror
"We've been really derelict," Specter said of Congress' response to the energy issue. "We're gonna have to go to alternate forms of energy, and I've been supporting that."
Virginia Deeter from Somerset County told Specter her home of 30 years soon would sit between two wind turbine facilities: one 1,400 feet away from her back door and the other 1,800 feet away from her front door.
"Our home is going to be worthless," she said she was told by real estate agents. "Where do we turn?"
Also filed under [
Impact on People|
Energy Policy]
Spanish wind turbine company Gamesa Inc. announced Friday that it is laying off 28 workers in its Falls tower production facility as it winds down its tower business, which will be handled by subcontractors in the future.
Since it opened in 2006, Gamesa has produced towers, blades and turbines at three plants in the Keystone Industrial Port Complex in Falls. But it is negotiating with five potential subcontractors interested in taking over the tower production at the KIPC.
Also filed under [
General]
Farmer says possibility of power line on his land 'like a punch to the gut'
August 24, 2008 by Joshua Bowman in Herald Mail
August 24, 2008 by Joshua Bowman in Herald Mail
One week after moving in, Loudenslager found out that a swath of the farm where cows graze and alfalfa grows soon could be cleared to make way for a high-voltage power line.
"It's like a punch to the gut," Loudenslager said. "This is where I've wanted to be my whole life."
Loudenslager's farm north of Boonsboro sits on one of several routes that have been suggested for the Potomac Appalachian Transmission Highline (PATH), which would run from St. Albans, W.Va., through Bedington, W.Va., to Kemptown, Md., in Frederick County.
Pa. judges recommend against power line
August 23, 2008 by Garren Shipley in Northern Virginia Daily
August 23, 2008 by Garren Shipley in Northern Virginia Daily
Virginia may have given a controversial power line an initial "yes," but Pennsylvania has given it an initial "no."
In a ruling released late Thursday, regulatory judges in Pennsylvania recommended that the state's Public Utilities Commission deny applications from Allegheny Power and Dominion Virginia power to build the Trans-Allegheny Interstate Line.
A hearing examiner for the Virginia State Corporation Commission has recommended approval for the controversial power line, but only on the condition that West Virginia and Pennsylvania also sign off on the plan.
Massive power line project not needed, PUC judges say
August 20, 2008 by Rick Stouffer in Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
August 20, 2008 by Rick Stouffer in Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
After reviewing thousands of pages of testimony and comments from numerous public hearings, Judges Mark A. Hoyer and Michael A. Nemec in a 364-page document said Allegheny Energy, through its transmission line subsidiary TrAILCo had "failed to carry the burden of truth" for the entire 240-mile project.
"Based on our review of the entire record, we have concluded that little or no need for reinforcement in the Prexy service area presently exists," the judges wrote.
Windmills, power lines, loss of view draw worry
August 20, 2008 by Robert L. Baker in Wyoming County Press Examiner
August 20, 2008 by Robert L. Baker in Wyoming County Press Examiner
If someone were to tell Doug Tewksbury or Tom Baisley to go jump off a cliff, they'd probably seize the moment
That is, of course, if they were at their favorite launch spot on the top of Mehoopany Mountain.
The weekend warriors who can't seem to get paragliding out of their blood are part of a small yet growing group of individuals who are worried.
They're worried that BPAlternative Energy's plan to put an 85-90 wind turbine park in the southern part of Wyoming County will not only spoil their fun, but also disrupt the peace and solitude that the sleepy Endless Mountains have enjoyed for centuries.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on People]
Wind farm firm looking for land in Clearfield County
August 15, 2008 by Kimberly Finnigan in Tri-County Sunday
August 15, 2008 by Kimberly Finnigan in Tri-County Sunday
The push for alternative energy sources continues in Clearfield County.
Although plans are only in the beginning stages, Iberdrola Renewables is looking to build a wind farm between the north Rockton and Luthersburg areas.
Craig Poff, senior project developer, and Paul Copleman, communications manager for Iberdrola Renewables' King of Prussia offices, said the company, which originated in Spain, is best known for its wind energy.
Also filed under [
General]
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