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General and Impact on Wildlife
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Direct Testimony of Jon Boone before the Public Service Commission of Maryland
September, 2005
by Jon Boone
Jon Boone is a intervenor in a Maryland Public Service Commission windpower case (No. 9008). On September 16, 2005, he formally submitted his direct testimony in this case. His testimony and attachments cover the gamut of issues surrounding the wind industry.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on People|
Impact on Economy|
Property Values|
Maryland]
Andrew Chapman's Submission re. The National Animal Welfare Bill 2005
August 16, 2005
by Andrew Chapman, Inverloch
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds|
Australia / New Zealand]
Jon Boone addresses wind power for the Mid-Atlantic region.
BBC Research & Consulting's 2005 report for the National Wind Coordinating Committee that studies 9 wind plant sitings in an effort to identify circumstances that distinguish welcomed projects from projects that were not accepted by communities.
Also filed under [
Technology|
Impact on Birds|
Impact on Bats|
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on Views|
Erosion|
Pollution|
Impact on Space|
Impact on People|
Noise|
Lighting|
Impact on Economy|
Property Values|
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
Tourism|
Safety|
Icing|
Injury|
Structural Failure|
Energy Policy|
USA]
To help guide our own internal policy on wind energy, VNRC has developed a list of criteria that we feel is appropriate to consider for wind energy development. These criteria are not exclusive to state owned land, but rather focus on developing a vision for siting wind energy infrastructure in Vermont. We have included specific considerations for State lands as well.
The goal is to integrate the need to develop new in-state sources of renewable energy with protection of existing environmental values and public policy goals.
Adam Kelly: Direct Testimony to Vermont Public Service Board on behalf of Vermont Agency of Natural Resources
December 22, 2004
by Adam Kelly
...additional radar studies would be required to see if spring migration patterns are different than those measured in the fall. Typically spring migration is shorter than fall migration with fewer numbers in the shorter period of time. How this will affect the numbers of birds passing through the rotor swept volume is unknown. It is important to determine the seasonal timing, altitude and numbers of migrant birds passing over the proposed project site and the effects of weather upon their passage over a greater part of the whole year. In addition, it is possible to determine some of the bird and bat species passing through the project site by accoustical sensors to determine which species, that make vocal calls, are migrating through the site.
So, before we proclaim victory against our profligate use of fossil fuels in the last 50 years, politicians and environmental groups might ponder the huge costs in dollars and environmental damage before 20-storey windmills festoon our coastlines, our sea lanes and our beautiful Quebec hills.
...some wind power facilities, such as
the Altamont Pass Wind Resource Area (APWRA) in eastern Alameda and Contra Costa Counties,
California, are causing severe environmental impacts to raptor populations due to bird kills from
collisions with turbines and electrocution on power lines.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds|
California]
Researched and written by Eleanor Tillinghast of Green Berkshires Inc. this is a comprehensive study of the probable impact of industrial wind plants on the rural character, quality-of-life and economy of the Berkshires in western Massachusetts. Specific issues addressed include visual aesthetics, tourism, property values, public roads and public safety.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on People|
Impact on Economy|
Property Values|
Tourism|
Massachusetts]
Wind turbines to produce electricity on a large scale – “wind farms” – are currently being proposed for parts of Tug Hill. Large-scale wind farms are a relatively new occurrence in the Northeast, and since they are new there are many questions that do not have clear answers.