News
Category:
Texas
WNDMILL: Plan to relay wind energy via lattice towers at issue
July 18, 2009 by Jerry Lackey in San Angelo Standard-Times
July 18, 2009 by Jerry Lackey in San Angelo Standard-Times
The Competitive Renewable Energy Zone transmission lines proposed to pass through West and Central Texas have a number of ranchers and small town dwellers up in arms about the effect the 200-foot-tall lattice towers would have on the scenic Texas Hill Country.
The Lower Colorado River Authority-Transmission Services Corp. proposes to construct three new, double-circuit, bundled conductor, 345-kilovolt transmission lines, primarily on double-circuit-capable lattice structures.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Landscape]
Plans for offshore wind farm near SPI elicit mixed reaction
July 18, 2009 by Corey Ryan in Valley Morning Star
July 18, 2009 by Corey Ryan in Valley Morning Star
The office announced Thursday that it has reached an agreement with Baryonyx Corp., a Houston-based green energy company, that could turn waters off the island coast into the nation's biggest wind farm.
Baryonyx Corp. was the sole bidder for the right to build a wind farm off the island's eastern shore, GLO spokesman Jim Suydam said.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Landscape]
Transmission line debates: wind here, towers somewhere else
July 18, 2009 by Amanda Casanova in Abilene Reporter News
July 18, 2009 by Amanda Casanova in Abilene Reporter News
Karlen Hardy's home on Farm Road 126 is built with a panel of glass windows to give her the best view of the hills.
"During the daylight, I see the generators, and at night I see the red lights," Hardy said. "It looks like alien spaceships coming through the window.
"The lines will totally destroy our view," she added.
But Catherine Cuellar, Oncor spokeswoman, said the importance of the transmission lines outweighs the aesthetic worries.
"I definitely think that as time passes, the visual impact diminishes," she said.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on People]
All Austinites may soon shoulder extra green energy costs
July 17, 2009 by Marty Toohey in Austin American-Statesman
July 17, 2009 by Marty Toohey in Austin American-Statesman
Austin's electric utility could soon reverse a long-standing practice of selling wind, solar and other renewable energy only to customers who choose to buy it, four Austin City Council members and a mayoral aide said this week.
The council's ambitious goal of getting 30 percent of the city's electricity from renewable sources by 2020 could be in jeopardy if Austin Energy relies exclusively on its landmark GreenChoice program.
Also filed under [
General]
Power line plans alarm Hill Country residents
July 17, 2009 by Zeke MacCormack in San Antonio Express-News
July 17, 2009 by Zeke MacCormack in San Antonio Express-News
Having dodged wind farms near Enchanted Rock, those intent on preserving the beauty and property values in and around this Hill Country city are now focused on power lines.
About 250 people met here Wednesday night to hear Texas Wildlife Association speakers discuss major new power lines planned to deliver electricity to metropolitan areas from huge wind farms being developed in West Texas and the Panhandle.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on People]
Austin's clean energy program costing more, selling less
July 12, 2009 by Marty Toohey in American-Statesman
July 12, 2009 by Marty Toohey in American-Statesman
For the past decade, Austin's ambition to become the world's clean-energy capital has been best exemplified by one effort: GreenChoice, a program that sells electricity generated entirely from renewable sources such as wind.
Now the nationally renowned program is struggling to find buyers - the latest allotment is 99 percent unsold after seven months on the market - and Austin Energy is looking for ways to bring down the rising costs. ...It now costs almost three times more than the standard electricity rate.
Also filed under [
General]
A sense of foreboding has engulfed this rural town since word spread that huge towers carrying power lines soon may punctuate its ruggedly beautiful landscape.
"It's a big deal to have something of that massive size come through here," Kimble County Judge Andy Murr said. "There are very few large transmission lines through the county."
Also filed under [
General]
A plan to bring energy from West Texas wind turbines to population centers in East Texas has some Hill Country residents crying foul. KUT's Mose Buchele has details on what's got them worried.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on People]
Wind Turbines and Transmission Lines carry anxiety across the Hill Country
July 8, 2009 by Vicki Wolf in Mason County News
July 8, 2009 by Vicki Wolf in Mason County News
"If you have a turbine going up near a cotton field, no problem: farmers will take money and be happy with it. But if you want to put up a turbine near Enchanted Rock, that is a different deal," says David Langford, Texas Wildlife Association's CEO and owner of a six-generation ranch in the Hill Country.
"Is the potential benefit worth the probable negative impact on scenic views, tourism and land values?" asks Robert Weatherford.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on People]
T. Boone Pickens' plan to build the world's largest wind farm is off.
Instead, Pickens said he will build five or six smaller wind farms, in the Midwest and possibly Texas, though he hasn't settled on locations.
Last year, Pickens announced that he would build a 1,000-megawatt wind farm in Pampa, Texas.
Also filed under [
General]
Monday's Commissioner's Court meeting began as usual with public forum, but a lengthy, animated discussion with members of the gallery regarding action on a proposed county tax abatement for the Senate Wind Project lasted in excess of 90 minutes.
Also filed under [
Impact on People|
Zoning/Planning]
A portion of a wind farm project in Kenedy County has been sold while the rest is up for sale.
Australia-based Babcock and Brown is keeping the operation part of the Gulf Wind project, but has sold the rights to its expansion. Initial plans called for a total of 157 wind turbines and thus far 118 are spinning.
Also filed under [
General]
County commissioners plan to tackle concerns about the construction of wind farms out near Chapman Ranch.
A concerned resident went before commissioners Wednesday saying he's concerned that wind farm companies are signing contracts with private land owners; that type of deal is not regulated by the state and would not require a public hearing.
Also filed under [
General]
About 400 landowners from Bell, Burnet, Coryell and Lampasas Counties showed up for a meeting Saturday night hoping to protect their land from an Oncor Electric Delivery Company transmission line project planned in their areas.
Oncor's project, dubbed the Newton-Killeen 345 kV Transmission Line, would require clear-cutting an approximately 20-mile long, 160-foot-wide trail to accommodate towers that would transport wind energy through Central Texas.
Also filed under [
General]
Millions of birds funnel through the Texas coast before they head north along the Central Flyway, one of the great bird migration routes between South America and the Arctic. This was the first year that wind farms were operating there during the spring migration.
One study near the coastal wind farms in Kenedy County, near the Laguna Madre, found that at the peak of fall migration in 2007, 4,000 birds an hour passed in a 1-kilometer-wide band.
Several Maxdale and Ding Dong residents are opposing a proposed power line project for aesthetic and financial reasons.
"I live in the country; nobody out here wants this," said Sherry Fisher, a landowner with 450 acres of pristine ranch land that may be disturbed by the new towers.
Two weeks ago, Oncor sent newsletters to landowners whose land could be crossed by towers.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on People]
Wind on the Texas coast is tempting for energy companies. Unlike other parts of Texas -- the nation's No. 1 wind energy state -- the coast has breezes that blow consistently on summer days, when energy demand peaks. But there's risk, too.
Millions of birds funnel through the Texas coast before they head north along the Central Flyway.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
USA]
Young County commissioners moved a step closer to reaching a tax abatement agreement with Gamesa Energy on Monday by creating a tax reinvestment zone.
The zone is a necessary step toward an abatement agreement. Games has announced it plans to build a wind farm that would be mostly in Jack County with 12 turbines extending into Young County.
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
Zoning/Planning]
Despite the attraction of wind as a nearly pollution-free power source, a Texas Tech University wildlife ecologist cautions that a tsunami of modern wind turbines dotting the South Plains of Texas could have as yet unknown ecological consequences on criti
And there are plenty of playas on the Texas High Plains and in Eastern New Mexico - approximately 22,000, in fact. Indeed, it's the largest concentration in the world. Playas act as natural water storage sites, providing irrigation water and seasonally recharging the Ogallala, the nation's largest aquifer.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Landscape]
Gamesa Energy asked Young County to expedite its proposal to put a wind farm in the county, with a representative saying getting a tax abatement in place quickly could greatly benefit the school districts.
Colin Kelly with Gamesa told commissioners the Texas Legislature was considering a bill that would cap the amount of revenue school districts can get due to wind farms.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
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