News
Category:
USA and Virginia
Browse in :
All
> Location
> USA
(1271)
All > Location > USA > Virginia (276)
Any of these categories
All > Location > USA > Virginia (276)
Any of these categories
A U.S. congressman has added his voice to those who seek to protect Camp Allegheny, the Civil War battlefield now considered endangered by the industrial wind energy utility under construction nearby.
Congressman Nick J. Rahall II (D-3rd District) of Beckley represents 17 counties in West Virginia, including Pocahontas County, where the battleground lies.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
West Virginia]
House rejects amendment to stop power lines
June 21, 2007 by Kimberly Hefling, Associated Press in Times Argus
June 21, 2007 by Kimberly Hefling, Associated Press in Times Argus
WASHINGTON - The House rejected a resolution Wednesday that would block government plans to spur construction of major new power lines in many states regardless of local opposition.
The issue has been contentious in parts of the East Coast and in the Southwest, where two high priority transmission corridors for power lines were proposed. Rep. Frank Wolf, R-Va., warned colleagues that unwanted power lines could come to their district.
Also filed under [
General|
Energy Policy|
Arizona|
California|
Delaware|
Maryland|
Nevada|
New Jersey|
New York|
Ohio|
Pennsylvania]
U.Va. Environmental Scientist Advocates Impact Assessments for Wind Energy Projects
June 5, 2007 in UVa Today
June 5, 2007 in UVa Today
Imagine 3,500 wind turbines, each at least as tall as a 40-story building, lining the ridges of Virginia's mountains for about 400 miles (Shenandoah National Park is 100 miles in length). That is what would be needed, according to a U.Va. environmental scientist, to satisfy proposed legislation to make nine percent of Virginia's energy "renewable" by 2020.
Rick Webb doesn't want to imagine it, nor would he allow it if it were up to him. "On-shore wind energy will do little to solve our energy problems in Virginia, but will possibly do significant harm to our environment," he said.
Webb's take: while wind energy may be a partial solution to what he sees as an energy crisis, the electricity produced by turbines built atop pristine Appalachian ridges won't make enough of a meaningful contribution to offset their environmental harm.
Also filed under [
General|
Energy Policy]
How green is nuclear power?
March 7, 2007 by Mark Clayton, Staff writer in The Christian Science Monitor
March 7, 2007 by Mark Clayton, Staff writer in The Christian Science Monitor
Some call it a carbon-free alternative to fossil fuels, but others point to significant environmental costs.
In Kansas, where winds blow strong, the push for clean energy includes not only new wind turbines but also new nuclear-power plants as part of a "carbon-free" solution to climate change.
It's an idea that may be catching on. At least 11 new nuclear plants are in the design stage in nine states, including Virginia, Texas, and Florida, according to the Nuclear Energy Institute website.
But that carbon-free pitch has researchers asking anew: How carbon-free is nuclear power? And how cost-effective is it in the fight to slow global warming?
"Saying nuclear is carbon-free is not true," says Uwe Fritsche, a researcher at the Öko Institut in Darmstadt, Germany, who has conducted a life-cycle analysis of the plants. "It's less carbon-intensive than fossil fuel. But if you are honest, scientifically speaking, the truth is: There is no carbon-free energy. There's no free lunch."
Details and a registration form are available at the link below for the Wildlife and Wind Energy Conference to be held on Saturday, December 2, 2006 at Kutztown University in Kutztown, PA USA.
Areas of power grid congestion ID'd
August 8, 2006 by H. Josef Hebert, Associated Press in chron.com
August 8, 2006 by H. Josef Hebert, Associated Press in chron.com
WASHINGTON — Southern California and the urban centers from Northern Virginia to New York face the most critical power grid problems, but such remote areas as Montana and the Dakotas may need new transmission lines in the near future, an Energy Department report warns.
Wind energy committee gathers on Wednesday
December 8, 2005 by Anne Adams • Staff Writer in The Recorder (VA)
December 8, 2005 by Anne Adams • Staff Writer in The Recorder (VA)
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Virginia Highlanders following the debate on the impacts of commercial wind turbine projects may want to head next door to West Virginia next Wednesday.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
West Virginia]