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ELLENSBURG - A 500-square-mile zone on Kittitas County's east end was approved by county commissioners on Wednesday as an area pre-identified as compatible for wind farm development.
The zone stretches along the Columbia River and the county's southeast border. Final approval of the new zone is expected to come 3 p.m. July 19 when final documents are signed. Commissioner Chairman Alan Crankovich on Thursday said commissioners approved the addition of wording to the zone that would indicate that wind farm developers also must gain approval for their projects from private, state and federal landowners in the area. This includes the U.S. Defense Department that owns Yakima Training Center lands administered by the U.S. Army and Fort Lewis.
"I'm not as optimistic as my fellow commissioners are on the availability of state, federal and military lands for wind farms," Crankovich said.
He said he doesn't want creation of the zone to give wind farm companies "false hope" that they can easily site a project in the zone.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
A state siting board will hear comments today to consider whether new setbacks should be required for the Kittitas Valley Wind Power Project.
The Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council will hold two sessions today, from 3-5 p.m. and 6:30-9:30 p.m., at the Teanaway Hall, Kittitas County Event Center, in Ellensburg.
In May, EFSEC recommended Gov. Chris Gregoire to approve the project, allowing up to 65 wind turbines to be built by Horizon Wind Energy of Houston along ridges on either side of Highway 97 outside of Ellensburg. The turbines would be the size of old-growth firs and have propeller blades up to 145 feet long.
However, the governor asked for the setbacks to be reconsidered by EFSEC, which had required setbacks of four times the height of the turbines for non-participating residences.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Construction is proceeding on the 205 megawatt (MW) White Creek Wind Project in Klickitat County, Washington, due to the successful completion of financing. All local and state permits have been issued for the windfarm, which is located on 9,500 acres of ranchland, 21 miles east of Goldendale. Operation is expected in late 2007 or early 2008.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
A Mighty Wind Is Pushing U.S. Renewable Energy Success
July 24, 2007 in Consulting-Specifying Engineer
July 24, 2007 in Consulting-Specifying Engineer
The United States is expected to be home to an anticipated 49,000 MW of installed wind-power capacity by 2015, making it the world's largest wind-power producer, according to a recent report. Developers are expected to invest more than $65 billion between 2007 and 2015 in wind-power facilities, researchers say.
ELLENSBURG -- The wind blows so hard over these desert ridges that it topples outhouses. It whistles through the high steel towers strung with cables that carry electricity west to light the cities of Puget Sound.
The hills west of Ellensburg, then, would seem an ideal spot for giant wind turbines to help quench the Northwest's thirst for clean, home-grown energy.
Instead, they have become a battleground as some locals and Kittitas County officials square off against environmentalists and wind-power companies over putting towering generators near rural homes that dot these hills and valleys.
Now the fivc-year-old debate has reached all the way to the governor's office, elevating this beyond a classic not-in-my-backyard tale in a sparsely populated county. The outcome of this fight could set a precedent for future fights over wind power in the state as demand continues to mount.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Denver-based Invenergy Wind LLC has options to lease or buy land 20 to 25 miles east of Ellensburg for a wind farm project, located between Vantage Highway and Interstate 90.
The company, part of the larger Chicago-based power-generation company Invenergy, has environmental, wind, habitat and wildlife studies under way at this time at the site, according to Doug Carter, vice president of development for the company's western region.
“We have, so far, viewed the location as a good site for wind-power generation,” Carter said. “We intend to keep developing the site.”
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Chicago-based Invenergy Wind North America applied on Wednesday with Kittitas County to construct a $250 million, 69-turbine wind farm sandwiched between Vantage Highway and Interstate 90 southeast of the existing Wild Horse Wind Power Project on the east end of the county. ...By utilizing the county's pre-identified wind farm zone, the company will likely expedite the approval process.
"I'm estimating that public hearings before the county commissioners on the project could come as early as December," Piercy said.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
Zoning/Planning]
For a second time, a Washington state agency has recommended that the governor approve a proposed central Washington wind farm over the objections of Kittitas County citizens and officials.
The state Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council had recommended that Gov. Chris Gregoire approve the Kittitas Valley Wind Power Project in March, but Gregoire asked the council to reconsider whether the turbines should be set farther away from land owned by others.
Neighboring landowners and local officials have argued against the project for five years, saying it will have negative environmental and visual impacts.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
On Aug. 21, when afternoon temperatures in Washington state soared, Avista Corp.’s (AVA) utility division asked customers to cut their electricity use while it scoured the region for power supplies. Utility operators were frustrated, in part, because the company’s supply of wind power was producing nothing, thanks to a lack of wind.
Avista wasn’t alone. Throughout the West during that August heat wave, a growing fleet of windmills met triple-digit temperatures with impotence. California’s grid operator was serving up a record amount of power that afternoon, too, while its 2,850 MW of wind turbines were churning out just 112 MW.......What can all these windmills do to help prevent a blackout in a heat wave? Utilities’ estimates of that range widely. When figuring out how to keep the lights on during the coming summer’s hottest day, PJM pencils in 20% of wind capacity for serving peak load. The California Independent System Operator figures 5% will be there. For Texas, which has more windmills than any other state, Ercot counts on just 2.6% of capacity. Avista, like many utilities operating their own grid, doesn’t count on any wind power during the summer peak. As more windmills come on line, overestimating could mean a blackout, while underestimating could mean paying a lot of money for unneeded standby generators.
Also filed under [
Technology|
Energy Policy]
VANCOUVER, Wash. - The Port of Vancouver has unveiled a new $3.3 million mobile harbor crane.
The crane is capable of lifting 140 metric tons. Port officials say it was purchased in part to unload the blades and hubs of giant wind turbines for Pacific Northwest wind farms.
Cost issues aside, Avista has no choice but to add new renewable sources of electricity to its portfolio. Initiative 937, approved by Washington voters in 2006, requires utilities to acquire new renewable energy resources or to buy so-called renewable energy "credits" from others so that they supply at least 15 percent of their retail load with renewable energy in 2020. I-937 requires utilities to meet biennial conservation targets beginning in 2012, and because wind-turbine farms take only about six months to build after construction begins, Avista doesn't have to erect its wind turbines right away, Silkworth says.
"Our needs don't really start until 2012; so, we're not thinking of building this thing for a few years," he says.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy]
Power company Avista Corp. (AVA.N: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Monday it opposes an initiative in Washington state requiring 15 percent of power supply to come from renewable sources, saying the measure would boost prices and that it fails to count existing hydropower.
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies]
Avista Corporation is looking to rural Lincoln County for their next big power project. But they aren't going to install a big electrical sub-station, or some high tension power lines, they're going to harness the wind. ..."Unfortunately wind is expensive, it's much more expensive than hydro, it is however cheaper than solar," said Hugh Imhof, spokesperson for Avista.
But "greener" energy comes at a cost, something that will be reflected in rate increases.
"It will be something that will be incorporated into the rate raise and it will probably mean an increase," said Imhof. "None of these things are cheap anymore."
Avista Corp. will delay building a wind farm south of Reardan by at least two years, citing the high cost of the wind turbines.
"This stuff is really expensive," said Hugh Imhof, a spokesman for the Spokane-based utility. "Why build a $125 million wind farm if we don't need it for another two years?"
Also filed under [
Impact on Views|
Oregon]
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
Energy Policy]
Behind closed doors: council ponders Desert Claim Wind Power Project
October 22, 2009 by Mike Johnston in The Daily Record
October 22, 2009 by Mike Johnston in The Daily Record
The state Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council, or EFSEC, today resumes deliberations on whether to approve the 95-turbine, $330 million Desert Claim Wind Power Project proposed for eight miles northwest of Ellensburg.
EFSEC's seven members were scheduled to gather again behind closed doors in Olympia at 1 p.m. today, according to EFSEC Manager Allen Fiksdal.
Talks of a wind farm on top of Rattlesnake Mountain in Benton County is no rumor. ...So far we know the Department of Natural Resources has signed a contract to lease 640 acres to Northwest Wind Partners.
The assistant region manager for the Department of Natural Resources could not tell us how many windmills we're talking on top of Rattlesnake Mountain.
He says the decision was made to lease the land because they support renewable energy.
Bird Group Watches For Dangerous Wind Projects
July 25, 2006 by Carol Cizauskas in Oregon Public Broadcasting
July 25, 2006 by Carol Cizauskas in Oregon Public Broadcasting
Currently, only one project is strongly opposed by Blue Mountain because of concerns for birds. It's called Windy Point, in Klickitat County in south-central Washington.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Birds]
Today the Bonneville Power Administration will install the first of fourteen anemometers to better track where and how hard the wind is blowing.
The BPA, which markets power from the Northwest's network of federal hydroelectric dams, has struggled to incorporate increasing amounts of variable wind energy into the region's electric grid.
Also filed under [
Oregon]
Cantwell touts wind's effects on economy - The industry creates jobs at the Port of Vancouver and elsewhere, the senator says
August 22, 2006 by Holley Gilbert in The Oregonian
August 22, 2006 by Holley Gilbert in The Oregonian
Cantwell, a member of the Senate Energy Committee, helped push through Congress a two-year extension of a production tax credit for wind energy, which helped seal the current Vestas deal and provide jobs at the Port, Clark said. The credit was to expire on Dec. 31, 2005.
The extension provides a 1.9 cent per kilowatt hour tax credit to the wind farm owner -- which passes the savings to ratepayers -- for electricity generated with turbines over the first 10 years of a project -- a break that has been crucial to wind farm development, port officials said.
Cantwell said she also has proposed a bill for the development of clean energy that would ensure the tax credit until 2015. The lengthy extension would provide more predictability for investment and allow the wind power industry to grow, she said.
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
USA]