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Kittitas County commissioners may change the county’s wind farm ordinance next year after county staff examines standards that have been common to wind farm projects proposed so far in the county.
Commissioners last week, during their update of the county comprehensive plan, agreed to have the county Community Development Services Department do the review and bring recommendations to the county commissioners.
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Zoning/Planning]
Desert Claim Wind Power LLC, which wants to build a wind farm in Eastern Washington, is applying to a state panel after losing an appeal in a county superior court, the company said Thursday.
Kittitas County Superior Court upheld Kittitas County's decision to deny a permit for Desert Claim to build a 180-megawatt wind farm north of Ellensburg. Desert Claim is a wholly owned subsidiary of enXco Inc., a wind developer based in North Palm Springs, Calif.
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Zoning/Planning]
What EnXco Inc. in 2005 said it would do after Kittitas County rejected its wind farm north of Ellensburg it did Monday: the wind power development company filed a downsized wind farm proposal with the state in hopes to get better treatment and possible approval.
Clean vs. dirty is only part of renewable energy debate
October 30, 2006 by Lisa Stiffler in Seattle Post-Intelligencer
October 30, 2006 by Lisa Stiffler in Seattle Post-Intelligencer
The slogans are simple:
Clean wind energy or coal-powered plants polluting the planet.
Higher electrical bills or utilities free to save ratepayers money.
In the muddle of initiatives and measures that clutter the Nov. 7 ballots, those for and against Initiative 937 are hoping to persuade voters with these basic concepts.
But that’s only the tip of the wind turbine.
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Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
Energy Policy]
Supporters of Initiative 937, the renewable energy measure on the Nov. 7 ballot, have out-raised their opponents by a 4-to-1 margin heading into the final two weeks of the campaign, according to the state Public Disclosure Commission.
Washingtonians for Cleaner Cheaper Energy had collected $1.52 million and spent $1.46 million as of Oct. 10, while No on I 937 had raised $372,615 and spent $67,785.
Leading the pro-initiative campaign funding is the Sierra Club and its political action committee with combined in-kind contributions of more than $132,000.
The initiative addresses two of the Sierra Club’s top priorities, which are air quality and public health, said Sierra Club associate regional representative Shannon Harps.
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Tax Breaks & Subsidies]
Initiative 937- Green Energy Quotas Analyzed in New Study
October 23, 2006 by Todd Myers in National Center for Policy Analysis
October 23, 2006 by Todd Myers in National Center for Policy Analysis
Washington's Initiative 937, which appears on the statewide ballot this November, would impose new restrictions on the state's utilities in an effort to reach targets of specifically selected energy types, says Todd Meyers of the Washington Policy Center.
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Tax Breaks & Subsidies]
Does clean-energy initiative promise more than it can deliver?
October 11, 2006 by Andrew Garber, Staff Reporter in The Seattle Times
October 11, 2006 by Andrew Garber, Staff Reporter in The Seattle Times
A clean-energy initiative on the November ballot promises to reduce the state’s dependence on fossil fuels, combat global warming and cut the cost of electricity.
Backers of the measure, Initiative 937, also say new wind farms would generate millions in tax dollars for struggling rural communities.
Can the initiative deliver on all those promises? It’s unclear.
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Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
Energy Policy]
Fight picking up on renewable energy ballot measure
October 7, 2006 by Rachel La Corte, Associated Press in kgw.com
October 7, 2006 by Rachel La Corte, Associated Press in kgw.com
In a state where environmental issues often find ample support, an initiative to compel utilities to use cleaner energy should be the least controversial of the three measures on the statewide ballot in November.
But after months of little to no debate over the measure — which would require the state’s large utilities to increase renewable energy sources to 15 percent of their supply by 2020 — opponents have started speaking out, arguing that Initiative 937 would raise customers’ rates.
“It’s a feel-good initiative,” said Chris McCabe, spokesman for the Association of Washington Business, which is opposed to the measure. “Everyone wants a cleaner environment. It’s easy for people to buy into that. It’s one of those things where the devil is in the details.”
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Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
Energy Policy]
PUD debate: will fees be enough for the job?
October 4, 2006 by Eric Horsting in Vashon-Maury Island Beachcomer
October 4, 2006 by Eric Horsting in Vashon-Maury Island Beachcomer
“Your plan is not based on fees,” said Tom Bangasser to Rita Schenck as the two debated the merits of a Public Utility District.
They were formally con and pro speakers invited to the Sept. 21 meeting of the League of Women Voters.
Schenck replied, “It is based only on fees. If we can conserve appropriately, we won’t need renewable energy.”
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Energy Policy|
Zoning/Planning]
That relationship will begin to change after the BPA's current contracts with public utilities expire in 2011.
In that year, BPA projects that the output from the 31 dams and one nuclear plant that make up the Federal Columbia River Power System will be roughly equal to the demands of the utilities.
Under BPA's proposal for new 20-year contracts, the agency would continue supplying low-cost power in the amounts and roughly the same rates as it does now.
But as the region's population and economy grows, BPA will have to acquire more power from somewhere elsewhere to supplement a tapped-out hydroelectric system that's under pressure to remove, rather than build, dams.
KENNEWICK, Wash. - Energy Northwest plans to add 14 wind turbines to their wind farm south of Kennewick.
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Zoning/Planning]
In a give-and-take Monday, a Cowlitz PUD commissioner complained that a statewide renewable energy initiative would wrest control from local decision-makers and warned that wind power has shortcomings.
“If wind were a perfect resource, it would blow all the time. It doesn’t. That’s one of the principal flaws of this initiative,” Commissioner Buz Ketcham said.
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.
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Tax Breaks & Subsidies]
Power Authority Charts West's Course
September 25, 2006 by William McCall, Associated Press in CBS News
September 25, 2006 by William McCall, Associated Press in CBS News
At the halfway point between the West Coast energy crisis of 2001 and the next major electricity contract renewal year of 2011, a federal power marketing agency is proposing a policy change that could affect rates in the Pacific Northwest for generations and become a national model for energy development.
Northwest hydropower is one of the cheapest energy resources in the nation - about half the current market rate for electricity. The Bonneville Power Administration - which sells power in all of Washington, Oregon and Idaho and parts of California, Nevada, Utah, Wyoming and Montana - announced this summer it wants to change the way it charges utilities for its wholesale power, to keep rates low.
Energy initiative hits utilities - I-937 would require companies to invest in conservation projects
September 23, 2006 by John Dodge in The Olympian
September 23, 2006 by John Dodge in The Olympian
Voters have a voice in the state’s energy future when they cast their ballots in the Nov. 7 general election.
Initiative 937 would require the state’s 17 largest utilities to invest in all cost-effective energy-conservation projects at their disposal and obtain 15 percent of their electricity from new renewable energy resources, including wind and solar, by 2020.
Supporters insist the goals can be achieved without taking a big bite out of ratepayer pocketbooks, while building on a regional legacy of clean hydropower and energy independence.
“We have a choice of charting a path toward a cleaner energy future,” said initiative backer K.C. Golden, a former state energy policy director and policy director for Climate Solutions.
Critics fear passage would drive up energy customers’ costs from $185 million to $370 million a year and create an artificial economy around new energy resources.
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Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
Energy Policy]
Tempers reached a boiling point at Thursday night’s third and final Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council public commentary session at the Kittitas County Fairgrounds.
Speaking out in favor of the proposed Kittitas Valley Wind Power Project and alternative energy, Ellensburg resident James Markret incited the ire of several veterans in attendance after likening the war in Iraq to Vietnam, saying that both happened “for no reason.” The comment drew loud vocal protests from several audience members and Administrative Judge Adam Torem threatened to throw out the objectors.
Several audience members walked out of the meeting amidst Markret’s speech, one of whom yelled an expletive at Markret as he left.
After sitting through more than 27 hours of hearings this week, listening to or reading testimony from 35 witnesses and cross examining some of those labeled as expert witnesses, the jury is finally out on the controversial Kittitas Valley Wind Power Project.
The “jury” - the 7-member state Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council - may decide by late December what to recommend to Gov. Chris Gregoire on the 65-turbine wind farm proposed for 12 miles northwest of Ellensburg.
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Zoning/Planning]
The site in Kittitas County has all the attributes the Whisky Dick Mountain site has – a steady supply of wind and nearby high power transmission lines. But it also has something the Whiskey Dick site doesn’t have – a loud group of opponents.
“It’s location. Wild Horse Project was never affected because there wasn’t many people around,” said Sandy Sandall, a neighbor who opposed the project.
Sandy Sandall and his neighbors worry the project would block their panoramic valley views and lower property values.
But the owners of the land where the farm would be built are all for it.
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Zoning/Planning]
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.
Energy Northwest this week submitted an application to build a $1 billion coal gasification power plant at the Port of Kalama, kicking off a review by state regulators that could take more than a year.
"This is a new technology," Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council manager Allen Fiksdal said Wednesday. "It's a big project, and it's complex."
The 600-megawatt Pacific Mountain Energy Center would be the first power plant of its kind in Washington and the first required to comply with a state law that calls on new power plants that use fossil fuels to curb greenhouse gases.
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Technology|
Zoning/Planning]