News
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Washington
The state Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council announced it will conduct a public hearing 7 p.m. Aug. 6 at Central Washington University to examine a request to expand the acreage of the Wild Horse Wind Power Project and add 26 wind turbines to the wind farm located 17 miles east of Ellensburg.
Also filed under [
General]
Kittitas County commissioners have selected attorneys with a Wenatchee firm to provide land-use hearings examiner services that will begin when a contract with the firm is signed. ...The hearings examiner will conduct public hearings on subdivisions or plats, rezones when they are connected to a subdivision project, cluster plats, development agreements, planned unit developments, resorts and wind farms when they are proposed within the east-county wind resource zone. These hearings are now conducted by the county Planning Commission.
The examiner will then make a recommendation to county commissioners who make the final decision on the proposals.
The Planning Commission will continue to make recommendations on changes to the county comprehensive plan and land-use codes and on proposals from the three citizen advisory committees and rezones not connected to a subdivision.
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General]
The state Supreme Court is weighing whether it has jurisdiction in Kittitas County's appeal of a wind farm 12 miles northwest of Ellensburg.
The court held a hearing Thursday on whether it should weigh in on the case. Last September, Gov. Chris Gregoire approved the Kittitas Valley Wind Power Project, as recommended by the state's Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council.
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General]
Court hears wind farm arguments; Focus on state energy siting law
June 25, 2008 by Mike Johnston in The Daily Record
June 25, 2008 by Mike Johnston in The Daily Record
"In its simplest terms, it's about who should make the land-use decisions for Kittitas County residents," said James Carmody, lawyer for the citizen wind farm opposition group Residents Opposed to Kittitas Turbines. "Is it county elected representatives or a group of unelected bureaucrats? We say local government should make that final decision."
Assistant Attorney General Kyle Crews said there are debatable issues raised by the county about the EFSEC statute, "but the actions of the governor, the applicant and EFSEC were all done lawfully."
Also filed under [
General|
Zoning/Planning]
Another wind energy company has jumped into the sweepstakes to build a wind farm along a ridge on state-owned timberland in east Clark County.
It marks the latest sign that an already-booming wind industry is starting to trickle west across the Cascade Range.
Horizon Wind Energy, which also is proposing a 120-megawatt project currently under court challenge by Kittitas County officials, filed an application to lease 5,400 acres from the state Department of Natural Resources in the Larch Mountain area of Clark County.
By meeting a Monday deadline, Horizon will vie for the lease in an auction with a Portland-based subsidiary of enXco Inc.
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General]
Washington state Supreme Court to consider challenge to approval of wind farm
June 2, 2008 by Wayne Barber in SNL Interactive
June 2, 2008 by Wayne Barber in SNL Interactive
The Washington state Supreme Court will hear a challenge June 26 to state authorization of a major new wind power project planned in Kittitas County.
At issue is approval of Horizon Wind Energy LLC's Kittitas Valley project by Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire and the Washington Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council.
A local citizens group called Kittitas County and Residents Opposed to Kittitas Turbines challenged the siting council's and the governor's authority to pre-empt local land use regulations as well as other legal matters.
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General]
Proposed wind farm may be visible to Portland/Vancouver residents
May 30, 2008 by Brian Barker in KATU TV
May 30, 2008 by Brian Barker in KATU TV
A proposed wind farm development Washington is creating some controversy.
While the plan is still in the very early stages, the designers envision placing wind turbines on a ridge near Larch Mountain, east of Battle Ground. ...A proposed wind farm development Washington is creating some controversy.
While the plan is still in the very early stages, the designers envision placing wind turbines on a ridge near Larch Mountain, east of Battle Ground.
Southwest Washington is likely to see wind turbines on the horizon thanks to burgeoning demand for renewable energy in the region, according to developers of Clark County's first wind farm proposal.
Representatives of a large energy developer eyeing a state-owned ridgeline in east Clark County indicated Wednesday that plenty of wind prospectors are scouring the landscape for potential wind farm locations. The company, enXco Inc., wants to lease state timberland to build as many as 39 skyscraper-high wind turbines near Larch Mountain. ...A west-side wind boom is no sure bet.
That's because one of the biggest advantages to building wind farms west of the Cascades also is perhaps the biggest disadvantage: the presence of the majority of the region's population. ..."You get into this looming effect," said Allen Fiksdal, director of the Washington Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council. "It's a visual resource kind of issue.
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General]
A wind energy developer wants to lease state-owned forest to build as many as 39 skyscraper-high wind turbines along a ridge near Larch Mountain in east Clark County.
The proposal, by a Portland-based subsidiary of enXco Inc., marks one of the first signs of westward migration for a wind energy boom that's already caused windmills the size of office towers to sprout across Eastern Washington. Washington's commissioner of public lands expects more to come.
"There are significant opportunities," state lands Commissioner Doug Sutherland said Wednesday.
Evergreen Wind Power Partners applied for the lease on about 5,400 acres of forest land owned by Sutherland's Department of Natural Resources.
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Zoning/Planning]
The Skamania County prosecutor is asking a judge to throw a wind farm challenge out of court. Earlier, a citizens group filed suit against the county to stop a proposed wind farm near the Columbia Gorge. This is the third wind project to run into opposition in the Northwest recently, despite public votes in favor of more renewable energy. ...Elsewhere in the region, local landowners have not hesitated to file preemptory challenges to nip projects in the bud. On the Oregon side of the gorge by Mosier, a proposal for a 40 turbine wind farm is stuck in the gate as well.
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."
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General]
The 69-turbine, $250 million wind farm proposed for seven miles west of Vantage was approved Tuesday by Kittitas County commissioners, and construction at the site could start in October.
Commissioners Mark McClain and Alan Crankovich OK'd a final version of a development agreement with Invenergy Wind North America LLC after making minor changes to some of its provisions.
Before a wind-farm building permit can be issued to the Chicago-based energy company, a list of requirements in the agreement must be met, said Darryl Piercy, director of county Community Development Services.
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Zoning/Planning]
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 [
General|
Energy Policy]
For the birds? Recent sightings raise hopes sage grouse and wind farms may not be mutually exclusive
April 24, 2008 by Scott Sandsberry in Yakima Herald-Republic
April 24, 2008 by Scott Sandsberry in Yakima Herald-Republic
Then came onto the Whisky Dick came the 9,100-acre Wild Horse facility, owned by Puget Sound Energy, 127 wind turbines ...Some feared they might end the area's sage grouse future.
And now that a grouse and a nest have been found there?
"I think it's still too early to know," said Mike Schroeder, a state Department of Fish and Wildlife upland bird research biologist considered the state's foremost expert on sage grouse.
"One, it's just one nest. I've had sage grouse nest in wheat fields where there was absolutely zero chance of success. You have birds that do strange things. ..."There are issues -- the blades killing birds, the blades killing bats," said Andy Stepniewski, author of "The Birds of Yakima County" and program chair of the Yakima Valley Audubon. "The bigger issue is the footprint, the habitat fragmentation. The footprint of each one is a lot bigger than one can imagine, because of the size of the machine, the size of the road; these are enormous trucks that bring these huge turbines in there.
"The habitat is significantly impacted.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Birds]
Puget Sound Energy wants more Wild Horse wind turbines (Update)
April 17, 2008 by Mike Johnston in Daily Record
April 17, 2008 by Mike Johnston in Daily Record
Puget Sound Energy will seek approval to add about 25 turbines to its Wild Horse Wind Power Project, constructing the new towers both inside and outside the existing 127-turbine project.
The Bellevue-based private utility announced the planned expansion will include turbine sites on a newly purchased 1,400-acre tract immediately north of the existing wind farm that now takes in 9,150 acres, according to a news release. ...“It’s planned to locate added turbines inside the project as in-fill, and on the new property,” Lenz said Wednesday. “The 25 we’re looking at now is an estimate. It could be more or less.”
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General]
Kittitas County commissioners have affirmed that planned turbine locations in a proposed wind farm should be moved to comply with the required setback distance from two residences that exist near the project east of Ellensburg. ...The company is proposing to construct and operate the 69-turbine Vantage Wind Power Project 15 miles east of Ellensburg between Vantage Highway and Interstate 90.
After reviewing the proposed agreement page by page and suggesting changes, commissioners agreed to meet again at 2 p.m. May 6 to examine a final, updated copy of the document. Commissioners may take final action at that time to approve the estimated $300 million project located about seven miles west of Vantage.
The project is within the county's wind energy overlay zone, an about 500-square-mile area on the east end of the county that has been pre-identified as generally compatible with wind farm developments.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Windmill rule ideas get public airing
April 14, 2008 by Carrie Chicken in Walla Walla Union-Bulletin
April 14, 2008 by Carrie Chicken in Walla Walla Union-Bulletin
A controversy that has been brewing in Columbia County for months draws closer to resolution tonight.
The Columbia County Planning Commission will discuss options for amending the zoning ordinance regarding development requirements or processing for wind tower-related energy production. ...Of the five options under consideration, two are proposed by citizen's groups. Friends of Scenic Columbia County is a group representing residents with more restrictive ideas for development standards, according to county documents.
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Zoning/Planning]
One wind farm stuck in the air, Another moving through process
April 10, 2008 by Sade Malloy in KIMATV 29
April 10, 2008 by Sade Malloy in KIMATV 29
"This is the only town I know where you can fly a kite year round."
But taking advantage of this natural resource can be a lot harder than it seems.
The Kittitas Valley Wind Farm off Highway 97 has been in the works for three years now.
It was denied by County Commissioners, ok'd by Governor Gregoire, now it's at the State Supreme Court. ...
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
The Kittitas County Planning Commission on Tuesday voted 5-0 to recommend approval of the proposed 69-turbine Vantage Wind Power Project, a $300 million wind farm proposed for 15 miles east of Ellensburg between Vantage Highway and Interstate 90.
In making the motion for recommendation of approval, Planning Commission member Kimberli Green said she had no problems with the project as long as Chicago-based Invenergy Wind North America LLC follows through with all environmental safeguards and mitigations it has committed to. ...Invenergy is proposing the project which is about seven miles west of the Columbia River and Vantage and approximately three miles southeast of Puget Sound Energy's Wild Horse Wind Power Project.
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Zoning/Planning]
Windfall -- Existing transmission lines help make power feasible
March 18, 2008 by David Lester in Yakima Herald-Republic
March 18, 2008 by David Lester in Yakima Herald-Republic
But the biggest reason for the growth of wind lies just out of sight from Wild Horse: the Columbia River with its huge hydroelectric generating capacity and the transmission lines that crisscross the state and region.
Because of its intermittent nature, wind energy needs a solid base of other sources to sustain delivery of power to homes and businesses. Hydro dams are that base.
Other states, principally Montana and North Dakota, have better wind than Washington. But the lack of transmission is stunting development.
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General]
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