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Impact on Bats and West Virginia
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Proposed W. Va. Wind Farm Testimony Continues
October 24, 2009 by Associated Press in Maryland AP News
October 24, 2009 by Associated Press in Maryland AP News
Attorneys for the developers of a West Virginia wind farm questioned all but their last witness in a trial over whether the project will harm an endangered bat.
The defense witnesses said Friday in U.S. District Court in Greenbelt that netting has not captured any Indiana bats and disputed audio recordings that witnesses for the plaintiffs say show the endangered bats are at the site.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife]
Environmentalists divided over wind farm, endangered bats
October 21, 2009 by Maria Glod in Washington Post
October 21, 2009 by Maria Glod in Washington Post
Workers atop mountain ridges are putting together 389-foot windmills with massive blades that will turn Appalachian breezes into energy. Retiree David Cowan is fighting to stop them.
Because of the bats. ...It is the first court challenge to wind power under the Endangered Species Act, lawyers on both sides say. With President Obama's goal of doubling renewable energy production by 2012, wind and solar farms are rapidly expanding. As they do, battles are being waged to reach the right balance between the benefits of clean energy and the impact on birds, bats and even the water supply.
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Impact on Wildlife|
USA]
A proposed West Virginia wind power project will harm a tiny, endangered bat and its developers should be should be required to obtain permits under the Endangered Species Act, attorneys for two environmental groups argued Wednesday in federal court.
The developers admit bats will be killed by the turbines, but refuse to acknowledge the endangered Indiana bat will be among them, plaintiffs attorney Eric Glitzenstein argued in his opening statements.
Lawsuit: Md. company's wind energy project would kill endangered bats
October 20, 2009 by Catherine Krikstan and James B. Hale in The Daily Times
October 20, 2009 by Catherine Krikstan and James B. Hale in The Daily Times
The 124-turbine wind farm being built by Rockville-based Beech Ridge Energy would put the lives of endangered Indiana bats, and other bat species, in danger, according to the plaintiffs -- The Animal Welfare Institute, Mountain Communities for Responsible Energy and David G. Cowan.
Plaintiff's witness Michael Gannon, a bat biologist and professor at Pennsylvania State University, said he is "very much in favor" of wind energy, but remains concerned that this project could have a devastating effect on the Indiana bat.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Maryland]
The federal lawsuit filed against Beech Ridge Energy and its parent corporation by Mountain Communities for Responsible Energy and others will culminate with an evidentiary trial starting October 21st in Greenbelt, Maryland. ...Beech Ridge Energy concedes that approximately 135,000 bats could be killed during the twenty-year operation of the project. Despite this staggering figure, Beech Ridge Energy's staff have testified previously that Indiana bats were not likely to be killed by the project because pre-construction surveys did not establish presence of the species on the project site.
However, the discovery process leading up to this October trial has exposed evidence to the contrary.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife]
Wind turbines could continue to sprout along the state's Appalachian ridgetops, as state regulators approved a project on the Randolph/Barbour County border in November. The same company applied in December to build a project in Grant County, while another developer announced plans in January for a project near Keyser.
Industry growth may be slowing, however, as the national economic recession dries up the investment capital needed to build new projects.
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Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on People]
Marty has been studying the life cycle of the timber rattlesnake for 25 years. He regularly visits several dens that have been in existence on the Allegheny Front for thousands of years -- to check on the emergence of snakes in the spring. Marty had been concerned about the possible disruption of the snake dens by the construction of the Ned-Power Industrial Wind Turbines, but he was assured that the dens, located in rock piles, with crevasses going into the earth, would not be disturbed.
When Marty returned to his study site this Spring, this is what he found: "It is finished. There is nothing left to save.
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Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Birds]
Expanding wind industry hits bats, turbulence and lawsuits
June 12, 2008 by Christa Marshall in Climate Wire
June 12, 2008 by Christa Marshall in Climate Wire
The prospect of thousands of endangered bats flying to their deaths in West Virginia wind turbines soon could get consideration in federal court because of Judy Rodd.
The 63-year-old is the president of Friends of Blackwater Canyon, which recently joined 10 other groups in filing a "notice of intent" with the Fish and Wildlife Service to sue a wind company on Endangered Species Act grounds. The organizations warned of potential turbine kills of the Indiana bat, Virginia big-eared bat and Virginia northern flying squirrel.
"Yes, we're concerned about climate change," said Rodd in a phone interview. "But that doesn't mean they can't build the turbines somewhere else and let the bats live."
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Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on People]
When he received a reply from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service about its correspondence with Liberty Gap, the information included a Nov. 16, 2007 letter from the agency to Wendy Tidhar of WEST, Inc. based in Cheyene, Wyo. WEST apparently represents an unnamed wind energy developer exploring a site on federal national forest property that would affect Pendleton and Hardy counties in West Virginia, and a portion of Rockingham County in Virginia.
What the USFWS told Tidhar, says Thomas, is promising for those who have for years stressed the need to protect the environment, birds and bats in particular, from a potential proliferation of wind turbine towers along the Appalachian Front.
The USFWS West Virginia Field Office told Tidhar, "We recommend that you consider alternative locations for this wind power facility because the proposed site is a high risk site, and wind power operations at this location pose a reasonable likelihood of take of species protected by the Endangered Species Act, the Migratory Bird Treaty, and Eagle Act."
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Birds]
Washington, DC (HNN) -- U.S. Rep. Alan B. Mollohan, D-WV on Tuesday, May 1, 2007, testified before the U.S. House of Representatives Fisheries, Wildlife and Oceans Subcommittee on the impacts of wind turbines on birds and bats. Below is Mollohan's testimony:
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Birds|
Impact on Landscape|
Tax Breaks & Subsidies]
Congress urged to study effects of wind power on bats, birds
May 2, 2007 by Tara Copp in American-Statesman
May 2, 2007 by Tara Copp in American-Statesman
WASHINGTON - An unusual coalition of conservationists and coal advocates told Congress on Tuesday that before the nation continues its rapid expansion of wind power, an assessment is needed of how many bats and birds are maimed and killed by wind turbines' blades.
That study should be followed up with regulations to protect those species, witnesses told a House Natural Resources subcommittee.
Environmental concerns - Bird, bat deaths raise questions in wind farm plan
April 24, 2006 by Christian Giggenbach in The Register-Herald
April 24, 2006 by Christian Giggenbach in The Register-Herald
LEWISBURG — One environmental concern over the proposed 124-turbine wind farm slated for northern Greenbrier County is the number of birds and bats killed each year by the blades of the nearly 400-foot-tall structures, but whether bats can put a halt to the $300 million project remains to be seen.
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Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Birds]
Environmental impact of wind farm concerns commissioners
January 25, 2006 by Liz Beavers, Staff Writer in Times-News
January 25, 2006 by Liz Beavers, Staff Writer in Times-News
The speakers were met with a bit of skepticism, however, as Commissioner Wayne Spiggle questioned them about their proposed relationship with existing industries and the possible environmental impact on winged creatures.
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Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Birds]
Wind generator to use fire to examine bats
January 19, 2006 by John Raby, Associated Press in Contra Costa Times
January 19, 2006 by John Raby, Associated Press in Contra Costa Times
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - The nation's largest generator of wind power plans to use fire to study bat habitats. FPL Energy LLC operates 43 wind farms in 15 states, including the Mountaineer Wind Energy Center in Tucker County.
Windmills shred bat population- Energy companies find clean not always green; environmentalists angry
December 14, 2005 by Larry Lipman - Cox Washington Bureau in ajc.com
December 14, 2005 by Larry Lipman - Cox Washington Bureau in ajc.com
Thomas, W.Va. --- Towering up to 228 feet above the Appalachian Mountain ridge, windmills are lined up like marching aliens from "War of the Worlds."
Up close, they emit a high-pitched electrical hum. From a distance of a few hundred yards, their 115-foot blades make a steady whooshing sound as their tips cut through the air at up to 140 mph.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife]
Bat deaths cast pall over promise of wind power
November 14, 2005 by Larry Lipman in Palm Beach Post Washington Bureau
November 14, 2005 by Larry Lipman in Palm Beach Post Washington Bureau
THOMAS, W.Va. — Towering up to 228 feet above the Appalachian Mountain ridge — far above the treeline — are windmills lined up like marching aliens from War of the Worlds.
Up close, they emit a high-pitched hum. From a few hundred yards away, their blades — extending 115 feet from center — cause a steady whooshing sound as they cut through the air at up to 140 mph at the tips.
Also filed under [
Pennsylvania]
Investigating a Turbine Tragedy: Bat deaths could threaten green image of wind power
October 3, 2004 by Jim Balow in Sunday Gazette-Mail (Charleston, WV)
October 3, 2004 by Jim Balow in Sunday Gazette-Mail (Charleston, WV)
The 2003 study, aimed as much at birds as bats, unexpectedly found that the Mountaineer wind turbines
on Backbone Mountain killed an estimated 2,092 bats.
Tuttle, not involved in that study, called the 2003 bat kill “by far the largest bat mortality event I know of
worldwide and, as far as I know, the biggest mortality event of any animal.” The 2004 bat kill could be
even worse.