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Wisconsin's business community is divided over Gov. Jim Doyle's clean energy plan that calls for increasing the use of renewable fuels and opens the door to nuclear power, with opponents saying the new mandates will weaken Wisconsin's already struggling manufacturing sector.
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Wisconsin]
WVa House kills mountain wind farm resolution
April 10, 2009 by Associated Press in Bluefield Daily Telegraph
April 10, 2009 by Associated Press in Bluefield Daily Telegraph
The House has apparently killed a resolution supporting development of a wind farm on the site of a planned mountaintop removal mine.
Activists with Coal River Mountain Watch have been pressing Richmond, Va.-based Massey Energy to drop its mining plans in Raleigh County in favor of a wind farm.
Windforce meet comes after PSC application
February 2, 2009 by Richard Kerns in Mineral Daily News-Tribune
February 2, 2009 by Richard Kerns in Mineral Daily News-Tribune
Fresh from beginning the formal application process with the West Virginia Public Service Commission, US WindForce will meet tonight with area residents as part of its ongoing public outreach efforts on the Pinnacle Wind Farm near Keyser.
The Community Advisory Panel for the Pinnacle project will meet at 6 p.m. at the WindLea Conference and Banquet Center. The meeting is open to the public.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
e West Virginia Public Service Commission is expected to reach a decision today on whether to grant AES' siting permit to construct up to 65 wind turbines on the Laurel Mountain ridge between Barbour and Randolph counties. ...The PSC has been considering all of the written evidence and testimony in order to arrive at a decision in the case. Today is the final day in the statutorily imposed 300-day process for the PSC to make a decision.
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Zoning/Planning]
In newspaper advertisements, ApCo says customers who sign up are "investing in a future of energy that's both clean and green." ...But ApCo has already agreed to buy the green power. ApCo contracted for 75 megawatts of energy from the Camp Grove Wind Farm in central Illinois and 100 megawatts from the Fowler Ridge Wind Farm in western Indiana. ApCo already buys power from Summersville Hydro in West Virginia, and has plans to buy from the Beech Ridge Wind Energy project in Greenbrier County when it is finished.
So what's the benefit if ApCo customers sign up, given that the company's already buying the green power?
Also filed under [
Impact on Economy]
Pa. judges recommend against power line
August 23, 2008 by Garren Shipley in Northern Virginia Daily
August 23, 2008 by Garren Shipley in Northern Virginia Daily
Virginia may have given a controversial power line an initial "yes," but Pennsylvania has given it an initial "no."
In a ruling released late Thursday, regulatory judges in Pennsylvania recommended that the state's Public Utilities Commission deny applications from Allegheny Power and Dominion Virginia power to build the Trans-Allegheny Interstate Line.
A hearing examiner for the Virginia State Corporation Commission has recommended approval for the controversial power line, but only on the condition that West Virginia and Pennsylvania also sign off on the plan.
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Pennsylvania|
Virginia]
Raleigh County Mountain at Center of Coal vs. Wind Debate
August 14, 2008 by Pam Kasey in The State Journal
August 14, 2008 by Pam Kasey in The State Journal
Coal River Mountain in Raleigh County may soon become the center of an energy battle that pits fossil fuels against non-fossil renewable sources.
At issue is this: Should we develop coal resources now if that will destroy wind resources that can be harnessed forever?
North Carolina-based community organizers Appalachian Voices decided to raise this question.
The group contracted national wind development consultants WindLogics to analyze some likely wind resources in southern West Virginia.
Wind farming or strip mining? Which energy extraction method should be used on Coal River Mountain?
Residents of Clear Fork, Marsh Fork and other Raleigh County areas, with the support of environmental and community organizations such as Coal River Mountain Watch, the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, Appalachian Voices and the Sierra Club, asked the Raleigh County Commission Tuesday to support a proposed wind farm, which they say offers more long-term economic, social and environmental benefits to the county.
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Zoning/Planning]
More rules needed for wind power, study concludes
May 4, 2007 by Ken Ward Jr. in The Charleston Gazette
May 4, 2007 by Ken Ward Jr. in The Charleston Gazette
Appalachian states lack strong and detailed guidelines to regulate the continued growth of wind power facilities along the Mid-Atlantic highlands, according to a new study by the National Academy of Sciences.
A team of academy experts concluded that wind power can help offset the greenhouse emissions caused by coal and other fossil-fuel energy sources, but the projected growth of wind power in West Virginia, Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania creates potential threats to bird and bat populations that are not fully understood, the academy study found.
Windmill "farms" also can cause other environmental problems and create legitimate aesthetic concerns for local communities - ranging from damage to scenic vistas to noise and "shadow flicker," a strobe-like effect created by rotating turbines, the report found.
"The United States is in the early stages of learning how to plan for and regulate wind-energy facilities," says the report, compiled by the National Academy's National Research Council.
The report said the cumulative effects of continued growth in wind power are unclear, and that further study is needed.
Rep. Alan B. Mollohan, D-W.Va., told a House committee Tuesday about the dangers wind turbines in West Virginia and elsewhere pose to birds and bats.
"In the past, West Virginia's natural resources were exploited without regard to the long-term environmental consequences, and I think it's imperative that this not be allowed to happen again," Mollohan told the House Subcommittee on Fisheries, Wildlife and Oceans during Tuesday's hearing, the first congressional hearing on the impact of huge wind turbines on wildlife.
Mollohan also spoke about the size of the wind projects on West Virginia's mountain ridges.
States with renewable portfolio standards have generated growth in the renewable energy sector, but many of the Appalachian states don't have one. Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland and New York all have some fairly progressive goals, but West Virginia, Kentucky, Virginia and Tennessee don't have a state RPS and wind projects often ignite battles.
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General|
Delaware|
Kentucky|
Maryland|
North Carolina|
Pennsylvania|
Tennessee|
Virginia]
More than four years later, despite still more proposals from developers, the 44 giant windmills at the Mountaineer site on Backbone Mountain remain the only wind towers in West Virginia, although work on the NedPower site began last fall.
Why the delay? There are a host of reasons, but Billy Jack Gregg puts it simply: public opposition.
Also filed under [
General]
West Virginia governor backs idea of guaranteed price floors for oil
September 17, 2006 by Peter Gartrell in The News Record
September 17, 2006 by Peter Gartrell in The News Record
But Manchin's proposal went a step beyond talk and ideas, setting out a concrete way to begin attracting more money to development of ethanol, biodiesel, solar, wind or biomass electricity generation.
“I've always been told the $35, $40 range (per barrel of oil) is where alternative fuels become viable” Manchin told The News-Record after a tour of Arch Coal's Black Thunder mine. “Let's find that benchmark ... I don't see another way.”
Peltz sees windmills as “a small piece of the puzzle,” with the major roles in the energy drama occupied by oil and coal.
Manchin proposes moratorium on new wind projects
June 14, 2006 by Tim Huber, Associated Press in Herald-Dispatch
June 14, 2006 by Tim Huber, Associated Press in Herald-Dispatch
CHARLESTON -- Gov. Joe Manchin proposed legislation for the special session that began Tuesday that would temporarily bar siting new wind farms near airports.
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General|
Zoning/Planning]
State officials playing catch-up in regulating wind farms
December 14, 2005 by Brian Farkas, Associated Press in timesleader.com
December 14, 2005 by Brian Farkas, Associated Press in timesleader.com
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - A national panel studying the emergence of wind farms in the Mid-Atlantic region learned Wednesday that West Virginia is still trying to develop effective ways to regulate the industry.
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General|
Zoning/Planning]
Wind farms must file copies of permits, studies with PSC
December 12, 2005 by Joe Morris in The Charleston Gazette
December 12, 2005 by Joe Morris in The Charleston Gazette
Wind farms in West Virginia will have to do more to show they’re complying with state and federal regulations under a ruling just issued by the state Public Service Commission.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
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.
"Beauty is in the eye of the beholder," Dave Groberg, project developer for Invenergy Wind LLC told 60 members of Mountain Communities for Responsible Energy (MCRE) Tuesday at Williamsburg’s community center. "While many people find wind turbines graceful and attractive, others disagree." He was referring to the 131 wind turbines his Chicago-based company hopes to erect on the mountain ridges of northwestern Greenbrier County.
Wind farms: Mollohan and Rahall are wise to ask questions now
June 29, 2004 by Editorial in The Charleston Gazette
June 29, 2004 by Editorial in The Charleston Gazette
Must West Virginia play host to thousands of clean, green, scenery-despoiling machines to make urban environmentalists feel better? At the cost of how many birds and bats?