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Low energy prices force year delay in Roxbury wind farm
November 21, 2009 by Terry Karkos in Sun Journal
November 21, 2009 by Terry Karkos in Sun Journal
Owners of a wind-power company set to erect 22 turbines on local hills have decided to delay the project by a year because the energy market has fallen in the recession.
Record Hill Wind LLC is building a $120 million wind farm along the 4-mile ridgeline that connects Partridge Peak, Record Hill and Flathead Mountain. The company had planned to put up the turbines next year, but now says it will be up and running in 2011.
EFSEC member: review process flawed; Ian Elliot wants state to do better
November 21, 2009 by Mike Johnston in Daily Record
November 21, 2009 by Mike Johnston in Daily Record
Ian Elliot wanted to raise the issue of turbine density in the state's review of the Desert Claim Wind Power Project, but couldn't.
The issue wasn't officially entered into evidence by an intervener in the Desert Claim review process, nor was there any expert testimony, studies or other data submitted on the issue by an intervener or the project applicant. ..."I believe the process is flawed because the rights of the local citizens and the obligations of EFSEC do not align," Elliot stated
Also filed under [
General|
Washington]
Camden officials OK wind project feasibility study
November 21, 2009 by Abigail Curtis in Bangor Daily News
November 21, 2009 by Abigail Curtis in Bangor Daily News
Saying that they are paying close attention to Vinalhaven's community wind project, town officials this week agreed to a preliminary feasibility study for a wind project atop Ragged Mountain.
While no project is now in the pipeline, anemometers placed on the mountain three years ago found that the town has "a serious wind resource," said Jeff Lewis, chairman of the Camden Energy Committee. ...Any project ultimately would be put to a town vote, Lewis said.
That won't be a slam-dunk for wind power proponents, according to Baker.
"If you thought Vinalhaven was iconic, try messing around with the Camden Hills," he said.
Committee must hold meeting on wind power again
November 21, 2009 by Katie Farrell Lovett in The Daily News
November 21, 2009 by Katie Farrell Lovett in The Daily News
Earlier this week, a City Council subcommittee held a meeting to finalize recommendations on much-debated rules surrounding the location of wind turbines.
In a lightly attended meeting, they did just that.
On Monday, however, they have to do it all over again. The culprit? A locked door. ...Though the meeting continued, the subcommittee had unintentionally violated the state's Open Meeting Law, meaning the meeting will have to be held again.
Also filed under [
General|
Massachusetts]
Townships learn about initiatives; Sleepy Eye wind farm proposed
November 21, 2009 by Fritz Busch in The Journal
November 21, 2009 by Fritz Busch in The Journal
Turbine setbacks leave towns twisting in the wind
November 21, 2009 by Edward D. Murphy in Portland Press Herald
November 21, 2009 by Edward D. Murphy in Portland Press Herald
The city thought it was ahead of the curve back in 2007 when it bought a windmill that was supposed to provide power for a transportation center built around a station for the Downeaster train.
The $200,000 windmill never came close to meeting expectations, but even that was OK. The city had an agreement in which the manufacturer would pay the difference between the value of the anticipated electricity and the value of the actual output.
Community wind farms stall with lending holdups
November 20, 2009 by Jackie Noblett in Mass High Tech
November 20, 2009 by Jackie Noblett in Mass High Tech
A year after the collapse of the equity financing market for large wind farms, state leaders and private developers are eyeing community-scale projects as an opportunity to grow the number of turbines in the state. But while communities may be good candidates for wind projects - with a strong, steady demand for electricity and the ability to raise taxes as collateral - just who will ultimately back these developments is still an unknown.
Ecogen Wind LLC sues Steuben County town over wind farm delays
November 20, 2009 by Steve Orr in Democrat and Chronicle
November 20, 2009 by Steve Orr in Democrat and Chronicle
A wind energy development company has sued a second town board in an attempt to force through a large wind farm without the approval of local elected leaders.
Ecogen Wind LLC filed a lawsuit Monday against the town of Prattsburgh, Steuben County, claiming town leaders have improperly thrown roadblocks infront of the wind farm. The company brought a similar legal action this month against the neighboring town of Italy in Yates County.
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission announced Thursday that it has approved a $161 million loan to the company building the Montana Alberta Tie Line between Great Falls and Lethbridge.
The Western Area Power Administration will loan Toronto-based Tonbridge Power Inc. - the project's developer - money with funds from the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act of 2009, also known as the federal stimulus bill.
Robert Gardiner, a public broadcasting executive-turned-wind power developer, fielded questions from the audience about the so-called Highland Wind project. It's a $250 million development that would place 48 wind turbines in a single-file, southeasterly row along four peaks. It would likely be visible from the Appalachian Trail. ...I'm very concerned about the mountaintop removal," says Greg Perkins, the owner of the home in Highland Plantation that would be closest to the wind farm, about a half-mile away. He's also a soil scientist. "I really think we need to rethink this whole wind power thing in Maine. It doesn't create that much energy and for what we're losing, there's no balance to it. So I really think we need to rethink it."
Ellis County Zoning: anticipating the opportunity for personal gain
November 20, 2009 by Paul Faber in Kansas Free Press
November 20, 2009 by Paul Faber in Kansas Free Press
The one piece of business discussed by the commission came from Commissioner Keith Campbell. Mr. Campbell proposed that the commission adopt a bylaw which said that when considering board business, if a commissioner "anticipated the opportunity" to personally benefit by the action of the board in the value of $1000 or more, that commissioner should publicly state that. ...Because of the avowed interest of some current and past members of the zoning commission in securing personal contracts with corporations seeking to put wind energy conversion systems in Ellis County, some members of the public were interested in greater transparency in the operation of the zoning board.
Folks living in Dixmont voted Thursday night on an ordinance that would regulate wind power development in their town.
The issue arose when a company began looking into the prospect of placing ten wind turbines along Mount Harris in Dixmont.
For the past nine months the local planning board has been researching the effects of such projects on residents living nearby.
After just two months of operation technical problems have forced the blades of the world's largest offshore wind farm to stop turning. ...The wind farm has not been producing energy since last weekend and Dong Energy, which owns the wind farm, is losing approximately 1.1 million kroner each day the turbines stand still.
Jonathan Carter joins effort to curb wind farm siting atop peaks
November 20, 2009 by Terry Karkos in Sun Journal
November 20, 2009 by Terry Karkos in Sun Journal
Longtime environmental activist and wind-power supporter Jonathan Carter of Lexington Township joined forces this month with a grassroots coalition trying to stop sprawling industrial wind farms atop Maine's mountains.
Carter, a former Green Party gubernatorial candidate, is the director of the Forest Ecology Network, which was created to protect, preserve and defend Maine's native forest environment through public awareness, grassroots citizen activism and education, according to its Web site. ..."This isn't simply (not in my backyard)," Carter said. "These mountaintops are unique. They're rare. To destroy them is, in my thinking, extremely inappropriate and shortsighted."
A state employee was questioned Friday, Nov. 20, about a report he prepared for the Buckeye Wind Project.
Champaign County Prosecutor Nick Selvaggio and Gil Weithman, city of Urbana law director, asked Nick Doss about methods he used to develop sections of a staff report concerning aviation and decommissioning of the Buckeye Wind Project.
Hearings on proposed wind turbine project in Champaign County nearing end
November 20, 2009 by Matt Sanctis in Springfield News-Sun
November 20, 2009 by Matt Sanctis in Springfield News-Sun
In what could be the final day of hearings on a proposed plan to install 70 wind turbines in Champaign County, a state employee was questioned about a report he prepared for the Buckeye Wind Project.
Champaign County Prosecutor Nick Selvaggio and Gil Weithman, city of Urbana law director, on Friday, Nov. 20, asked Nick Doss about methods he used to develop sections of a staff report concerning aviation and decommissioning of the Buckeye Wind Project.
The O'Malley administration's desire to build offshore wind turbines as part of its renewable energy program is running into an unlikely source of resistance: the military.
The fear is that turbines placed in the Atlantic Ocean could disrupt flight and weapon test ranges ..."When you start to place turbines out in the Atlantic Ocean, they will create an artificial image on the radar, and we might not be able to see aircraft because we think the aircraft is really the turbine spinning around out there," said Todd Morgan, president of the Southern Maryland Navy Alliance.
Wind developer Ecogen has filed another lawsuit against a local municipality in an attempt to erect electricity-producing wind turbines.
The lawsuit was recently filed in state Supreme Court in Rochester against the Prattsburgh Town Board and other town officials.
It is similar to legal action the company is taking against the town of Italy in Yates County, which has refused to grant Ecogen permission to build wind turbines there.
OPSB staffer says board has ‘no obligation' to consider concerns of county or other intervenors in Buckeye Wind case
November 19, 2009 by Breanne Parcels in Urbana Daily Citizen
November 19, 2009 by Breanne Parcels in Urbana Daily Citizen
An Ohio Power Siting Board staff member admitted under cross examination Wednesday that the board has no obligation to consider the concerns of the public or intervenors in the Buckeye Wind case.
Stuart Siegfried, of the Efficiency and Renewables Division of the Department of Energy and Environment, testified that he was responsible for compiling and editing the OPSB staff report on the project that was issued Oct. 13, in compliance with the deadline to do so 15 days before the public hearing at Triad that was held Oct. 28.
Arran-Elderslie has passed a new noise control bylaw. The bylaw will prohibit and regulate excessive noise and associated vibration, said chief administrative officer/clerk A. P. Crawford.
There is no enforceable noise control bylaw in the municipality, she said. Three pre-amalgamation bylaws for Chesley, Tara and Paisley, now more than 10 years old "are all out of date and contain invalid references due to amendments to provincial legislation," she said.