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Renewable energy does have its price
Posted by: Lisa on July 31, 2009 1:44:09 PM
Wind farms and solar power plants may offer free fuel costs and no carbon-dioxide emissions, but don't assume there's universal support from environmentalists, according to industry observers.
"The world is changing," said Andrew Spielman, a partner at the Denver office of Hogan & Hartson LLC who works on renewable-energy projects. ..."There are more complexities with renewable projects," he said, "and it's no longer an assumption that the environmental community will approve and support renewable projects."
Note : http://denver.bizjournals.com/denver/stories/2009/08/03/story2.html?b=1249272000^1869647&ana=e_vert
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Impact on Wildlife
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Ranch joins power line opposition
Posted by: Lisa on June 21, 2009 9:27:33 AM
Xcel Energy and the Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association have filed with the commission for a certificate of public convenience and necessity for the lines, which the companies say will increase the reliability of the grid in the valley and increase their ability to export electricity generated from wind and solar farms in Southern Colorado. ...An administrative law judge will hold a pre-hearing conference Friday in Denver to consider the intervention requests. The utilities commission has until Jan. 26 to decide on the applications by Xcel and Tri-State.
Note : http://chieftain.com/articles/2009/06/21/news/local/doc4a3dbed645a7a266502531.txt
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Impact on Wildlife
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Wind farm raises environmental impact concerns
Posted by: Lisa on March 28, 2008 6:55:44 PM
A giant wind farm in northeast Weld County may be a groundbreaking model of how to generate clean, renewable energy while protecting wildlife occupying the same space.
But it's also been on the receiving end of some environmental criticism. ...Ken Strom, director of bird conservation for Audubon Colorado, said he is disappointed that Cedar Creek's developers did not move all the turbines away from the escarpment.
"In terms of the outcome of the hearings, I don't think (our concerns) were adequately addressed," he said. "I think they tried to meet a number of our concerns but they fought to move a minimum of the turbines."
Strom notes that some birds will be killed as a result of having the turbines within their traditional nesting areas and others will simply avoid the area out of fear of the constantly whooshing towers.
Note : http://www.ncbr.com/article.asp?id=92340
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School’s wind power plan raises noise, viewshed issues
Posted by: hughkemper on June 29, 2007 7:31:41 AM
SEI, the school for renewable energy and sustainable housing technology, won approval June 4 from the Board of County Commissioners for its bid to erect a 106-foot-high tower on its year-old Paonia campus. The tower will support an electricity generating turbine with blades spanning 12 feet to be used for class instruction and to produce power for the school's use.
The BoCC, sitting with commission chair Jan McCracken absent, voted 2-0 in favor of the schools proposal after hearing comments from neighbors both in support and opposition of the plan.
Note : http://www.deltacountyindependent.com/Issues/2007/06-27/delta/windpower.html
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Talk about winds of change
Posted by: Lisa on June 24, 2007 9:31:06 AM
So you plant your feet in the gritty soil beneath the whirring monsters that seem to brush the blue sky and you feel the hot wind dancing from the south and for a long time you just stare. This is wind energy. And one day, many scientists believe, it will drive the world. Of course, not everyone has that sense of awe over the whole thing. Take rancher Bob Emick. Inside his home, which sits smack in the middle of 98 of the science fiction-looking turbines...He leans on one elbow, glances out a window and watches a rotor spin. "I guess," he said, "you just get used to them."
Note : http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_6209736
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View at Pawnee changes; First of nearly 300 turbines dot horizon at grasslands
Posted by: hughkemper on June 23, 2007 12:41:24 PM
The view brought mixed emotions to the Riters.
"To be honest, I was shocked when I first saw them," said 66-year-old Karl Riters, who enjoys hiking, backpacking and volunteering with the Poudre Wilderness Volunteers. "I saw them from maybe eight miles away and I started hoping that as I got closer they wouldn't be that apparent. But the closer we got, the worse it looked. I'm all for reducing carbon emissions, but when out in a desolate area like this, you don't want to see that."
Lori Bell, the grasslands' acting district manager, said she has received numerous complaints about the turbines. She said there is nothing the U.S. Forest Service can do because the wind farm is on private land.
Note : http://www.coloradoan.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2007706230347
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Land near grasslands may host wind farm
Posted by: Cath on December 02, 2005 10:58:18 AM
In the next two years, a Virginia company hopes to pump upward of $400 million into what could be Colorado's largest wind farm on private grazing land near Grover.
Note : http://www.greeleytrib.com/article/20051202/NEWS/112020070
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