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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.
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.
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.
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."
Wind turbines disfavored in scenic corridor; Vote on wind energy facilities slated for Tuesday
November 20, 2009 by Jon Duval in Idaho Mountain Express
November 20, 2009 by Jon Duval in Idaho Mountain Express
Though a final decision has yet to be made, the Blaine County Commission made it clear this week that it does not favor allowing wind energy facilities in the "scenic corridor," the area visible from state Highway 75.
It's the biggest issue the commission faces while continuing deliberations on a proposed ordinance regulating wind energy facilities. The meeting Tuesday at the Old County Courthouse in Hailey was the fifth public hearing on the issue and another, possibly the last, is set for Tuesday, Nov. 24, at 2 p.m.
Officials: Keep control local; State could preempt local turbine requirements
November 19, 2009 by Kate Hessling in Huron Daily Tribune
November 19, 2009 by Kate Hessling in Huron Daily Tribune
In an interview Wednesday, Huron County Commissioner Kurt Damrow said Monday's public hearing is the last chance for local units of government, including townships that have control of their zoning and have a wind turbine ordinance, to speak to the State of Michigan in regard to maintaining local control over setback requirements and noise limitations for wind developments.
"What's on the line is whether local units of government will have a say in zoning, specifically (regarding) setbacks and noise," Damrow said.
Islanders flock to unveiling of wind turbines
November 18, 2009 by Abigail Curtis in Bangor Daily News
November 18, 2009 by Abigail Curtis in Bangor Daily News
Dignitaries, schoolchildren and more than 400 islanders crowded Tuesday morning around the base of a massive wind turbine to officially dedicate the Fox Islands Wind Project. ...While it seemed clear that the vast majority of residents at the ceremony were thrilled with "their" turbines, a small but vocal group of islanders who live close to the turbines has expressed deep concerns about the noise, flickering red lights and potential negative effects on health and well-being.
"Last night, it was just throbbing," said David Wylie, who lives about a half mile from the turbines. "Whump, whump, whump."
50ft tall wind turbines that won't need planning permission in countryside 'free for all'
November 18, 2009 by David Derbyshire in Mail Online
November 18, 2009 by David Derbyshire in Mail Online
The Government says it wants to cut the red tape and expense involved in generating energy from wind, and insists the new rules will come with strict conditions about noise, size and appearance.
But rural campaigners said the changes to the planning system could lead to a 'free-for-all' and warned that the countryside was in danger of being sacrificed in the battle against global warming.
Magnificent views enjoyed by visitors to an award-winning North East holiday complex would be ruined by plans to build four massive wind turbines nearby, it is claimed.
Businessman Alun Moore has invested about £2m over the last 20 years in developing his Beacon Hill holiday centre, 15 self-catering cottages and a luxury spa on a hilltop north west of Morpeth. ...But now Mr Moore fears his business, which employs 14 people locally, will suffer badly if plans by Novera Energy to erect four 101m turbines at nearby Todd Hill, Pigdon, are given the go-ahead.
Dixmont to vote on industrial wind energy ordinance
November 18, 2009 by Sarah Komuniecki in WABI TV5
November 18, 2009 by Sarah Komuniecki in WABI TV5
Two years ago, a company started looking into the potential for placing wind turbines along Mt. Harris in Dixmont. Since then, local residents have been talking about what that could mean for them-- and Thursday, the issue comes to a vote.
Mt. Harris Wind had plans to build about ten turbines along this ridge in Dixmont, says project partner Andrew Price.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
Maine]
Proposals to build Europe's largest onshore windfarm in the Shetland Islands at a cost of £800 million could be scaled back, according to developer Viking Energy, writes Will Nichols.
The limited company originally presented plans for the 150 turbine, 540MW project to the Shetland Islands council this summer.
However, last week, a spokesman for Viking Energy told NewEnergyFocus.com that the company is to submit an addendum to its plans early in the new year in a response to concerns flagged up during consultation, including over bird life and landscape.
Supporters of liquefied natural gas terminals have thrown a late snag into what has been an orderly process to create rules for developing multibillion-dollar energy corridors in Maine. LNG representatives want to extend the current moratorium on energy corridors and create a government commission to do more reviews. Their proposal was filed late last week with the special study group already debating policy for energy corridors.
Six Digby Neck residents will visit Environment Minister Sterling Belliveau Wednesday in Halifax to ask a few questions about a planned wind turbine park.
"We're trying to find out his reasoning for approving this turbine site in the first place," Evelyn Hayden said Monday.
"We're just a group of concerned citizens that are trying to protect the health of everybody down here."
Attorney provides legal advice on wind farm options
November 17, 2009 by Jen Cullen in The Republican Eagle
November 17, 2009 by Jen Cullen in The Republican Eagle
Concerned residents have relentlessly questioned how far wind turbines should be set back from other structures in rural Goodhue County.
Commissioners learned Tuesday that addressing those concerns locally regarding two proposed wind farms could be difficult. ...[County Attorney Stephen] Betcher said state law now allows counties to step in and regulate wind farms between 5 and 25 megawatts as well with PUC's help. In doing so, commissioners could impose stricter standards - including for setbacks - than the state currently does on mid-range and larger projects.
The debate over whether to build the country's first offshore wind farm in Nantucket Sound is no stranger to challenges.
The latest - a bid by the Wampanoag tribes on Cape Cod and Martha's Vineyard to have the 560-square-mile Sound declared eligible for the National Register of Historic Places - may top the list.
From impacts on fisheries to new requirements for construction along Nantucket Sound, a finding that the Sound is eligible for the register could have wide-ranging effects on development and economic activity, opponents of the move argue.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Massachusetts]
In the distance, the dark, low expanse of the island is punctuated by three white lines jutting through the horizon.
Three giant wind turbines rise from the interior of the island, visible from miles away, above pines, above homes, above Vinalhaven's granite bones.
And on Tuesday, the $14.5 million Fox Islands Wind project officially goes on line with a ribbon-cutting event ...The Lindgrens said the noise can be more intrusive then they were led to believe it would be. The noise is constant, said Britta Lindgren, like a jet passing overhead, "but it never passes." And there's an odd pressure in the air, indefinable, like low frequencies that have begun since the turbines started.
Prince Edward County councillors and members of the public left the Nov. 10 special meeting over a new proposed windmill bylaw for the municipality at Shire Hall feeling impotent, bemoaning the unanswered questions.
"In my opinion, the mark was missed. And in a lot of ways, it feels like we're beating a dead horse because, in the game of politics, the Ontario government trumps municipalities. And if the province doesn't want it, then the province isn't going to care what we have on paper," said Prince Edward County councillor Kevin Gale.
Wind farm plan irks activists; Towers would be built in remote McCain Valley
November 15, 2009 by Onell R. Soto in San Diego Union-Tribune
November 15, 2009 by Onell R. Soto in San Diego Union-Tribune
A remote corner of East County is shaping up as a battleground between companies pushing wind farms as clean and cheap power generators and activists who view them as a blight on the landscape.
It has put environmentalists in the position of opposing renewable energy because, they say, it's in the wrong place.
Drawing the most attention is a plan by the Spanish conglomerate Iberdrola to build about 100 skyscraper-sized towers in and near the McCain Valley, a federal conservation area abutting Anza-Borrego Desert State Park.
The battle over a new wind farm in Tehachapi is now heading to the Kern County Board of Supervisors. Kern County planning commissioners approved the Alta-Oak Creek Mojave wind project late Thursday night after hearing both sides of the debate.
After hours of emotional testimony from Tehachapi residents, the planning commissioners approved a 9,000 acre wind farm in the small mountain town. It could be the largest wind energy project in California, but it has Tehachapi residents' heads spinning.
Zoning and changing times a backdrop to neighbor against neighbor
November 13, 2009 by Bob Keeler in Montgomery News
November 13, 2009 by Bob Keeler in Montgomery News
David Yoder's been farming for more than a third of a century.
He's at least the fourth generation of his family who have lived and worked on the land on Cowpath Road near the border of Franconia and Salford townships that has been farmed "forever," Yoder said.
Adding a 140-foot cellular tower and a power-generating wind turbine with a blade that reaches to a height of 163 feet will give the farm reduced electric bills and rental income from the cell tower and is similar to adding animals, crops or farm buildings, he said.