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Impact on Birds and North Dakota
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Potential whooping crane deaths demand EIS for North Dakota wind project, groups say
February 7, 2013 in The Chattanoogan
February 7, 2013 in The Chattanoogan
Seventy-six groups led by American Bird Conservancy (ABC), one of the nation's leading bird conservation organizations, have called on the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) to fully analyze the environmental consequences of a proposed North Dakota wind farm to the endangered Whooping Crane. FWS is considering issuing the first-ever Incidental Take Permit (ITP) to a wind farm for the killing of endangered Whooping Cranes and threatened Piping Plovers.
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Impact on Wildlife|
USA]
Seven oil companies charged with violating Migratory Bird Treaty Act
August 26, 2011 in Devils Lake Journal
August 26, 2011 in Devils Lake Journal
“At the North Dakota U.S. Attorney’s Office, we are committed to enforcing laws that protect North Dakota’s outdoors and to providing companies who follow the law with a level economic playing field.”
The statutory maximum sentence for violation of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act is six months in federal prison and a $15,000 fine.
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Energy Policy]
Bird group says cancellation of North Dakota wind farm reflects seriousness of bird issues
April 4, 2011 in American Bird Conservancy
April 4, 2011 in American Bird Conservancy
American Bird Conservancy (ABC), the nation's leading bird conservation organization, today said that the cancellation of the Xcel Energy Inc. 150-megawatt, $400 million wind farm in southeastern North Dakota reflects how serious bird mortality issues are in connection with the burgeoning wind farm industry.
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USA]
Wind project scrapped on possible threat to bird species
March 31, 2011 by Naureen S. Malik in Wall Street Journal
March 31, 2011 by Naureen S. Malik in Wall Street Journal
The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service expressed concern that the wind farm could harm whooping cranes and piping plover birds that are protected by federal law, which was a "major factor" for terminating the agreement, Xcel spokeswoman Patti Nystuen said in an emailed statement.
Increase in wind turbines concerns conservationists
May 6, 2010 by Dan Gunderson in Minnesota Public Radio
May 6, 2010 by Dan Gunderson in Minnesota Public Radio
But scientists still don't know much about the long-term effects of wind turbines on wildlife. So researchers are studying a variety of bird species to determine if they are killed by spinning turbines, or avoid habitat hear them.
One of the places they're searching for answers is the prairie pothole region of North Dakota, often called the nation's duck factory.
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Impact on Wildlife]
Power line in western ND includes $500,000 to make sure whooping cranes don't run into it
March 15, 2010 by Associated Press in INFORM
March 15, 2010 by Associated Press in INFORM
Developers of a new power line in western North Dakota are spending $500,000 to make sure whooping cranes don't run into it.
Minnesota Power is building the 22-mile line in Morton and Oliver counties. It's supposed to connect a new 75-megawatt wind farm to the Square Butte electric substation near Center.
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Transmission|
Minnesota]
Ducks in the wind: Research project explores impact of wind farms on nesting waterfowl
July 12, 2009 by Brad Dokken in Grand Forks Herald
July 12, 2009 by Brad Dokken in Grand Forks Herald
Tanner Gue knows as well as anyone just how wet it's been this summer in some of North Dakota's prime waterfowl country.
That's good for ducks, of course, even if it sometimes complicates life for people trying to study them.
A UND graduate student, Gue, 25, is heading up the fieldwork portion of a two-year research project aiming to learn more about the impact of wind farms on the survival of nesting ducks.
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Impact on Wildlife]
Solution sought for N.D. power line bird strikes
September 21, 2008 by James MacPherson in Washington Post
September 21, 2008 by James MacPherson in Washington Post
Death comes from above and below for birds on the causeway that separates Lake Audubon from Lake Sakakawea along the Missouri River.
Biologists believe overhead electrical power lines and car collisions make the two-mile stretch of U.S. Highway 83 through the Audubon National Wildlife Refuge one of the world's deadliest places for birds, on land or air.
Recently, biologist Darren Doderer located casualty No. 373, a mangled and bloodied double-crested cormorant that appeared to have hit one of the dozen or so unmarked overhead power lines.
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Impact on Wildlife]
Facing a huge increase in North Dakota's number of wind towers, state regulators promised to pay close attention to projects' potential effects on the whooping crane, a huge bird is in danger of extinction.
"We generally aren't happy until you are," Public Service Commissioner Kevin Cramer told Jeffrey Towner, a U.S. Fish and Wildlife field supervisor in Bismarck, and Terry Ellsworth, an agency wildlife biologist, at a commission meeting Tuesday.
Most of North Dakota's wind energy projects are outside the normal migratory path that whoopers take from Canada to Texas each year, wildlife officials say.
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Impact on Wildlife]
FWS officials fear wind towers will kill whooping cranes
July 13, 2008 by Associated Press in Grand Forks Herald
July 13, 2008 by Associated Press in Grand Forks Herald
With wind energy towers rising around the state, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service officials worry about rare whooping cranes that pass through on their migration route betweem Canada and Texas.
Representatives of the Fish and Wildlife Service plan a meeting this week with the North Dakota Public Service Commission and a separate meeting with officials of some 30 wind companies working in the Great Plains. They want to discuss a habitat conservation plan for the big white birds.
"It's on the table now because we're seeing such a rapid increase in the number and size of wind power projects.
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Impact on Wildlife]
Wind farm's possible affect on whoopers causes worry
July 11, 2008 by Lauren Donovan in Bismarck Tribune
July 11, 2008 by Lauren Donovan in Bismarck Tribune
A world's-largest scale wind farm proposed for Oliver and Morton counties could snare and kill a migrating endangered species.
Whooping cranes pass through those counties flying between northern Canada and Texas and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is concerned that an explosion of wind farms up and down the Great Plains' flyway will further endanger the rare birds.
The agency charged with protecting the enormous white cranes will meet with the Public Service Commission next week to talk in general about the problem. It will meet in Denver later in the week with 30 wind companies working the Great Plains region.
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Impact on Wildlife]
Rare birds could be threatened by growth of wind farms
February 27, 2008 by Maria Sudekum Fisher in InForm
February 27, 2008 by Maria Sudekum Fisher in InForm
Whooping cranes, one of the world's rarest birds, have waged a valiant battle against extinction. But federal officials warn of a new potential threat to the endangered whoopers: wind farms.
Down to as few as 16 in 1941, the gargantuan birds that migrate 2,400 miles each fall from Canada to Texas, thanks to conservation efforts, now number about 266.
But because wind energy, one of the fastest growing sources of renewable energy, has gained such traction, whooping cranes could again be at risk - from either crashing into the towering wind turbines and transmission lines or because of habitat lost to the wind farms.
"Basically you can overlay the strongest, best areas for wind turbine development with the whooping crane migration corridor," said Tom Stehn, whooping crane coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
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