News

Impact on Birds and Oregon
Browse in : All > Topics > Impact on Wildlife > Impact on Birds (474)
All > Location > USA > Oregon (195)
Any of these categories
[ Impact on Wildlife | Washington ]

Green power collides with Endangered Species Act

Posted by: Lisa on August 10, 2009 7:14:36 AM
Green power, green jobs, renewable energy collide with the Endangered Species Act in a proposed wind farm in Southwest Washington. The project calling for between 48-60 megawatts of power is proposed for 3,359 acres of Washington Department of Natural Resources land northwest of Naselle, Washington. ...The DNR has the power to stop the project if it deems the project endangers Murrelets.
Note : http://naturalresourcereport.com/2009/08/green-power-collides-with-endangered-species-act/
Read More (274  words )
[ Impact on Wildlife | USA ]

Wind farms' impact on sage grouse part of stimulus study

Posted by: Lisa on June 01, 2009 7:59:56 AM
The Bureau of Land Management is using some stimulus money to study the effect of wind farms on a dwindling sage grouse population in Central Oregon. BLM spokesman Michael Campbell said the agency hopes to lessen or eliminate any impact. The agency would hire people to tag sage grouse in areas where wind farms are proposed and track the birds' movements to figure out where turbines could be located. Contracts have not yet been awarded.
Note : http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2009/jun/01/wind-farms-impact-on-sage-grouse-part-of-stimulus/
Read More (664  words )
[ Impact on Wildlife ]

Can wind-power project fly high in Central Oregon?

Posted by: Lisa on January 12, 2009 10:55:22 AM
Big plans east of Bend may come down to a small bird, the sage grouse. Central Oregon's first commercial wind farm could be up and running as soon as next year, unless it runs into environmental or other obstacles its backers cannot overcome. The $220 million project would be built on private land 30 miles east of Bend. However, the project is facing some scrutiny over it's impact on the wildlife habitat.
Note : http://www.ktvz.com/global/story.asp?s=9661661
Read More (519  words )
[ Impact on Wildlife ]

Wind farm would be area's first; Proposed project facing scrutiny over sage grouse habitat

Posted by: Lisa on January 10, 2009 11:57:54 AM
A 10,000-acre ranch that stretches into both Crook and Deschutes counties could be the site for Central Oregon's first commercial wind farm. ...But some environmental and wildlife groups point out it could also further threaten sage grouse and harm other animals. "Our point of view is we want to support renewable energy products. But just because it's renewable energy doesn't mean there aren't impacts," said Brent Fenty, executive director of the Bend-based Oregon Natural Desert Association.
Note : http://www.bendbulletin.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090110/NEWS0107/901100387
Read More (748  words )
[ General | Impact on Wildlife | Impact on Landscape | Washington ]

Group forming to battle windmill farm project

Posted by: Lisa on November 04, 2007 9:48:24 AM
The wide open spaces and natural terrain and wildlife of Southeastern Washington are fading, and some residents would like the encroaching effects of urbanization toned down, such as a proposed project that would place 35 to 50 turbines on Rattlesnake Mountain. More than 30 people showed up Saturday at the Richland Community Center for a meeting to oppose a proposed windmill farm at the base of the mountain. ...Rick Leaumont, chairman of the Audubon Society's conservation committee, agreed that urgency in protesting the project is necessary because about 238 bird species have been documented in the area, and would be effected by the windmills. "Wildlife needs some kind of solitude, a place that is theirs," Leaumont said. "Any location on the mountain would be a problem."
Note : http://www.tri-cityherald.com/tch/local/story/9430162p-9342335c.html
Read More (444  words )
[ Impact on Wildlife ]

Every kilowatt has its price; Wind farms may kill birds; wave energy needs study

Posted by: Lisa on November 03, 2007 6:02:35 PM
Wind farms apparently aren't quite as harmless and "green" as promoters like to say. It appears they may present a threat to eagles and hawks, especially along the Columbia River in Oregon and Washington. This should be no great surprise. There is nothing that man can do that does not exact some sort of price on the rest of nature. The trick is finding the lowest price. ...But when it comes to birds, the price gets much steeper. It is feared that with hundreds or even thousands of these windmills close together, they could start exacting a heavy toll on large birds that live in those regions as their native habitat.
Note : http://www.mailtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071103/OPINION/711030301
Read More (360  words )
[ General | Impact on Wildlife | Impact on Views | Impact on People ]

Wind Farms Blow Debate Into The Columbia Gorge

Posted by: Lisa on October 30, 2007 6:59:45 PM
A proposed wind farm on Seven Mile Hill near the tiny town of Mosier, Oregon is the centerpiece of the trouble that stems from development near a protected scenic area. The Cascade Wind Project, proposed by UPC Wind Partners, has thus far drawn serious opposition from not only residents of Mosier, but throughout the Gorge and beyond. The farm would be built just outside the Scenic Area boundary, and the 389-foot-high turbines of the 40 towers would be clearly visible from many areas in the Gorge, including Interstate 84 and McCall Point Trail. "This proposal is a slap in the face of the protection rights that everybody in the Gorge has had to live up to for the past twenty years," says Mike Rockwell, a real estate agent who lives in Mosier. "It's simply not a wise location."
Note : http://www.newwest.net/city/article/wind_farms_blow_debate_into_the_columbia_gorge/C108/L108/
Read More (1239  words )
[ General | Impact on Wildlife | Washington ]

Wind Turbines Are Threat To Habitat Of Local Birds, Studies Show

Posted by: Lisa on October 30, 2007 5:35:37 AM
By December 2007, more than 1,500 turbines will be churning out electricity in the Columbia River Gorge. Scientists are also concerned that since the turbines are nearing along the ridge of the gorge, canyons and shrub-covered rangeland, the natural habitats of the birds could be at risk. ...Wildlife biologists in Oregon and Washington state say the turbines are taking toll on raptors and other birds and it may limit expansion of clean wind energy.
Note : http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7008989781
Read More (275  words )
[ Impact on Wildlife ]

Wind farms generate bird worries; As more turbines churn in gorge, wildlife biologists fear blades threaten raptor numbers

Posted by: Lisa on October 29, 2007 6:14:19 AM
The rapid expansion of wind energy farms in the Columbia River Gorge's shrub steppes could put hawks, eagles and other raptors on a collision course with fields of giant turbines and their 150-foot blades. ...Nationwide, collisions kill about 2.3 birds of all varieties per turbine per year, studies show. But birders say those numbers are meaningless because the totals make no distinction between abundant and rare species. Golden eagles and ferruginous hawks -- a threatened species in Washington -- already are few in number, said Michael Denny of the Blue Mountain Audubon Society, and even a few fatalities could prove devastating. "We'll have certain species in sharp local decline," Denny said.
Note : http://www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/news/1193622908249580.xml&coll=7
Read More (1065  words )