News
Category:
Impact on Wildlife and Wyoming
Browse in :
All
> Topics
> Impact on Wildlife
(870)
All > Location > USA > Wyoming (163)
Any of these categories
All > Location > USA > Wyoming (163)
Any of these categories
Not much is certain about the future of sage grouse in Wyoming - including the birds' undecided status as a potentially endangered species and their possible role in curbing oil, gas and even wind energy development.
But based on a number of sage grouse habitat improvement projects in development across the Bighorn Basin, one thing is certain: Boosting the bird's prospects is a slow and painstaking process.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds]
Nesting uncomfortably? G&F schedules study of golden eagle population
August 29, 2009 by Whitney Royster in Casper Star-Tribune
August 29, 2009 by Whitney Royster in Casper Star-Tribune
Brian Rutledge, executive director of Audubon Wyoming out of Laramie, said golden eagles, along with other raptors, are struggling in light of the energy development around the state. Power poles are being erected in areas of the sagebrush sea ...and now raptors can perch there and pick off sage grouse. ...He said a rise in wind energy also threatens the bird.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds]
Wind power industry retreating from Wyo., citing sage grouse concerns
August 7, 2009 by Scott Streater in New York Times
August 7, 2009 by Scott Streater in New York Times
Wyoming's wind energy boom is stalling amid growing confusion over state regulations designed to protect environmentally sensitive sage grouse and how those rules should apply to wind power projects.
Houston-based Horizon Wind Energy announced last week that it is indefinitely suspending plans to build a 300-megawatt-capacity wind farm that would have occupied one of dozens of state-designated "sage grouse core areas" deemed essential to protecting the imperiled bird.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds]
Commissioners deny conditional use permit for wind farm
August 7, 2009 by Karl Ritzman in Unita County Herald
August 7, 2009 by Karl Ritzman in Unita County Herald
The Uinta County Commissioners voted unanimously to deny two conditional use permits that would have allowed an additional 120 wind turbines on Bridger Butte.
Bridger Butte Wind Power and Bridger Butte Wind Power II, being run by Tasco Engineering, wanted to add the turbines in the general area of Bigelow Road, and extending southward from the current project.
Also filed under [
General|
Impact on Birds]
Horizon halts Wyo. wind project because of grouse
August 7, 2009 by Matt Joyce in Dallas Morning News
August 7, 2009 by Matt Joyce in Dallas Morning News
Horizon Wind Energy has suspended development of the Simpson Ridge wind farm in Carbon County because of Wyoming's rigid position on protecting key sage grouse habitat.
Houston-based Horizon is not scrapping the project, but is placing it on hold indefinitely, project manager Nate Sandvig said Friday.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds]
They used to mine coal in the abandoned town of Carbon. Now this patch of southern Wyoming is a battleground in the debate over what many hope will be the clean energy source of the future: wind power.
At the heart of the dispute are plans to build a network of wind farms in the American West that conservationists fear could disrupt threatened habitat such as sage brush, a dwindling piece of the region's fragile ecosystem.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds]
Project manager Nate Sandvig said Friday the company has decided not to submit a permit application to the Wyoming Industrial Siting Council based on the state's recent decision not to allow wind energy development in key sage grouse habitats. ...
Earlier this month, Gov. Dave Freudenthal's chief of staff, Ryan Lance, said the decision not to allow wind energy in sage grouse core areas came after consulting with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds]
A decision to block wind energy development from key sage grouse habitats in Wyoming could effectively nullify a significant portion of the state's wind energy resource. But exactly how much is unclear.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is considering listing the sage grouse as a threatened and endangered species. Half of the bird's remaining prime habitat in the West lies within Wyoming's borders.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds|
Energy Policy]
Wind industry wants review of Wyo's grouse policy
July 14, 2009 by Matt Joyce in Casper Star-Tribune
July 14, 2009 by Matt Joyce in Casper Star-Tribune
Cheyenne Wind developers have asked the Department of the Interior to review Wyoming's sage grouse protection policy in light of the state's recent hard-line stance against building wind farms in important habitat areas for the chicken-sized birds. ...Wind developers say they're concerned that Wyoming's position could "abruptly halt wind energy development in Wyoming's sage-grouse 'core areas'.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds|
USA]
A utility company on Friday agreed to a settlement of more than $10 million following the electrocution of dozens of eagles, hawks, owls and other birds in Wyoming.
PacifiCorp pleaded guilty to 34 violations of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. U.S. Magistrate Judge Michael Shickich in Casper ordered the utility to pay a $510,000 fine and $900,000 in restitution.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds|
USA]
Wind energy industry sets sage grouse research plan
July 10, 2009 by Dustin Bleizeffer in Casper Star-Tribune
July 10, 2009 by Dustin Bleizeffer in Casper Star-Tribune
The state's recent decision not to allow wind development in critical sage grouse habitat essentially takes 75 percent of Wyoming's best wind resources off the table, according to one independent wind energy company.
In response, wind developers are teaming up with wildlife agencies across nine western states to launch a $10 million, five-year research effort.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds]
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service says it opposes construction of any wind farms in Wyoming's core sage grouse population areas, a position that wind developers say could have a chilling effect on their plans in the state.
Brian Kelly, supervisor in the agency's Wyoming field office, made the comments in a letter Tuesday responding to an inquiry from the Wyoming Game and Fish Department.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds|
USA]
The federal government has charged PacifiCorp and Exxon Mobil Corp. in two unrelated cases with killing scores of migratory birds in Wyoming, according to court documents filed last week in U.S. District Court in Cheyenne.
PacifiCorp, which does business in Wyoming as Rocky Mountain Power, is charged in a 34-count criminal information document with the deaths of 38 golden eagles at power poles in six counties from December 2007 to February 2009.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds|
USA]
State officials recently reached a decision not to allow wind development -- or even a pilot study -- in Wyoming's sage grouse core areas.
It's a potentially huge blow to several wind development projects, including Horizon Wind Energy's Simpson Ridge project and Power Company of Wyoming's Sierra Madre and Chokecherry wind projects -- all in Carbon County.
Gov. Dave Freudenthal issued the core areas sage grouse management plan by executive order in August 2008.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds]
Federal officials are again delaying whether to list sage grouse in 11 Western states as threatened or endangered -- leaving in limbo until at least 2010 a spate of industries that could face sweeping restrictions if the bird is protected.
The chicken-sized grouse ranges from Montana to California alongside livestock grazing, oil and gas drilling and an increasing number of wind power turbines.
Wyo. wind power boom could drive sage grouse to endangered list
June 3, 2009 by Scott Streater in New York Times
June 3, 2009 by Scott Streater in New York Times
Development of wind energy and sage grouse protection are on a collision course in Wyoming, where state officials are worried that a future Endangered Species Act listing for the chicken-like bird could ruin the golden egg laid by the Obama administration's renewable energy mandates. ..."The bird does well in the existing conditions that are out here. It's the new threat from wind energy that has got us so worried," said Aaron Clark, special adviser on energy infrastructure to Wyoming Gov. Dave Freudenthal (D). "I don't think you could justify a [federal endangered species] listing for that bird in Wyoming without the threat from wind development."
In the high-stakes game of preserving sage grouse, biologists say they're still figuring out how the birds will react to the influx of wind turbines rising up from the wide-open sagebrush plains where the birds evolved.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 15 months ago commenced a review of whether sage grouse should be protected under the Endangered Species Act.
Also filed under [
Impact on Birds]
Sweetwater County debates impact of wind energy development
April 24, 2009 by Jeff Gearino in Casper Star-Tribune
April 24, 2009 by Jeff Gearino in Casper Star-Tribune
The wind energy boom blowing through Sweetwater County will be a gale force soon and could threaten the region's quality of life, a host of speakers said this week.
Officials urged residents to get involved early and often in the decision-making process. To be determined is where, how and how much energy development will occur in the county's mostly undeveloped wind power industry.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape]
A planned wind project near Hanna in Carbon County has raised concerns from some about how it might affect natural and cultural resources in the area.
The Medicine Bow Conservation District and the Hanna Historical Society asked Horizon Wind Energy not to harm natural or cultural resources when building its 154-turbine wind project.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape]
Biologists trying to keep wildlife out of 'ER'
November 22, 2008 by Rebecca Huntington in Casper Star-Tribune
November 22, 2008 by Rebecca Huntington in Casper Star-Tribune
Pauley's preliminary survey of experts identified four primary 'drivers' that could affect future wildlife populations. They are: expanding rural subdivisions, energy development, invasive nonnative species and climate change. ...Much of the meeting, which wrapped up Friday, highlighted ongoing research efforts to understand the potential impacts of energy development -- from fossil fuels to wind farms -- on sage grouse, songbirds, elk, mule deer and other species across the state.