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Residents have expressed fears over the size of five huge wind turbines after their first view of how they would appear on the Derbyshire landscape.
West Coast Energy, the company behind the scheme, said the 126m (413ft) turbines proposed for Matlock Moor at a cost of £16m ...
Heidi Brautigam loves nothing better than horseback riding in Warm Springs Valley, where she has lived for 17 years.
But she is worried her rides could become dangerous once big tractor rigs and construction trucks start hauling equipment and materials to build Nevada Wind's proposed wind turbine farm on the northern ridges overlooking the valley, north of Spanish Springs.
Sensible decision needed on potentially damaging wind farm
November 28, 2008 by James Reynolds in Head of Media
November 28, 2008 by James Reynolds in Head of Media
RSPB Scotland put in written objections and supported Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH) in giving evidence to a public local inquiry which finished this week, opposing what could be enormously harmful impacts of the proposed 14 turbine windfarm at Stacain, near Dalmally, in Argyll. RSPB Scotland believes the area is entirely inappropriate for a wind farm, and ministers should reject the application.
The importance of the area for golden eagles, which are synonymous with Scotland's wild beauty, is such that it is almost certain to soon be proposed for designation as a Special Protection Area (SPA). If this goes ahead it will then be strictly protected under Scots and European law.
Hundreds of giant pylons connecting the English border to the Welsh coast will be needed to link huge new wind farms to the National Grid, campaigners warned yesterday. ..."Developers can be given planning consent for the turbines without consideration of the power transmission element, which can also have a huge impact on the environment.
Islanders say no to wind farm; Big Island too small, residents say
November 28, 2008 by Bruce Bell in The Whig Standard
November 28, 2008 by Bruce Bell in The Whig Standard
Big Island residents want no part of a proposed wind farm development north of Picton, Prince Edward County council was told this week.
Henri Garand and Ian Hanna presented council with a 112-signature petition asking the Big Island portion of the 66-turbine proposal be separated from the rest of the project. ..."All of us believe that Big Island is not an appropriate location."
Fighting Over Sun and Wind in Greece
November 27, 2008 by Niki Kitsantonis in International Herald Tribune
November 27, 2008 by Niki Kitsantonis in International Herald Tribune
While Greek authorities are taking steps to harness the country's untapped potential in wind and solar energy, and to meet European Union targets on curbing the use of polluting fossil fuels, the residents of Aegean islands are opposing the drive, afraid that towering wind turbines will mar the natural beauty of their communities and offend the tourists on whom they rely.
A quiet land rush is under way among the buttes of southeastern Wyoming, and it is changing the local rancher culture. The whipping winds cursed by descendants of the original homesteaders now have real value for out-of-state developers who dream of wind farms or of selling the rights to bigger companies.
But as developers descend upon the area, drawing comparisons to the oil patch "land men" in the movie "There Will Be Blood," the ranchers of Albany, Converse and Platte Counties are rewriting the old script.
More than 30 people expressed their concerns about a massive power line upgrade project proposed by Central Maine Power at Lewiston City Hall Monday night during a public hearing before Maine's Public Utilities Commission. About 70 people were present. ...Nearly all of those who spoke before Commissioners Jack Cashman, Sharon Reishus and Vendean Vafiades were apprehensive about the project, anticipating noise pollution, loss of property value and health risks.
Clean energy clashes with wildlife in California
November 25, 2008 by Cassandra Sweet in Cattle Network
November 25, 2008 by Cassandra Sweet in Cattle Network
The permitting disputes demonstrate some of the hurdles that renewable energy developers face not just in California, but nationwide, and cast a light on the difficulties policy makers face in trying to balance clean-energy development with other environmental goals.
"There has to be some reconciling of two very important societal values: protection of wildlife including birds, and moving forward with some haste to get alternative energy going," said Doug Anthony, deputy director of the Santa Barbara County Planning and Development Department's Energy Division.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
California]
Expert: Expanding wind power could unhinge insects; Unintended Consequences
November 24, 2008 by Steven Stycos in The Providence Phoenix
November 24, 2008 by Steven Stycos in The Providence Phoenix
An internationally known bat researcher, however, says tens of thousands of bats are killed annually by wind turbines in the US. Unless researchers are monitoring a site, says Boston University professor Thomas Kunz, bat fatalities often go undetected, because their bodies are lost in the brush or eaten by scavengers.
In a November 19 lecture sponsored by the Rhode Island National History Survey, Kunz, director of BU's Center for Ecology and Conservation Biology, labeled wind energy "brown," not green. He also warned that high numbers of bat fatalities may cause populations of insects to increase dramatically.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Rhode Island]
Heritage agency hits out at attempt to extend windfarm
November 24, 2008 by Jamie Buchan in The Press and Journal
November 24, 2008 by Jamie Buchan in The Press and Journal
A bid to extend a controversial windfarm near a historic Banffshire castle has been criticised by Historic Scotland officials and council planning chiefs. ...Historic Scotland had raised concerns that the two turbines would have a "severe" visual impact on the unoccupied castle. ...The proposed turbine would be some 3,700ft from the castle, while the other two would be closer, around 2,600ft away.
Residents protest 'green' power lines; Many claim towers spoil natural beauty
November 24, 2008 by Tammy Marashlian in The Signal
November 24, 2008 by Tammy Marashlian in The Signal
The towers are visible from the back of Milligan's Cavi at The Big Oaks, but he says it's not those power lines that concern him.
The restaurateur is bothered by the lines that Southern California Edison will soon install midway down the slope in Bouquet Canyon as part of the Tehachapi Renewable Transmission Project.
The towers would dominate the view from Milligan's backyard bar and grill and he believes they would spoil Bouquet Canyon's rare natural environment.
Jerry McRae didn't mince words when talking about a high-voltage transmission line that will cross his land near here.
"You're going to have a hell of a time building a power line in this community," McRae said. ...Construction on the line is scheduled to begin in March.
"It can't be built without eminent domain in this community right now," McRae warned right off the bat.
The question: Where to build green-energy sites
November 23, 2008 by Ginger Richardson in The Arizona Republic
November 23, 2008 by Ginger Richardson in The Arizona Republic
The rush to build "green energy" is dividing environmental groups, many of whom believe such projects will irreparably harm ecologically sensitive habitat. ...If millions of acres are razed for solar plants, swaths of wildlife habitat will be eliminated, putting the desert tortoise, the Mojave ground squirrel and the American badger at even greater risk, conservationists say.
Environment Agency to build up to 80 wind farms
November 23, 2008 by Richard Gray and Patrick Sawer in Telegraph.co.uk
November 23, 2008 by Richard Gray and Patrick Sawer in Telegraph.co.uk
The controversy surrounding wind farms will be reignited this week when the government agency charged with protecting the environment reveals plans to build up to 80 wind turbines along some of the nation's most picturesque rivers.
Energiekontor Uk Ltd wants to put five 328ft (100m) turbines at Brightenber Hill near Gargrave, Skipton.
A 250-strong group of residents have formed Friends of Craven Landscape and are campaigning against the plans.
Craven Council has received 600 letters of objection and a 600-signature petition, but its planning committee has been asked to approve the plans.
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.
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.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Wyoming]
The Laramie-based Biodiversity Conservation Alliance released a 50-plus page study on Friday, offering recommendations for places in the state the group deems most suitable for wind power development.
The report also outlines locations that should be avoided, and the places where the group says developers must tread carefully, for environmental reasons.
Endangered bats may delay wind project in Logan County
November 21, 2008 by Breanne Parcels in Urbana Daily Citizen
November 21, 2008 by Breanne Parcels in Urbana Daily Citizen
The presence of the federally-endangered Indiana bat may delay plans to install wind turbines in southern Logan County, but shouldn't have an impact on Champaign County, said a wind company representative Friday.
"We are aware of the bat being found and we're working closely with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Ohio Department of Natural Resources," said Michael Speerschneider with Everpower Renewables.