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Impact on Views and Canada
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Windmill won't be constructed at top of Nuttby Mountain
May 16, 2008 by Colin MacLean in The Truro Daily News
May 16, 2008 by Colin MacLean in The Truro Daily News
Fears that a scenic lookout point on the top of Nuttby Mountain would be ruined by the installation of a huge wind turbine have been laid to rest.
Clair Peers, president of Cobequid Wind Power, a development partner in the Nuttby Mountain project, confirmed Thursday afternoon that a turbine would not be constructed on the mountain's highest point.
"The thing is with this particular high spot is it's just not a stable enough location," said Peers.
He did say, however, there would most likely be a windmill constructed near the peak, but was unsure exactly how close it would be.
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Impact on Landscape]
Halifax seeks public's input on wind power
November 30, 2007 by Amy Pugsley Fraser in The Chronicle Herald
November 30, 2007 by Amy Pugsley Fraser in The Chronicle Herald
Storeys-high wind turbines might not be the first thing you think of as part of the Halifax skyline, but city officials want your input. ..."While wind energy is valued as an environmentally friendly power source, the size of the wind turbines and wind farms also raises planning issues regarding compatibility with homes from noise and impact on views, et cetera," says the report drafted for regional council
Bluewater mayor Bill Dowson says the most common concern over wind turbines in the municipality is site lines along the lakeshore.
Dowson says the municipality is looking at establishing a bylaw similar to the one passed in South Huron and proposed in Ashfield-Colborne-Wawanosh that would require a distance of 400 metres from homes and 600 metres from urban developments.
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The Quebec Environmental Public Hearing Board has rejected a $350-million wind power proposal from a Toronto company that wanted to build an expansive farm in the province’s northeastern region.
The board, known by its French acronym, BAPE, gave the thumbs down to Skypower’s plans, which would include the construction of 114 windmills in four communities bordering the St Lawrence seaway, near Rivière-du-Loup.
The board, which held several hearings on the project, concluded Thursday that the turbines would ruin a picturesque view, threaten the region’s natural and wildlife heritage and threaten the agricultural economy.