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Wind turbine process poisoned by problematic policies
January 5, 2009 by Josh Bickford in East Bay RI
January 5, 2009 by Josh Bickford in East Bay RI
After more than a year's worth of meetings, research, wrangling and debates, the project hit a brick wall of sorts last month as a report by AWS Truewind showed lower-than-expected wind speeds at the Legion Way site. Without strong enough winds, the project does not make financial sense.
On Monday night, the Committee for Renewable Energy for Barrington, rescinded its recommendation to the town council to accept a bid for the construction of the turbine.
The steady, strong winds over the Atlantic off New England have attracted another developer interested in harnessing them for power generation. A new wrinkle in the proposal by Grays Harbor Ocean Energy Company, of Washington state, is that the supports anchoring each wind turbine platform to the ocean floor would be designed in a way to turn wave action into electricity as well.
Also filed under [
General|
Massachusetts]
Paltry gusts have taken the wind out of a plan to erect a 200-foot wind turbine at Staples corporate headquarters off Rte. 9.
The Zoning Board of Appeals gave the go-ahead for the office supply giant to build a 120-foot meteorological test tower to measure wind velocity on the side of a hill near 500 Staples Drive.
The data collected from the spring until December indicates the wind is not strong enough to make the project financially worthwhile.
Also filed under [
General|
Massachusetts]
Dozens of residents from the Back Bay neighborhood turned out at last night's [Newburyport] City Council meeting to urge councilors to re-examine a recently passed ordinance regulating the creation of wind turbines in the city.
Almost 20 speakers visited the microphone, with the vast majority asking councilors to listen to a letter sent to councilors by Ward 2 Councilor Greg Earls. ...Citing pending litigation, councilors said last night they could not act on Earls' request, on the advice of the city's attorneys, Kopelman and Paige.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
Massachusetts]
Wind, wave power play; Company seeks permits to build 100 platforms off Nantucket and R.I.
December 29, 2008 by Bina Venkataraman in Boston Globe
December 29, 2008 by Bina Venkataraman in Boston Globe
A developer is proposing to build the first commercial-scale projects in New England waters to harness the power of the waves for electricity, but most of the energy they produce would actually come from attached wind turbines.
Grays Harbor Ocean Energy Company, based in Seattle, applied for preliminary permits from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in October to explore mounting 100 jack-up platforms - similar to those used in the offshore oil industry - in seven tracts of ocean around the country.
Fairhaven wind project developer dodges lawsuit
December 27, 2008 by Charis Anderson in South Coast Today
December 27, 2008 by Charis Anderson in South Coast Today
The developer behind the Fairhaven wind turbines is abandoning the special permit granted earlier this year but not the project, according to a letter sent to the town last week.
CCI Energy will now work with the town on how to restructure the project using the recently enacted Green Communities Act in order to provide the greatest benefit to the town, according to James Sweeney, CCI's president.
Study eyes wind power at Tufts campus
December 26, 2008 by Priyanka Dayal in Worcester Telegram & Gazette
December 26, 2008 by Priyanka Dayal in Worcester Telegram & Gazette
Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University will use a state grant to study the use of wind turbines on its sprawling campus in Grafton and Westboro.
The $39,760 grant was awarded by the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative's Renewable Energy Trust Fund. ...If the study finds that wind power is feasible, university officials will weigh the costs of constructing wind turbines and then seek permission from local boards.
Also filed under [
General|
Massachusetts]
For Councilor Greg Earls, the recently passed law that regulates the creation of wind turbines in the city needs another look. ...In his brief letter to fellow councilors, Earls stated there is a "public safety concern affecting the health and welfare of our citizens with respect to industrial wind turbines" over 100 feet high. Earls said he will supply further information, backing up his claims, to councilors Monday.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
Massachusetts]
Groups question how MMS is handling Cape Wind historic preservation issue
December 25, 2008 by Jim Kinsella in Cape Cod Today
December 25, 2008 by Jim Kinsella in Cape Cod Today
In a Dec. 17 letter, the federal Advisory Council on Historic Preservation notified the U.S. Minerals Management Service, the lead federal agency for permitting the proposed 130-turbine wind farm on Horseshoe Shoal in Nantucket Sound, that the MMS needs to take account of historic preservation concerns linked to Cape Wind before or concurrently with issuing a record of decision on the wind farm, and not after. ...[The] council questions whether the agency has completed key aspects of that process, such as documenting to the Massachusetts state historic preservation officer its findings on the area of potential effects on historic properties posed by the wind farm.
The Coast Guard report, which is not yet released, reportedly considers the 130-turbine project in Nantucket Sound "doable" but some in the audience found the simulated radar scenarios more than a tad confusing as they tried to pick out the boats from the false echoes and turbine blades. ...There are short periods of time when the vessels are subsumed into the turbines," Rugger concluded. "Inside the wind farm there are a lot of secondary reflections, and often times it's hard to pick out the vessels from that."
In a letter to U.S. Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthome dated Thursday, the congressman [Rahall D-WV] requests that the federal Minerals Management Service delay issuing its final environmental impact statement "until the U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) has provided the public 60 days to review and comment on a third-party review of the radar study submitted by the Cape Wind project developers."
Judge refuses to dismiss suit against Cape Wind
December 21, 2008 by Patrick Cassidy in Cape Cod Times
December 21, 2008 by Patrick Cassidy in Cape Cod Times
Although the judge reiterated in his decision an earlier finding that the town's claims can only be reviewed based on the parts of the project in state waters, the move nonetheless opens up the state's decision to approve Cape Wind to further scrutiny. ...McLaughlin said the main questions in the lawsuit are whether Bowles had all the necessary facts in front of him when he made his determination and whether he applied the law correctly.
Also filed under [
General|
Massachusetts]
With the final environmental report on the wind farm proposed to be built in Nantucket Sound now expected out early next year, letters of protest are blowing in from all sides.
In the past two days, powerful members of Congress, the federal agency responsible for historic preservation and a handful of national environmental groups have, for very different reasons, questioned the timing of the report's release.
Also filed under [
General|
Massachusetts]
Opponents of the proposed Nantucket Sound wind farm reacted angrily yesterday to a Coast Guard-sponsored presentation on the potential impact of the project on marine radar, calling the handling of a marine radar study a "black eye" for the federal agency.
The forum at the Sea Crest Oceanfront Resort and Conference Center ended on a sour note, with Cape Wind detractors claiming the Coast Guard was attempting to stifle public review of the marine radar study.
Also filed under [
General|
Massachusetts]
FAA wants proposed wind turbines trimmed
December 18, 2008 by Janet Hefler in Martha's Vineyard Times
December 18, 2008 by Janet Hefler in Martha's Vineyard Times
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) recently classified proposed wind turbine projects at West Tisbury School and the MV Arena (MVA) as presumed hazards to air navigation, given their location in the Martha's Vineyard Airport's flight paths. The FAA's decisions, which included recommendations for reducing the height of the two wind turbines, may literally take the wind out of the ice arena's project.
Also filed under [
Safety|
Massachusetts]
Business owner Mark Richey said yesterday he hopes to see his new 292-foot wind turbine up on his property in just a few weeks. ...Neighbors to the property have appealed the city's decision to grant permission for the turbine, raising concern about the impact the 292-foot-tall structure would have, such as the whirring noise it will generate, safety, low-level vibrations and the visual effect called "flicker" that wind turbines create when the afternoon light hits them.
Also filed under [
General|
Massachusetts]
The Coast Guard will delay by one month its recommendation on the advisability of the nation's first proposed offshore wind farm. It was not clear yesterday whether that will delay the key environmental review of Cape Wind ...Connie Terrell, a spokeswoman for the Coast Guard, said yesterday that, in the wake of Oberstar's request, the Guard decided to solicit comments from the public for 30 days before releasing its recommendation. It will hold a public meeting in Falmouth on Thursday.
Also filed under [
General|
Massachusetts]
Minnesota Congressman James Oberstar, the ranking Democrat on the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure at the time ...has used his new-found influence to delay the final federal environmental report on the proposal from Cape Wind Associates LLC to build 130 turbines in the Sound, thrusting himself into the controversial project's spotlight.
Yesterday, the Coast Guard, at the behest of Oberstar, agreed to delay a recommendation regarding the project until at least Jan.
Also filed under [
General|
Massachusetts]
If you see some balloons floating on the hill behind Graham Waste, don't think there is a sale on used cars. The balloons are part of the on-going Planning Board review process for two wind turbines with a proposed siting off Route 3A.
Beginning today (Friday) and continuing throughout the weekend, balloons will be floated as the approximate height of the two proposed wind turbine locations to aid the Planning Board in visualizing the scale of the project.