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Eyesores or clean machines? Environmentalists are split over the giant energy-producing towers popping up in Maryland and other states.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Maryland]
Expansion of the nation’s electricity generation by wind turbines may be eco-friendly, but it’s not winning hearts and minds in local communities, says Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment Morgan Williams.
Dr William’s report – Wind Power, People and Place – released today, said tensions were being increased by the limited scope for most New Zealanders to be involved in wind power development.
Wind energy projects headed for Champaign and Logan counties will get up to $3 million in grant awards to move forward with production, Gov. Ted Strickland announced Thursday. ...Diane McConnell, a Union Township resident and member of Union Neighbors United .. said the lack of information that affected residents have received is her biggest worry.
Also filed under [
Ohio]
Advocates call for lifting of ban on large scale wind projects
February 17, 2009 by John Dillon in Vermont Public Radio
February 17, 2009 by John Dillon in Vermont Public Radio
Wind energy advocates want the Douglas administration to lift its ban on large-scale wind projects on state-owned land.
The advocates say Vermont needs to explore all options as it looks for new energy resources.
But Governor Jim Douglas remains opposed to the idea
VPR's John Dillon reports:
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Vermont]
When the 50-turbine Dokie wind farm just outside Chetwynd is up and running next year, it will be B.C.'s first commercial wind power project, making the province the last in Canada to have such a power project.
A farm near Dawson Creek, B.C., called the Bear Mountain project is also scheduled to start generating power next year, and there are many other prospective sites being considered. ...And a group of homeowners near Bear Mountain has been rallying against the project there, insisting the wind farm will be too close to people.
Also filed under [
Canada]
A dispute over transmission lines for the proposed Nantucket Sound wind farm landed in court this week. ...Barnstable officials filed a complaint in Barnstable Superior Court Wednesday claiming the Cape Cod Commission has exclusive jurisdiction over the transmission cables that would link the turbines to the shoreline.
In October, the commission rejected a plan to have the transmission cables make landfall in Barnstable, and Cape Wind appealed that decision to the state Energy Facilities Siting Board.
In the complaint filed Wednesday, Barnstable officials contend the state Energy Facilities Siting Board does not have the authority to review the commission's denial of the transmission lines.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
Massachusetts]
...Rhode Island Gov. Don Carcieri's pledge nearly two years ago to bring wind power to a state where there is just one operating wind turbine. His goal was to get 15% of the state's electrical power from wind by 2011 - which would require about 100 turbines.
Several major challenges now stand in the way of the small state's big plans.
Among them: No one has decided where to put a wind farm, it's not clear how the project will be paid for, and public opposition - a major wild card - is unknown, according to Carcieri's top energy adviser, Andrew Dzykewicz. ...No other state has built an offshore wind farm, forcing Rhode Island's government to invent the process nearly from scratch. One of the state's main environmental regulatory bodies, the Coastal Resources Management Council, has not even decided what it requires from prospective wind power developers.
Bill would overrule local rules on windmills
August 28, 2009 by Charles Brace in Wisconsin State Journal
August 28, 2009 by Charles Brace in Wisconsin State Journal
Either way, the sound of wind turbines is making more ears perk up as a bill moves forward in the Legislature that would empower the Public Service Commission to create statewide rules governing wind power and pre-empt local government control over their placement.
The rules would govern the distance between turbines and homes along with their noise and the flicker effects of shadows from their turbine blades.
Also filed under [
Wisconsin]
BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese police opened fire on villagers protesting against the lack of compensation for land lost to a new wind farm in the southern province of Guangdong, local officials and residents said on Wednesday.
Also filed under [
Property Values|
Asia]
Clean energy future may be blowing in the wind
August 16, 2009 by Julia Merchant in Smoky Mountain News
August 16, 2009 by Julia Merchant in Smoky Mountain News
Will wind-generated power save the environment or sacrifice it?
The answer depends on who you ask ..."Your senators are very brave in what they're doing," said Lisa Linowes of New Hampshire-based Wind Action. "The legislature already concluded when it adopted the Ridge ordinance that your mountains have cultural significance to the state. When asked now to consider whether that value is worth more - or less - than wind generated electrons on the grid, your mountain senators are doing what most politicians in the U.S. have not done. They're putting a cold eye to the options and deciding wind is not worth the sacrifice, at least for now."
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
North Carolina]
The Cohocton Wind Farm Controversy continues -- this time, over print reports the turbines were not producing power. ...Local print reports quoted an official from the New York Independent Service Operator saying even though the turbines are spinning, the energy wasn't actually going into the power grid.
Tom Lewis, planning and environment manager with IPC Energy, said his company takes the results of a Wind Concerns Ontario survey seriously, but pointed to an earlier survey that found an overwhelming number of Ontarians are in favour of wind energy.
"I think there is a small number of people susceptible to health problems and I certainly empathize with them," Lewis said.
A joint statement was issued by the councils of Poole, Bournemouth, Purbeck and Christchurch in response to the "West of Isle of Wight" wind farm proposal.
It said they were "key stakeholders" representing local people, committed to sustaining the natural environment and working to support local employment and tourism industry.
"We are collectively disappointed that no approach appears to have been made... to either advise us of these plans or seek our views and the views of local residents, partners and businesses.
Also filed under [
UK]
DEQ issues go-ahead permit for MATL power line; State cites potential for wind development
October 29, 2008 by Nancy Thornton in Choteau Acantha
October 29, 2008 by Nancy Thornton in Choteau Acantha
Potential wind-farm development was the overriding reason why the state Department of Environmental Quality approved the proposed high-voltage power line that would tread its way across eastern Teton County between Great Falls and Lethbridge, Alta.
Montana Alberta Tie Ltd., or MATL, with offices in Calgary, Alta., submitted an application under DEQ's Major Facility Siting Act program on Dec. 1, 2005, providing a variety of reasons why its proposed privately-owned, 230-kilovolt transmission line would benefit the region. ...
Aggrieved parties who believe they are adversely affected by DEQ's decision have 30 days to appeal.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Montana]
Drafty reception for wind farm development; Green Energy Act; Northern Ontario residents critical of project
September 3, 2009 by Megan O'Toole in National Post
September 3, 2009 by Megan O'Toole in National Post
A group of Manitoulin Island residents is taking on a Toronto-based energy company, accusing Northland Power Inc. of fast-tracking a wind farm project without proper consultation.
The dispute is the latest sign of a groundswell of unease over wind power projects in the province, fuelled by groups such as Wind Concerns Ontario, which have been highly critical of the effects of such development on local communities. ...one of the project's most vocal opponents, says Northland has essentially "bulldozed" its plan over the community with little opportunity for a meaningful public response.
Also filed under [
Canada]
Only a massive immediate investment in wind energy and the installation of thousands of wind turbines over the next decade will permit France to reach its target of further reducing carbon dioxide emissions, according to a new report by a state agency.
Opponents of a controversial wind farm planned near Wellington are going back to court, claiming new evidence could limit the hours the project is allowed to run. Makara Guardians have asked both the High Court and the Environment Court to consider hearing submissions about the noise expected to come from Meridian Energy's West Wind project near Makara. ...
Makara Guardians lawyer Graham Taylor said the group was not appealing against the project in full, but wanted to bring new evidence before the court about conditions relating to wind noise.
Also filed under [
Noise|
Australia / New Zealand]
Green energy plan 'will force more families into fuel poverty'
June 25, 2008 by James Kirkup and Paul Ecclestone in The Telegraph
June 25, 2008 by James Kirkup and Paul Ecclestone in The Telegraph
More families will be driven into fuel poverty as a push to generate more electricity from "green" sources like wind, wave and solar power sharply increases household fuel bills, the Government has said.
Electricity bills could rise by 13 per cent and gas prices could go up by as much as 37 per cent as consumers are made to pay more to subsidise green energy production, ministers said in a new Renewable Energy Strategy. ...The Renewable Energy Strategy says: "It is likely that the measures we need to use to increase renewable energy will add to the challenges we face in combating fuel poverty."
Also filed under [
Impact on Economy|
UK]
Green projects generate splits in activist groups
December 12, 2007 by Greg Hitt in The Wall Street Journal
December 12, 2007 by Greg Hitt in The Wall Street Journal
On Capitol Hill, the Audubon Society is leading the fight to increase production of climate-friendly power. So why are Audubon enthusiasts battling a wind farm that could help meet that goal?
For one thing, there are trout in nearby streams, which activists say are at risk from chemical and sediment runoff from construction of 30 turbines, each soaring about 400 feet -- taller than the Statue of Liberty. Then there are the bats and hawks, which might be puréed by the giant blades that would catch the wind gusting along the Allegheny Mountains of Western Pennsylvania.
"They're enormous," says Tom Dick, a retired veterinarian who founded the local Audubon chapter. "When you start looking at this, it's like, 'hell, this is not right.'"
Greens, new-energy backers at odds over use of desert; Solar plans spur heated debate
September 2, 2009 by Michael Riley in The Denver Post
September 2, 2009 by Michael Riley in The Denver Post
If the vast creosote-covered plain that is California's Mojave Desert represents to some the grand potential of America's renewable-energy future, Jim Harvey sees something else.
"Their model is 'You must kill land to save land,' " said Harvey, a Web- page designer and homegrown activist who sees the Obama administration's push for green energy here as a destructive force poised to swallow his beloved desert. "How does that make any sense?"
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
USA]