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The Palm Springs Planning Commission approved about 50 windmills on Wednesday. ...The turbines would be about 3,000 feet from the Mountain Gate housing community and 2,000 feet from where College of the Desert's west valley campus is planned.
Powerlink foes weigh legal options; Groups say process favored SDG&E
December 20, 2008 by Onell Soto and Michael Gardner in Union-Tribune
December 20, 2008 by Onell Soto and Michael Gardner in Union-Tribune
Opponents of the Sunrise Powerlink are vowing to keep on fighting despite Thursday's vote by the California Public Utilities Commission approving the big power line from Imperial County to San Diego.
Groups representing consumers, environmentalists and backcountry activists say the process was unfairly tilted in favor of San Diego Gas & Electric, which proposed the line in 2005.
They are weighing legal options, such as asking appeals court judges to review the decision to make sure it was done properly.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
California]
State commission approves Sunrise Powerlink project - opponents set to appeal
December 19, 2008 by Michael Gardner in Union-Tribune
December 19, 2008 by Michael Gardner in Union-Tribune
The California Public Utilities Commission on Thursday cleared the way for construction of the Sunrise Powerlink, a contentious transmission line that promises to bring more reliable and renewable power from the Imperial Valley to San Diego. The 4-1 vote allows San Diego Gas & Electric Co. to move forward with the 123-mile, $1.9 billion power-line project, which could deliver enough electricity to serve 650,000 households.
San Diego Gas & Electric Co. said it must build a $1.9 billion, 123-mile transmission line to harness solar, wind and underground heat from a distant desert.
Critics question if the high-voltage power line will deliver on its promise of providing renewable power from California's Imperial Valley to the nation's eighth-largest city. They say it will blight the mountain landscape with 150-foot towers, and they emphasize that ratepayers will pick up the tab.
Those views will clash Thursday when the California Public Utilities Commission meets in San Francisco to consider approving the power line.
Also filed under [
General|
California]
County supervisors postpone hearing on wind energy project
December 17, 2008 by Sonia Fernandez in Noozhawk.com
December 17, 2008 by Sonia Fernandez in Noozhawk.com
The board votes to grant more time for ongoing discussions between the parties involved.
The Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday voted 4-0 (Supervisor Joni Gray recused herself) to continue a hearing on appeals of the Lompoc Wind Energy Project to a date in February 2009.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
California]
County supervisors to hear appeal of wind energy project
December 16, 2008 by Sonia Fernandez in Noozhawk.com
December 16, 2008 by Sonia Fernandez in Noozhawk.com
The Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday will consider an appeal of the Lompoc Wind Energy Project, a proposed wind farm of up to 65 wind turbine generators. ...Opponents, however, have raised issues about the effects of the nearly 400-foot tall turbines on views and quality of life in the area.
Also filed under [
General|
California]
A Spanish-owned corporation wants to build a new wind farm in the East County with more than 100 wind turbines. Executives rolled into Boulevard recently to pitch their plan, and reaction was not too friendly.
Executives from the Iberdrola Energy Company showed up with a slick Power Point presentation, colorful graphics and a few dozen chocolate bars - dark chocolate with a logo on the wrapper. All this to pitch a new wind farm project to the Boulevard Community Planning Group.
Also filed under [
General|
California]
Two appeals filed against the approval of the Lompoc wind energy project are on the board's agenda, but the project applicant requested Friday that they be postponed.
The supervisors received the letters from Acciona Energy asking for a 60-day continuance, because it would provide more time to work with the appellants - Lompoc area residents George and Cheryl Bedford and the California Department of Fish and Game. ...The state Department of Fish and Game was more concerned with bird and bat deaths that are common to wind turbines.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
California]
Higher electricity bills in Redding's future
December 14, 2008 by Scott Mobley in The Record Searchlight
December 14, 2008 by Scott Mobley in The Record Searchlight
The nearly 8 percent rate increase Redding Electric Utility will seek Tuesday for next year and 2010 could be just the beginning of a long, steady and rather steep cost climb for customers.
Rate forecasts through 2014 show REU imposing identical 7.84 percent increases each year while still chewing through wads of cash. ...Redding has made up for the lost hydropower, in part, by commissioning a pair of large gas-fired turbines at its plant on Clear Creek Road. The utility has also entered long-term contracts for wind and biomass power.
The wind and biomass have allowed REU to meet state renewable energy mandates. But all three power sources cost more than twice as much as hydropower, adding $10.5 million each year on average to REU's fuel tab, Hauser said.
Two appeals filed against the approval of the Lompoc wind energy project are on the board's agenda, but the project applicant requested Friday that they be postponed.
The supervisors received the letters from Acciona Energy asking for a 60-day continuance, because it would provide more time to work with the appellants - Lompoc area residents George and Cheryl Bedford and the California Department of Fish and Game.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
California]
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]
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.
Surging issues over wind power; Controversial transmission line nearly complete
November 22, 2008 by Tammy Marashlian in The Signal
November 22, 2008 by Tammy Marashlian in The Signal
Electricity generated by a massive "wind farm" of giant windmills near Tehachapi will be carried through transmission lines to Southern California. ...But not everyone sees the rosy side of Edison's "green" project.
Also filed under [
General|
California]
Commissioners oppose location of wind generation projects
November 20, 2008 by Dave Maxwell in The Lincoln County Record
November 20, 2008 by Dave Maxwell in The Lincoln County Record
Lincoln County Commissioners, during their regular meeting November 10, said they were not opposed to the development of wind-generated power in the County, but would rather seek different locations than the ones being proposed.
Mission Edison Group, a subsidiary of Southern California Edison, had approached the County about building wind generators on Mt. Wilson and Table Mountain, both a little north of Pioche. County Commissioners have said they do not think those locations are the best places for such large generators.
PUC hears case for, against Powerlink; State panel could vote Dec. 4 on construction
November 8, 2008 by Onell R. Soto in San Diego Union-Tribune
November 8, 2008 by Onell R. Soto in San Diego Union-Tribune
Whether San Diego Gas & Electric Co. should build a massive power line into the Imperial Valley goes to the heart of a debate that's gripping California and the country as it works to wean itself from fossil fuels.
Is it better to rely on huge solar, wind and geothermal power plants far away or generate that power close to where it is needed?
Also filed under [
General|
California]
California study shows high cost of renewable power
November 7, 2008 by Bernie Woodall in Thomson Reuters
November 7, 2008 by Bernie Woodall in Thomson Reuters
If California expands its renewable power generation to be a third of electricity delivered in the state by 2020, it may cost $60 billion, the state's utility regulator said in a report issued on Thursday.
It is more costly to make electricity with renewable power -- solar, wind, geothermal and other sources that emit no or low amounts of global-warming greenhouse gases -- than with natural gas, nuclear and coal power plants. ...On Tuesday, California voters overwhelmingly -- 65 percent of the vote -- rejected a statewide ballot measure that would have required 50 percent of power to be generated from renewables by 2025.
Federal rules may be in play for Powerlink; 2005 law offers path if California regulators reject Sunrise proposal
November 4, 2008 by Onell R. Soto in Union-Tribune
November 4, 2008 by Onell R. Soto in Union-Tribune
If state regulators follow through with an administrative law judge's recommendation to reject the Sunrise Powerlink, San Diego Gas & Electric Co. still has other options to get the transmission line it seeks.
The California Public Utilities Commission decision may be appealed to the courts, or SDG&E could ask the federal government to override state regulators and authorize the big line.
A 2005 law allows utilities and other power-line builders to go to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission if they want to build a line rejected by state authorities in areas where federal officials believe there isn't enough electric transmission.
Supervisors will hear opinions on wind turbines
November 3, 2008 by Dylan Darling in Record Searchlight
November 3, 2008 by Dylan Darling in Record Searchlight
On a day of big decisions around the country - election day - the Shasta County Board of Supervisors will be weighing approval of a 6 1/2-mile long string of wind turbines atop mountains overlooking Burney.
While the Shasta County Planning Commission approved the 100-megawatt Hatchet Ridge Wind Project with a 5-0 vote on Oct. 3, a pair of appeals the following week now has the supervisors reviewing the plans.
The appeal hearing is set for 1:30 p.m. Tuesday.
Also filed under [
General|
California]
A draft decision released late Wednesday by a California Public Utilities
Commission judge would authorize the use of tradable renewable energy credits in efforts to comply with the state's renewable mandate.
The decision, crafted by administrative law judge Anne Simon defines
rules for a tradable REC market. ...With an eye on protecting ratepayers from excessive payments for tradable RECs, a transitional price cap of $50/REC used by investor-owned utilities would be implemented, the plan says.
This means an IOU could not use for RPS compliance a tradable REC for which it paid more than $50 on a levelized basis.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
California]
Florida's broken windmills: A California problem
October 28, 2008 by Jackie Devereaux and staff in Desert Valley Star
October 28, 2008 by Jackie Devereaux and staff in Desert Valley Star
The permit allowing windmills to go in didn't say they could sit there broken. Palm Springs is getting tough. If windmills are going to exist in the city they must be operational.
A city that has welcomed windmills since it was first approached about them in the early 1980's is finding that many of those windmills are no longer working and it wants them fixed. The question is who's responsible for fixing them?
Florida Power and Light (FPL), the owner of the inoperable windmills, was allowed to install and operate local windmill farms under a conditional use permit (CUP) stipulating if the windmill does not run for six months, it's declared a public nuisance and without a hearing, must be abated. ...So far FPL is all talk and no action as it has not been able to satisfy the city's or landowners' concerns.