News
Category:
California
Site Acquisition Strategy for California
October 24, 2006 by Western Wind Energy Press Release in Earth Times
October 24, 2006 by Western Wind Energy Press Release in Earth Times
Western Wind Energy Corporation has reviewed the wind energy marketplace across the United States and has determined to seek new wind energy development opportunities in California. The strategy is focused at 30 sites totaling over 1,200 Megawatts.
$3 billion Tehachapi facility would be largest in nation
February 21, 2007 by Ryan Schuster, staff writer in The Bakersfield Californian
February 21, 2007 by Ryan Schuster, staff writer in The Bakersfield Californian
A massive wind power facility proposed for the Tehachapi area, if approved by state regulators, would become the largest project of its kind in the nation.
The $3 billion Alta Wind Energy Center would involve installing as many as 750 wind turbines over a 50-square-mile area east and south of Tehachapi. It would generate as much as 1,500 megawatts — more than twice the power of the largest existing wind energy facility in the United States. It also would more than double the wind energy produced in the Tehachapi area.
Also filed under [
General|
Zoning/Planning]
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]
Hundreds of Tehachapi residents are trying to ban a wind farm from blowing into their part of town, but Kern County may not have legal grounds to stop the San Diego company that wants to build it.
The nearly 700 Tehachapi residents have signed a petition against giant wind generators, but it's not because they're anti-environment. It's quite the opposite. They just don't want the wind farms blowing in their back yards.
"If you picture a football field spinning in the air, that's how big they will be," Kassandra McQuillen explained.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on People]
A "wind farm" that would take advantage of the gusts that have been blowing through the Central Coast at 30 to 50 mph is moving right along despite a lawsuit filed against the county's approval of the project.
Construction won't begin for at least a year, but in the meantime officials of the developer say they are working to meet all the requirements imposed by the county with the intention of protecting the environment surrounding the "clean energy" project.
15,000 homes could be powered by 49 turbines on ridge near Burney
September 24, 2006 by Kimberly Ross in Record-Searchlight
September 24, 2006 by Kimberly Ross in Record-Searchlight
Up to 49 wind turbines could line 6½ miles of ridgeline near Burney -- and might be visible from parts of downtown Redding.
If approved, the $180 million Hatchet Ridge Wind Project would harness up to 125 megawatts of electricity at the site of the 1992 Fountain Fire, seven miles west of Burney and north of Highway 299. The turbines could reach 500 feet tall.
Also filed under [
General|
Zoning/Planning]
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.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on People]
A runaway windmill in Tehachapi closed Highway 58 -- a major east-west freeway connecting California's southern Central Valley to Las Vegas, Nevada and Arizona -- for most of the day Sunday.
As of 6:45 p.m., the highway remained closed between Tehachapi and Mojave. Officials had no estimate as to when it might reopen
Also filed under [
Safety|
Structural Failure]
A Mighty Wind Is Pushing U.S. Renewable Energy Success
July 24, 2007 in Consulting-Specifying Engineer
July 24, 2007 in Consulting-Specifying Engineer
The United States is expected to be home to an anticipated 49,000 MW of installed wind-power capacity by 2015, making it the world's largest wind-power producer, according to a recent report. Developers are expected to invest more than $65 billion between 2007 and 2015 in wind-power facilities, researchers say.
Airport commission takes look at wind farm project
March 11, 2008 by Danny Bernardini in The Reporter
March 11, 2008 by Danny Bernardini in The Reporter
For the first time in more than a year, a group other than the Solano County Planning Commission will be discussing a proposal to install up to 88 wind turbines in the Montezuma Hills.
The Solano County Airport Land Use Commission will hear the issue Thursday night, a year after voting against the issue the first time around for fear of the turbines affecting the radar system at Travis Air Force Base.
The difference this time is that officials at Travis are no longer objecting to the proposal, as stated in a letter written by Wing Commander Col. Steven Arquiette earlier this month. ...The company proposing the project, enXco, has offered Travis a gift of up to $1 million that the base may use anyway it wishes.
Also filed under [
Safety|
Zoning/Planning]
Alameda County Flubs First Step in Reducing Bird Kills by Obsolete Wind Turbines
April 3, 2006 by Center for Biological Diversity in Press Release
April 3, 2006 by Center for Biological Diversity in Press Release
Oakland, Calif. – The Alameda County Planning Department is recommending that long-time wind industry paid consultant and advocate WEST, Inc. serve as the so-called “neutral” scientific monitor for avian deaths caused by the Altamont Pass wind turbines, despite a clear and continuing financial conflict of interest.
Alameda County supervisors approved a one-year monitoring system that would study the impacts of the Altamont Pass windmills on scores of birds, including golden eagles, red-tailed hawks, burrowing owls and other protected species.
The $1.4 million price tag for the deal caused concern among the supervisors, who are afraid the cost of the study has spiraled out of control, but saying the study was necessary, they approved it unanimously Tuesday.
The dirty little secret about the windmill farm at Altamont Pass is that it slaughters thousands of birds every year while politicians turn a blind eye. Four years ago, environmental groups filed suit after the Alameda County Board of Supervisors effectively allowed the farm's several owners to keep killing birds despite evidence that the deaths could be greatly lessened.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Birds]
Altamont birds win experts - Supervisors designate team to study windmills vs. raptors
May 5, 2006 by Alex Breitler in The Record
May 5, 2006 by Alex Breitler in The Record
OAKLAND - It's like asking a scientist employed by an oil company to study pollution in San Francisco Bay.
That was the analogy used by environmentalists Thursday as they argued against hiring a wind energy consultant to conduct a sweeping study of bird deaths at the Altamont Pass windmills.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife]
Altamont Pass Bird Kill Study Underway-Will Determine Methods to Reduce Raptor Mortality at Wind Farm
December 8, 2006 by Jeff Miller, Center for Biological Diversity in Press Release
December 8, 2006 by Jeff Miller, Center for Biological Diversity in Press Release
OAKLAND Calif. – A blue-ribbon Scientific Review Committee (SRC) and an Avian Monitoring Team appointed by Alameda County to study bird fatalities at Altamont Pass has begun a groundbreaking monitoring program aimed at finding solutions for reducing the high number of birds of prey killed at some wind turbines.
This monitoring effort is intended to detect trends in bird mortality at Altamont Pass and evaluate the effectiveness of mitigation measures implemented to reduce avian mortality. The goal is to reduce deaths of target raptor species by 45 percent.
Altamont Pass Settlement Fails to Reduce Bird Kills
February 18, 2008 by H. Sterling Burnett, Ph.D. in The Heartland Institute
February 18, 2008 by H. Sterling Burnett, Ph.D. in The Heartland Institute
A January 2007 settlement agreement intended to reduce the number of bird deaths from wind turbines at Altamont Pass, California is failing, scientists report.
As a result, environmental groups are calling for additional restrictions on wind power generation at the nation's largest wind farm. ...Many of the affected bird species are protected by state and federal laws. Some of the birds killed are protected by federal laws so stringent they do not allow the taking or killing of even a single member of the species.
Wind farm critics say the failure to enforce federal wildlife protection laws in the Altamont wind farm case is a result of environmentalists' pressure for wind power.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Birds]
Altamont Pass turbines still killing birds of prey
January 12, 2008 by Jake Armstrong in Recordnet.com
January 12, 2008 by Jake Armstrong in Recordnet.com
Environmentally friendly efforts aren't so kind to each other in the rolling hills of the Altamont Pass.
For years, whirling rotors on some of the 5,000-plus wind turbines that line the pass have minced and otherwise killed thousands of golden eagles, red-tailed hawks and other birds of prey at a rate alarming to groups on a mission to protect them. ...Now a year into the settlement agreement, there has been little progress in reducing bird deaths to levels called for in the settlement.
The Golden Gate Audubon Society, a party to the lawsuit that triggered the settlement, backs scientists' recommendation that hundreds more turbines need to be relocated and the shutdown extended in order to reach the reduction mark.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Birds]
I am a volunteer at the Lindsay Wildlife Museum hospital (in Walnut Creek, Calif.). In the last two weeks we have had to euthanize three golden eagles and many other birds of prey that have fallen victim to the (Altamont) windmills. Too often the windmills chop them up so bad it is impossible to save them.
In Utah, state officials are fielding various combinations of energy proposals, a list that includes solar and geothermal installations and an energy storage project ...Scores of projects - some speculative, others well-funded and a few quirky - have surfaced with energy companies eager to take advantage of loan guarantees and tax breaks being promoted by President Barack Obama.
Alternative energy resource bill passed in state legislature
August 25, 2006 by Jehán Seirafi in The Desert Sun
August 25, 2006 by Jehán Seirafi in The Desert Sun
A bill to promote geothermal energy development in California was unanimously approved in both houses of the state’s legislature and signed into law Tuesday.
Also filed under [
General|
Energy Policy]
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