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[ General ]

Low energy prices force year delay in Roxbury wind farm

Posted by: Lisa on November 21, 2009 1:03:18 PM
Owners of a wind-power company set to erect 22 turbines on local hills have decided to delay the project by a year because the energy market has fallen in the recession. Record Hill Wind LLC is building a $120 million wind farm along the 4-mile ridgeline that connects Partridge Peak, Record Hill and Flathead Mountain. The company had planned to put up the turbines next year, but now says it will be up and running in 2011.
Note : http://www.sunjournal.com/node/567503/
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[ General ]

Camden officials OK wind project feasibility study

Posted by: Lisa on November 21, 2009 10:04:32 AM
Saying that they are paying close attention to Vinalhaven's community wind project, town officials this week agreed to a preliminary feasibility study for a wind project atop Ragged Mountain. While no project is now in the pipeline, anemometers placed on the mountain three years ago found that the town has "a serious wind resource," said Jeff Lewis, chairman of the Camden Energy Committee. ...Any project ultimately would be put to a town vote, Lewis said. That won't be a slam-dunk for wind power proponents, according to Baker. "If you thought Vinalhaven was iconic, try messing around with the Camden Hills," he said.
Note : http://www.bangordailynews.com/detail/130437.html
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[ General ]

Turbine setbacks leave towns twisting in the wind

Posted by: Lisa on November 21, 2009 8:12:43 AM
The city thought it was ahead of the curve back in 2007 when it bought a windmill that was supposed to provide power for a transportation center built around a station for the Downeaster train. The $200,000 windmill never came close to meeting expectations, but even that was OK. The city had an agreement in which the manufacturer would pay the difference between the value of the anticipated electricity and the value of the actual output.
Note : http://pressherald.mainetoday.com/story.php?id=297526&ac=PHnws
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[ General ]

Proposed highland plantation wind farm generates concern

Posted by: Lisa on November 20, 2009 1:19:19 PM
Robert Gardiner, a public broadcasting executive-turned-wind power developer, fielded questions from the audience about the so-called Highland Wind project. It's a $250 million development that would place 48 wind turbines in a single-file, southeasterly row along four peaks. It would likely be visible from the Appalachian Trail. ...I'm very concerned about the mountaintop removal," says Greg Perkins, the owner of the home in Highland Plantation that would be closest to the wind farm, about a half-mile away. He's also a soil scientist. "I really think we need to rethink this whole wind power thing in Maine. It doesn't create that much energy and for what we're losing, there's no balance to it. So I really think we need to rethink it."
Note : http://www.mpbn.net/News/MaineNews/tabid/181/ctl/ViewItem/mid/3475/ItemId/9906/Default.aspx
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[ General ]

Dixmont wind vote results

Posted by: Lisa on November 20, 2009 1:01:37 PM
Folks living in Dixmont voted Thursday night on an ordinance that would regulate wind power development in their town. The issue arose when a company began looking into the prospect of placing ten wind turbines along Mount Harris in Dixmont. For the past nine months the local planning board has been researching the effects of such projects on residents living nearby.
Note : http://www.wabi.tv/news/8653/dixmont-wind-vote-results
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[ General ]

Jonathan Carter joins effort to curb wind farm siting atop peaks

Posted by: Lisa on November 20, 2009 9:29:39 AM
Longtime environmental activist and wind-power supporter Jonathan Carter of Lexington Township joined forces this month with a grassroots coalition trying to stop sprawling industrial wind farms atop Maine's mountains. Carter, a former Green Party gubernatorial candidate, is the director of the Forest Ecology Network, which was created to protect, preserve and defend Maine's native forest environment through public awareness, grassroots citizen activism and education, according to its Web site. ..."This isn't simply (not in my backyard)," Carter said. "These mountaintops are unique. They're rare. To destroy them is, in my thinking, extremely inappropriate and shortsighted."
Note : http://www.sunjournal.com/node/548645
Read More (599  words )
[ General ]

Islanders flock to unveiling of wind turbines

Posted by: Lisa on November 18, 2009 12:45:56 PM
Dignitaries, schoolchildren and more than 400 islanders crowded Tuesday morning around the base of a massive wind turbine to officially dedicate the Fox Islands Wind Project. ...While it seemed clear that the vast majority of residents at the ceremony were thrilled with "their" turbines, a small but vocal group of islanders who live close to the turbines has expressed deep concerns about the noise, flickering red lights and potential negative effects on health and well-being. "Last night, it was just throbbing," said David Wylie, who lives about a half mile from the turbines. "Whump, whump, whump."
Note : http://www.bangordailynews.com/detail/129959.html?comment_result=posted
Read More (840  words )
[ Zoning/Planning ]

Dixmont to vote on industrial wind energy ordinance

Posted by: Lisa on November 18, 2009 1:21:30 AM
Two years ago, a company started looking into the potential for placing wind turbines along Mt. Harris in Dixmont. Since then, local residents have been talking about what that could mean for them-- and Thursday, the issue comes to a vote. Mt. Harris Wind had plans to build about ten turbines along this ridge in Dixmont, says project partner Andrew Price.
Note : http://www.wabi.tv/news/8626/dixmont-to-vote-on-industrial-wind-energy-ordinance
Read More (341  words )
[ General | Transmission ]

Study of energy corridors beset by complications

Posted by: Lisa on November 17, 2009 9:59:24 AM
Supporters of liquefied natural gas terminals have thrown a late snag into what has been an orderly process to create rules for developing multibillion-dollar energy corridors in Maine. LNG representatives want to extend the current moratorium on energy corridors and create a government commission to do more reviews. Their proposal was filed late last week with the special study group already debating policy for energy corridors.
Note : http://pressherald.mainetoday.com/story.php?id=296620&ac=
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[ General ]

Island's energy is up

Posted by: Lisa on November 16, 2009 7:09:36 AM
In the distance, the dark, low expanse of the island is punctuated by three white lines jutting through the horizon. Three giant wind turbines rise from the interior of the island, visible from miles away, above pines, above homes, above Vinalhaven's granite bones. And on Tuesday, the $14.5 million Fox Islands Wind project officially goes on line with a ribbon-cutting event ...The Lindgrens said the noise can be more intrusive then they were led to believe it would be. The noise is constant, said Britta Lindgren, like a jet passing overhead, "but it never passes." And there's an odd pressure in the air, indefinable, like low frequencies that have begun since the turbines started.
Note : http://pressherald.mainetoday.com/story.php?id=296430&ac=PHnws&pg=1
Read More (1621  words )
[ General ]

Maine groups urge wind power slowdown

Posted by: Lisa on November 10, 2009 11:29:04 AM
Two groups came to the Maine Statehouse on Monday to ask the state to slow down wind power development, which they say is gobbling up environmentally sensitive mountain ridges for questionable results. The Citizens' Task Force on Wind Power said it wants to work with state officials to reconsider statewide goals the group says will put turbines atop 360 miles of the state's mountaintops. The group formed recently in opposition to a project under way in Roxbury near Rumford.
Note : http://www.rutlandherald.com/article/BT/20091110/NEWS02/911100363/0/BENNETT
Read More (459  words )
[ General ]

Group takes stand against wind power; Wind power opposed by new citizens group

Posted by: Lisa on November 10, 2009 12:41:15 AM
While government, private and educational entities work in earnest to bring large-scale wind turbines to Maine, a newly formed group of concerned residents says the promises being made to Maine people are too good to be true. Wind turbines can be as loud as an airliner, as ugly as an oil derrick and as damaging to the environment as a clear-cut, according to members of the Citizens Task Force on Wind Power.
Note : http://www.bangordailynews.com/detail/128882.html
Read More (540  words )
[ General ]

Wind farm forum brings ill breeze

Posted by: Lisa on November 07, 2009 7:15:00 AM
More than 60 people turned out Friday night for the first public informational meeting on a proposed wind farm project on a ridgeline in Dixfield and Canton. Most spoke against siting a wind farm on the Colonel Holman Mountain ridge, stating beliefs that noise and shadow flicker could cause a variety of illnesses in people who live within 2 miles of a turbine. Three of the four speakers were opposed to wind turbines.
Note : http://www.sunjournal.com/node/433424
Read More (644  words )
[ General ]

Excessive winds may blow Rumford wind power project elsewhere

Posted by: Lisa on November 06, 2009 1:56:25 PM
Selectmen and a large crowd at Thursday night's board meeting came to hear a presentation by Boston-based wind power company First Wind on its proposed Longfellow wind farm project for Black Mountain and North and South Twin mountains. Instead, everyone learned that such a project might not even be viable, because First Wind studies so far show that wind atop Black Mountain is too strong for wind turbine engineering to handle, said Matthew Kearns, vice president of business development for First Wind.
Note : http://www.sunjournal.com/node/432695/
Read More (543  words )
[ Energy Policy ]

Downeast fishermen harbor doubts about offshore energy demonstration

Posted by: Lisa on November 05, 2009 4:10:03 PM
Maine's quest to become a leader in developing an alternative energy industry has plenty of support in Augusta and Orono, but along the shoreline people are more wary. While some see the development of offshore wind energy as a powerful engine for economic growth in Maine, many in the state's beleaguered lobster industry fear that wind farms will be just one more item on a growing list of obstacles to fishing in the Gulf of Maine. Last month, the state's Ocean Energy Task Force tentatively identified four sites along the Maine coast as potential locations for testing offshore wind generators.
Note : http://www.fenceviewer.com/site/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=22260:Downeast%20Fishermen%20Harbor%20Doubts%20About%20Offshore%20Energy%20Demonstration&catid=39:maritime&Itemid=65
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[ General | Massachusetts ]

Harvard signs wind power contract

Posted by: Lisa on November 03, 2009 7:14:43 AM
Harvard inked a deal yesterday to purchase 10 percent of annual electricity consumed on its Cambridge and Allston campuses from a leading wind provider in New England. This agreement, in which Harvard will acquire over 30 million kilowatt-hours of renewable energy, slates the University to become the largest institutional buyer of wind power in the region, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. ...Harvard will purchase 50 percent of the energy produced from First Wind's soon-to-be constructed wind farm in northern Maine for the next 15 years.
Note : http://www.thecrimson.com/article.aspx?ref=529893
Read More (450  words )
[ Transmission | Canada ]

Provincial power deal aimed at N.E. energy markets

Posted by: Lisa on October 31, 2009 6:23:40 AM
North America's largest utility company Hydro-Quebec has announced it will pay $4.4 billion for transmission lines of New Brunswick Power, a deal that would help the company secure greater access to electricity markets in the U.S. Hydro-Quebec announced Thursday that it expects to spend up to $23 billion over the next decade to boost its hydro electric output by 4,500 megawatts a year. Much of that will be exported to the United States and Ontario.
Note : http://www.bangordailynews.com/detail/127591.html
Read More (474  words )
[ Zoning/Planning ]

Wells voters to consider wind-turbine rules

Posted by: Lisa on October 29, 2009 9:58:00 AM
Wind turbines are a permitted use in town, but there's hardly anything on the books to regulate the devices, according to town officials. Article 2, Question 2, on the November referendum would change all that. "People are talking about (wind turbines) so we should have something out there to guide it," said Code Enforcement Officer Jodine Adams, who noted two turbines are already up and running in town. The Wells municipal code minimally addresses wind turbines, she said, but the proposed ordinance would establish a slew of guidelines that aren't yet addressed in town law.
Note : http://www.seacoastonline.com/articles/20091029-NEWS-910290347
Read More (437  words )
[ Energy Policy ]

King issues cautions on wind power obstacles

Posted by: Lisa on October 29, 2009 8:51:37 AM
Converting ocean winds into electricity could be a boon for the state but many obstacles need to be resolved before it can become a reality. That was the message former Gov. Angus King delivered Wednesday to more than 200 people attending the second Maine Coastal Waters Conference at Point Lookout. King said the state will need to factor the needs of shipping, fisheries and environmental groups when siting wind generators offshore. In addition, the technology to harness that energy has yet to be developed, he said.
Note : http://www.bangordailynews.com/detail/127216.html?comment_result=posted
Read More (605  words )
[ Transmission ]

PUC staff: Power grid upgrade is too costly

Posted by: Lisa on October 29, 2009 8:05:40 AM
Maine can have a reliable power grid for substantially less money, and with far fewer transmission towers and substations, than the $1.5 billion project Central Maine Power Co. is proposing, the staff of the Public Utilities Commission has concluded. In an analysis made available late Tuesday, the PUC staff said CMP has overstated and accelerated the need for its Maine Power Reliability Program, in part by using forecasts for growth in electricity use that have become outdated since the recession started. ... the staff concludes that the grid could be upgraded for $667 million under a basic plan, and for $852 million under a more extensive upgrade, depending on what is done.
Note : http://pressherald.mainetoday.com/story.php?id=292747&ac=PHnws&pg=1
Read More (980  words )

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