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OPPD gets 12 proposals to provide wind energy
October 13, 2008 by Nancy Gaarder in Omaha World-Herald
October 13, 2008 by Nancy Gaarder in Omaha World-Herald
Seems like there's plenty of interest in helping the Omaha Public Power District more fully embrace wind power.
The uility on Friday received 12 proposals to provide it up to 80 megawatts of wind energy.
Utilities, private contractors and entrepreneurs know how to build wind farms.
They can evaluate wind potential, negotiate easements with farmers and ranchers, construct 230-foot tall towers topped with 131-foot blades, and put electricity on the grid if there's access to transmission lines.
What they can't do is chart a clear path to the future for wind energy because it will be greatly influenced by decisions made in Washington, D.C. For now, there is no comprehensive national energy policy.
NPPD shifts focus to large private wind projects
December 23, 2007 by Mark Coddington in Grand Island Independent
December 23, 2007 by Mark Coddington in Grand Island Independent
At this time last year, Nebraska advocates for wind energy were bracing for another legislative session of mostly futile efforts to nudge public power out of its resistance to privately developed wind projects.
Now, the Nebraska Public Power District, the state's largest public utility, is negotiating with three private developers on projects totaling 150 megawatts a figure that would dwarf the state's current production of 73 MW per year. ...But not everyone is excited about the push into wind. ...Southern [Power District] spokeswoman LeAnne Doose said the utility's board is concerned about installing a traditionally more costly form of power at a time when utilities are passing double-digit rate increases.
Doose said she has seen a groundswell of support for wind energy, but she's concerned that utilities might bow to popular pressure rather than coming at wind with "a common-sense approach."
"It's coming," Doose said. "We just hope that it's done in more of a sensible way."
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies]
Heineman endorses community-owned wind turbines
May 22, 2007 by George Lauby in North Platte Bulletin
May 22, 2007 by George Lauby in North Platte Bulletin
Gov. Heineman signed a bill Monday encouraging communities to develop the wind turbines that generate electricity.
The new law financially encourages towns and landowners to develop a "field" of turbines, working in conjunction with Nebraska's public power companies.
Under that model, rural Nebraskans would own the development and not sell the wind rights to private companies.
The bill recently passed the Legislature, 49-0.
Also filed under [
General]
Nebraska lawmakers aprove bill encouraging wind farms
May 15, 2007 by Leslie Reed in Omaha World-Herald
May 15, 2007 by Leslie Reed in Omaha World-Herald
State lawmakers gave final approval Tuesday to a measure to encourage wind farms in Nebraska.
The bill would permit public power districts to work with private developers and landowners to build electricity-generating wind turbines.
All 49 lawmakers voted in favor of Legislative Bill 629, which now goes to Gov. Dave Heineman for his signature.
Under the plan, developers and private equity firms would work with rural Nebraskans to build wind farms and collect federal incentives for alternative energy production.
When the incentives expire after 10 years, the Nebraskans would attain full ownership of the projects.
Also filed under [
General|
Tax Breaks & Subsidies]
Company proposes wind farm that could be sold to NPPD
April 30, 2007 by Twylla Crosby in Norfolk Daily News
April 30, 2007 by Twylla Crosby in Norfolk Daily News
Filibusters in the Nebraska Legislature can't compare with the wind blowing through Boone County fields east of here.
New wind maps prove what many Boone County residents have known for years - the wind really does blow harder and more often in these hills.
Now, with a wind farm being proposed for the Petersburg area, that wind could become another crop to be harvested and put some extra cash in farmers' pockets.
Jim Jenkins, Nebraska representative for Third Planet Windpower of Bad Axe, Mich., stresses that the company is still in the early phases of negotiations and discussion with regard to "the business structure' for its proposed investment of up to $170 million in a wind farm east of here.
Also filed under [
General|
Tax Breaks & Subsidies]
Ethanol Reaps a Backlash In Small Midwestern Towns
March 23, 2007 by Joe Barrett in Wall Street Journal
March 23, 2007 by Joe Barrett in Wall Street Journal
CAMBRIA, Wis. -- With empty storefronts on the main drag and corn stubble stretching for miles in the surrounding hills, this fading farm town seems like a natural stop for the ethanol express.
Not to John Mueller, though. The 54-year-old stay-at-home dad has led a dogged battle to prevent a corn mill from building an ethanol plant up the hill from the village school. Concerned about air pollution, the water supply and the mill's environmental track record, Mr. Mueller and his group, Cambrians for Thoughtful Development, have blitzed the village's 800 residents with fliers, packed public meetings and set up a sophisticated Web site.
The mill has fought back with its own publicity campaign and local corn farmers have taken to the streets in tractors to show support. Now, as the mill races to build the $70 million plant, the matter is headed to the federal courthouse in Madison, 40 miles southwest.
Wind advocates react coldly to proposed plant by MWE
March 13, 2007 by Mark Coddington in The Independent
March 13, 2007 by Mark Coddington in The Independent
When Midwest Wind Energy announced last week its intention to build the state's largest wind plant in north-central Nebraska, it was greeted by alarm, not joy, from several of the state's staunchest advocates of wind power.
"This is the exact scenario that we've been aggressively working with public power for the last three years to avoid," said John Hansen, president of the Nebraska Farmers Union.
Hansen and others are concerned that such projects will siphon potential profits from wind energy to out-of-state developers, rather than keeping them with Nebraskan landowners.
The project is the latest flash point in a long-standing debate over how wind energy should be developed in Nebraska, the nation's only public-power state.
Also filed under [
General]
Bigger wind energy plans for Nebraska; Governor wants more alternative energy development
December 10, 2006 in NewsNetNebraska
December 10, 2006 in NewsNetNebraska
Tapping the wind for energy is an area ripe for development in Nebraska says Governor Dave Heineman.
“Wind energy is another alternative energy source we need to take a look at,” said Heineman at the Nebraska Farmers Union state convention this week. This conventions theme was farmer- and community-owned renewable energy.
Also filed under [
General]
Renewable-energy advocates look for answers to push wind power in Nebraska
December 10, 2006 by Mark Coddington in The Independent
December 10, 2006 by Mark Coddington in The Independent
“There’s no other state in the country that has as much wind energy potential as Nebraska that has done as little as Nebraska to develop it,” said John Hansen, president of the Nebraska Farmers Union.
Also filed under [
General]
Public utilities pose roadblock to wind energy, advocate says
December 9, 2006 by Nate Jenkins, Associated Press in Grand Island Independent
December 9, 2006 by Nate Jenkins, Associated Press in Grand Island Independent
A national wind-energy advocate blasted Nebraska for not doing more to turn its stiff breezes into power, placing much of the blame on Nebraska’s dominant electric utility.
While adjoining states such as Iowa and Colorado have hundreds of wind turbines, and the policies in place to encourage more, Nebraska has less than 50 and should not “bury it’s head in the sand, or the coalfields, for that matter,” Dan McGuire told members of the Nebraska Farmers Union gathered in Grand Island for an annual convention.
Nebraska ranks sixth among all states for wind generated, McGuire said, “but the Cornhusker state is lagging way behind other states,” in the development of wind farms, he said.
Also filed under [
General]
Wind power: Not as simple as it seems
February 5, 2006 by Bart Schaneman, Staff Reporter in starherald.com
February 5, 2006 by Bart Schaneman, Staff Reporter in starherald.com
But putting up wind turbines and generating electricity from wind power is not a simple solution. There are a number of factors to consider when installing turbines, and one of the most important factors is something called transmission.
Also filed under [
General|
Zoning/Planning]