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New Hampshire
One year to the day after Granite Reliable Power filed its application for a 99 megawatt wind power plant in Coos County, the state's Site Evaluation Committee yesterday approved a certificate for wind operation on the private land.
The 60-page decision, still subject to appeal in the state's Supreme Court. will still require a federal permit.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Parties seek wind farm rehearing; Project financing at heart of motions
August 19, 2009 by Chelsea Conaboy in Concord Monitor
August 19, 2009 by Chelsea Conaboy in Concord Monitor
Granite Reliable Power already has state approval to move forward with its plan to put 33 wind turbines on peaks in Coos County. But can the company afford its project?
That question is at the heart of several motions for rehearing, including one from the company itself, filed Friday with a subcommittee of the state Site Evaluation Committee. ...Throughout the approval process, Senior Assistant Attorney General Peter Roth, who is representing the public, has questioned whether the company has the financial resources or will be able to attract investors in a tough economy.
Also filed under [
General]
Parts for New Hampshire's first commercial wind farm are arriving by truck and train.
The 400-foot-tall turbines will be built on a ridge on Lempster Mountain in Lempster ...The parts that sit atop the 12 towers and hold the turbine blades weigh 64 tons each.
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General]
Several hurdles remain regarding the proposed St. Lawrence and Cape Vincent wind farms and their future connection to the regional electrical system.
One of them is a route to the grid. Acciona Energy North America, developer of St. Lawrence Wind Farm, has taken the lead on a possible route that would follow the abandoned New York Central Railroad corridor. But that corridor also contains the regional water line operated by the Development Authority of the North Country.
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General]
A portion of the wind energy generated from newly installed wind turbines located in PEI was wheeled through PEI and New Brunswick and sold to the New England Power Pool (NEPOOL) via the international interconnection node in Keswick, N.B. The renewable energy certificates (RECs) that were generated from this transmission were sold separately to independent buyers located in the NEPOOL.
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Petition challenges 37-turbine wind farm project near Newfound Lake
December 10, 2012 by Dan Seufert in New Hampshire Union Leader
December 10, 2012 by Dan Seufert in New Hampshire Union Leader
"The negative consequences of this industrial wind farm development far outweigh the benefits. We the people want this stopped to protect our homes, our land, our communities," states the petition, which was written by Grafton resident Erin Darrow.
Also filed under [
General]
An application to place 24 wind turbines on Tenney and Fletcher Mountain ridge lines west of Plymouth has been submitted to the state for review.
The $120 million Groton Wind Project would produce 48 megawatts of electricity, enough to power 20,000 homes.
The application was filed Friday with the state Site Evaluation Committee, which must give an up or down vote in nine months.
Also filed under [
General]
Plymouth fire chief opposes wind park
September 28, 2010 by Paula Tracy in New Hampshire Union Leader
September 28, 2010 by Paula Tracy in New Hampshire Union Leader
Houses at Eagle's Nest on Plymouth's Tenney Mountain would be the first residential area to be affected by wildfires from the park, said Fire Chief Casino Clogston.
Clogston said not only was it his responsibility to protect lives and property but also to ensure that his responders can do their jobs as safely as possible.
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Impact on People|
Safety]
Power co. to test turbines as energy alternative
September 13, 2007 by Jason Schreiber in Seacoast Online
September 13, 2007 by Jason Schreiber in Seacoast Online
Small windmills will likely start popping up around the Seacoast as Unitil Corp. tests new ways to produce energy.
The local power company installed its first windmill two weeks ago off Route 101 near Hampton Beach as part of a pilot project to assess the effectiveness of wind energy.
The company is now looking to place as many as 10 to 15 additional windmills atop utility poles around the Seacoast and in Massachusetts, said Unitil CEO Robert Schoenberger.
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General]
Power lines meet resistance; Some people fight wider easements
November 2, 2011 by Annmarie Timmins in Concord Monitor
November 2, 2011 by Annmarie Timmins in Concord Monitor
Northern Pass, a different entity than PSNH, cannot simply assume ownership of those easements, Savage said. He pointed to a legal opinion the forest society recently requested on the state's eminent domain law. The opinion, written by attorneys with the Ransmier and Spellman law firm in Concord, concludes that Northern Pass cannot use the power of eminent domain.
Also filed under [
Transmission]
Goshen officials are concerned about the power lines coming through their town from the proposed Lempster windmill project and have filed a petition with the New Hampshire Site Evaluation Committee for limited intervening status.
“We’re trying to protect the appearance of the village,” Goshen planning board chairman John Wirkkala said Tuesday.
Community Energy Inc. and Lempster Wind LLC, (collectively known as CEI) have proposed 12 electric generating windmills constructed on a 35-acre lot owned by resident Kevin Onella.
If the windmills are constructed as planned, transmission lines will run along route 10 from Lempster through Goshen and into Newport where the electricity generated will tie into the power grid.
“We’re asking for an alternative site for the lines or to bury the lines,” Wirkkala said.
Also filed under [
General|
Zoning/Planning]
While paper mills close and Cabletron spins off its remnants out of state, power plants from the Seacoast to Whitefield enjoy the perks of a poorly understood, $100-million subsidy program just for energy producers. It has a bureaucratic name: the forward capacity market. ...An unidentified 600-megawatt, gas-fired power plant project somewhere in Rockingham County is blocked behind half a dozen North Country renewable energy projects in the ISO-New England regulatory queue. The waiting list policy is first-come, first-served. A plant like that would typically pay its host community $4 million or more in property taxes, with few smokestack emissions. But those wind- and wood-fired projects at the front of the line are all in limbo. The Public Service power lines in the region are too small. Most of the players can't even bid into the upcoming ISO auction, because yet-to-be-built plants have to ante millions of dollars as a sort of performance bond. And the ISO doesn't make forward capacity payments for transmission line upgrades.
This extended news piece addresses efforts to bring renewable generation to northern New England.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
Zoning/Planning]
Power usage expected to break records, but supply adequate
August 2, 2006 by Gordon Fraser in Eagle Tribune
August 2, 2006 by Gordon Fraser in Eagle Tribune
The New England power grid will have 30,345 megawatts available today - use is expected to peak at a record 28,030 megawatts, even after energy companies have put out a call for people to voluntarily reduce power consumption, she said.
Getting more money to preserve land, operate state parks, protect wildlife and regulate polluters top the 2007 environmental agenda of a broad coalition of groups.
Legislative leaders embraced this first-ever collaborative effort the Granite State Conservation Voters Fund organized and promoted at a breakfast meeting of lawmakers Thursday.
“I think great things are going to happen this year, and it’s great to feel like you’re in the mainstream,” said former state Sen. Rick Russman, a Kingston Republican who serves on the GSCVF board of directors.
Production Tax Credit Vital for the Wind Industry
September 29, 2006 by Stephen Lacey in Renewableenergyaccess.com
September 29, 2006 by Stephen Lacey in Renewableenergyaccess.com
For wind developers, the Production Tax Credit (PTC) can either make or break a project. In Lempster, New Hampshire, the timely development of a 24-megawatt (MW) wind farm hinges on the probability of it coming online before December 31, 2007, when the PTC expires.
Because a comprehensive review of the project was approved by the New Hampshire site evaluation committee, it could take Community Energy Inc. — the developer overseeing the Lempster wind farm — up to nine months to start construction. And if the PTC is not renewed before the expiration date, there’s a chance the project could stall for much longer.
Proposal for small wind turbines in North Hampton causes stir
April 20, 2010 by Shir Haberman in Seacoast Online
April 20, 2010 by Shir Haberman in Seacoast Online
The chairwoman of the Energy Committee expressed concerns about how the proposed small wind energy systems ordinance was developed, as well as what it says. ...The Planning Board developed the ordinance to "accommodate small wind energy systems in appropriate locations, while protecting the public's health, safety and welfare," states Article 6 on the warrant for the May 11 meeting.
Also filed under [
General]
Proposed NU-NSTAR merger could boost wind power, transmission
November 2, 2010 by Edith Tucker in Coos County Democrat
November 2, 2010 by Edith Tucker in Coos County Democrat
The Northern Pass line, starting in Des Cantons, Quebec, would run to Franklin at a capital cost of $1.107 billion to be borne by Hydro-Quebec. An application filed on Oct. 14 with the federal Department of Energy (DOE) began the permitting process.
Also filed under [
Transmission]
Proposed wind farm imperils falcons, other threatened species
January 29, 2011 by Cathy Taibbi in All Voices
January 29, 2011 by Cathy Taibbi in All Voices
Possible collusion and fraudulent Environmental Impact studies may be paving the way for the $120 million Groton Wind Project to move forward despite very real danger to threatened species, including the Peregrine Falcon. Mortality would come from falcons colliding with the turbine blades as well as the environmental degradation caused by the construction.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Birds]
Proposed wind farm in Millsfield is drawing opposition
October 6, 2008 by Chris Jensen in New Hampshire Public Radio
October 6, 2008 by Chris Jensen in New Hampshire Public Radio
Drive through Lempster these days and you'll see the progress being made on the state's first commercial wind farm. When up and running, the 12 windmills on Lempster Mountain are expected to produce enough clean renewable energy for about 10 thousands homes. With America increasingly looking for clean energy and independence from oil, wind farms are one possibility. A big one is proposed for Coos County. The project has its fans, but it also has it opponents. NHPR correspondent Chris Jensen has the story.
Also filed under [
General]
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