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Wind plan stirs lawsuit
November 28, 2008 by David Winters and Max Mitchell in Watertown Daily Times
November 28, 2008 by David Winters and Max Mitchell in Watertown Daily Times
Watertown attorney David P. Antonucci, representing Concerned Residents of Hammond, filed the lawsuit in state Supreme Court here. The town has 20 days to respond to the lawsuit, once it is served.
The lawsuit alleges the wind farm ordinance approved Oct. 27 by the Hammond Town Council should be overturned because the environmental review process was not followed properly. The ordinance created regulations for wind farms, including setbacks, heights and locations for wind turbines in the town.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
New York]
According to local officials involved in the project, a proposed Freedom- Farmersville wind park is on long-term hold.
Noble Environmental approached the two towns approximately two years ago with its idea for a joint wind project that would be located on the border of the two Cattaraugus County townships.
Replacing the energy supplied by Vermont Yankee with 100 percent renewable energy sources could cost Vermont more than $1.2 billion ..."This portfolio of renewable resources would cost approximately $73 per megawatt hour (MWh) to develop and operate and would be more expensive than (building a) new fossil fuel generation plant," stated Scott M. Albert, a principal of GDS Associates and the region manager of the firm's Northeast office, in Manchester, N.H.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
Vermont]
This past summer Tom Stebbins, project manager at the Fredonia Branch of Horizon Wind Energy approached the Pomfret Town Board to update the progress of a potential wind farm within the town. At that time Horizon was eying a start date sometime in 2010. ...Stebbins said Horizon has run into many wetlands in Arkwright, and accompanied with the newly fallen snow, has delayed operations there, backlogging farms next in line like Pomfret.
In a few brief years, New York State has become famous for its wind farms. Thanks to government subsidies and aggressive targets for the production of clean energy, hundreds of turbines now dot the landscape upstate. But the planning and building of wind farms may be slowing.
In late October, Noble Environmental Power has asked the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority for more time to finish some of its projects.
A group in Hammond aimed at overturning the recent wind farm law has been growing steadily in numbers and influence.
Concerned Residents of Hammond, which began in late October after the town enacted a law regarding the creation of wind farms, has grown from 25 to 70 members. ...The original goal of the group was to have the town enact a moratorium on further development of wind turbines and test towers.
Wind development in New York has hit a bit of turbulence.
The nationwide financial crisis has put the brakes on a wind farm under construction in northern New York and another developer has aborted possible projects in eastern and central New York after trouble securing land. And wind energy companies are now being asked to abide by a code of ethics by Attorney General Andrew Cuomo.
The town wind law committee created to produce a zoning amendment to deal with wind farms added a sound measurement protocol and changed setbacks from roads during its meeting Thursday afternoon.
The sound protocol came from recommendations from the acoustical engineering firm Cavanaugh Tocci Associates, Sudbury, Mass., based on a wind development zoning law written for the Association of Towns and rules for noise studies written by Cape Vincent resident Clifford P. Schneider.
Wind farm road controversy: Slag concerns Ag and Markets
November 21, 2008 by Matt Surtel in The Daily News
November 21, 2008 by Matt Surtel in The Daily News
Although the DEC has cleared the use of slag on wind farm access roads, the state Department of Agriculture and Markets has concerns.
In a Sept. 8 letter to Invenergy regarding the High Sheldon Wind Farm, Agriculture Specialist Michael J. Saviola said ...the Department does not support the use of any adulterated industrial byproduct material (such as steel slag) as road base on, or adjacent to, structural lands used for the production of food and/or forage crops," Saviola wrote.
Schumer calls for open investigation of energy trading; Local consumers called victims
November 20, 2008 by Joe LoTemplio in Press Republican
November 20, 2008 by Joe LoTemplio in Press Republican
U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer is calling for a public investigation of an energy-trading deal that has cost municipalities millions of dollars this past year.
"Conducting the investigation behind closed doors just won't do," Schumer said. "We need FERC (the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission) to open up the books and determine both how much this cost New Yorkers and if that money can be given back to consumers."
The Select Board decided, on a 3-1 vote, to take no position Tuesday on a small-scale, temporary wind research project being proposed for Little Equinox.
The project, which is before the state's Public Service Board, would construct an 80-foot residential wind turbine on the mountain for two years for testing purposes.
Financial concerns may threaten wind farm projects
November 20, 2008 by Kathy Kellogg in The Buffalo News
November 20, 2008 by Kathy Kellogg in The Buffalo News
Noble Environmental Power's wind-energy projects in Cattaraugus and Allegany communities face an uncertain future both because of the global financial crisis and a legal snag.
During a meeting of the Farmersville Town Board meeting Monday night, Town Supervisor Joe Brodka announced he had been advised that the area's development director for Noble was no longer employed and that the local energy projects may be shelved or assets sold, due to financing difficulties.
Court knocks down town's law regulating wind farms
November 19, 2008 by Kip Doyle in Olean Times Herald
November 19, 2008 by Kip Doyle in Olean Times Herald
A law in the town of Centerville regulating wind farms was annulled by the state Supreme Court's Appellate Division because the town failed to comply with the State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQR). ...The decision, which was made on Nov. 14, was prompted by a lawsuit from the Centerville Concerned Citizens (CCC), a group of landowners in the town who claimed that the Centerville Town Board worked along with the Noble Environmental Power to craft a local law that accommodates Noble's proposed Centerville Windpark without fully looking at the environmental impacts.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
New York]
During his community forum in Irondequoit last night, Attorney General Andrew Cuomo told a group of Hamlin residents that he'd send an environmental attorney to look into the town's wind tower regulations and the circumstances under which they were passed. He was responding to repeated requests from a group of town residents, all members of the Hamlin Preservation Group.
After more than an hour of discussion at Tuesday's meeting, the Select Board voted to take no position on a proposal to extend by two years the life of a wind measurement tower on Little Equinox. ...Select Board member Michael Kilburn moved that the Select Board take no position because during a vote taken on Town Meeting Day in 2006, the board was directed to oppose a proposal from Endless Energy to build five 390-foot high wind turbines to produce electricity commercially.
Also filed under [
Vermont]
Alfred residents found that where there is wind, there is a window of opportunity in a special Monday night meeting at the Alfred Station Fire Hall.
Keith Pitman, president and chief executive officer of Empire State Wind Energy from Oneida, gave an hour-long presentation to Alfred residents to gauge how interested the community is in developing a wind project.
So how did the Alfred community react to the possibilities of wind power?
Compared to some other communities looking at wind, very peaceful.
The Farmersville Town Board voted Monday to replace its 2007 town law regulating wind farm projects with a shorter and more general version, while also lifting last month's temporary moratorium against wind energy facilities.
"The old law had stuff that should have been in a host community agreement [between the town and the wind farm developer] and not in the law itself," said Town Supervisor Joe Brodka.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
New York]
Legislature accepts PILOT proposal for wind turbines
November 17, 2008 by David Robinson in Evening Telegram
November 17, 2008 by David Robinson in Evening Telegram
The passage of a resolution by the Legislature last Wednesday established Herkimer County's negotiating position regarding payment in lieu of taxes agreements for wind projects: Closing an interconnected effort amongst affected municipalities and school districts over four years in the making.
Ongoing proposals by Iberdrola Renewable Energies to build wind turbines include: The Hardscrabble Project in the towns of Norway and Fairfield, with Owen D. Young Central School District; and the Jordanville Project in the towns of Stark and Warren, with West Canada Valley Central School District.
The resolution sets a PILOT payment of $8,000 per megawatt.
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
New York]
While satisfied with existing wind turbines, town officials are looking to better regulate any future wind projects, both large and small.
"We just want to make sure they are done to manufacturers' specs," Lowville Town Supervisor Arleigh D. Rice said.
The Town Council earlier this month held a public hearing on a proposed wind power zoning law but is awaiting review by the Lewis County Planning Board before adopting it, Mr. Rice said.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
New York]
Wind turbines are not operating in Noble Environmental Power wind parks in Clinton and Ellenburg because its power substation is expanding to include Chateaugay.
"It is a safety condition," said John Quirke, executive vice president of development. "We can't have people working in a live building. ...Noble's wind-farm development in the North Country has hit snags, including allegations under investigation by the State Attorney General's Office that company representatives may have bribed or influenced public officials in some communities.