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Kittitas County commissioners approved an agreement on Tuesday with a wind energy company that has the firm paying Kittitas County for the staff work required to deal with the development of its wind farm.
Invenergy Wind North America LLC, through its subsidiary Vantage Wind Energy LLC, will pay the county $110,000 for handling county requirements for the planned 69-turbine wind farm proposed.
Also filed under [
General|
Washington]
PGE to build port Westward peaker to smooth growing wind resource
December 2, 2008 in Energy Central
December 2, 2008 in Energy Central
Portland General Electric plans to repurpose its second Port Westward power plant as a 200-MW peaker to address the growing amount of wind generation it expects ..."When wind energy is added to a utility system, its natural variability and uncertainty is combined with the natural variability and uncertainty of loads. As a result, there is an increase in the need for system flexibility required to maintain utility system balance and reliability."
Avista will delay building a wind farm south of Reardan, Lincoln County, by at least two years, citing the high cost of wind turbines.
Longview realtor Bill Hallanger has been pressing the committee to draft a policy so he can put up an $8,000 windmill he bought from an Arizona company earlier this year. ...County officials say they must review proposals like Hallanger's to protect neighbors from noise and other impacts.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
Washington]
Wind farm ruling stirs mixed reaction, jubilation and disapointment
November 21, 2008 in Daily Record
November 21, 2008 in Daily Record
The unanimous decision by the state's highest court that upheld the governor's approval of the Kittitas Valley Wind Power Project has stirred both disappointment and jubilation, depending on how one views the role of state and local government.
Those opposed to the site of the 65-turbine wind farm 12 miles north of Ellensburg say the decision bodes ill for local governments.
Also filed under [
General|
Washington]
Washington Supreme Court sides with wind power
November 20, 2008 by Ben Miller in Puget Sound Business Journal
November 20, 2008 by Ben Miller in Puget Sound Business Journal
Wind power advocates won a convincing battle in the Washington Supreme Court, which ruled Thursday that local county commissioners can't block the way for wind power turbine farms.
In a unanimous verdict (one justice didn't participate), the court ruled that Kittitas County commissioners couldn't stop the construction of a wind power farm on Highway 97 about halfway between Cle Elum and Ellensburg.
Also filed under [
General|
Washington]
The state Supreme Court has upheld Gov. Chris Gregoire's approval of a wind farm in Kittitas County, despite the objections of local officials.
Also filed under [
General|
Washington]
Energy company seeks to expand capacity of Oregon wind farm by about 100 megawatts
November 18, 2008 in Canadian Business
November 18, 2008 in Canadian Business
Wind energy is the latest rage in going green and in shifting the United States away from fossil-based energy supplies. And more wind turbines are coming to Oregon. It is even required by law.
But with giant wind turbines now looming nearby, the Eaton's fear the rapid move to clean energy will come at the expense of their health.
The problem is something called "Wind Turbine Syndrome."
The chapter on commercial wind power has also "risen to the top," he said, especially after Idaho Power's proposal to run a 500-megawatt transmission line through Baker County.
Some residents believe that wind farms are the almost inevitable result of such a large capacity transmission line.
Companies or individuals considering a wind power project in Baker County deserve to know the process that's in place for approving or denying their project, Bennett said.
The overall goal of the new ordinance is to "have a tool that assists individuals, the (planning) department and (planning) commissioners to make decisions clearly and simply," Bennett said.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
Oregon]
City council takes stance on windmills viewshed issue
November 6, 2008 by Samantha Bates in The East Oregonian
November 6, 2008 by Samantha Bates in The East Oregonian
The city council doesn't want to see windmills surrounding Milton-Freewater.
Thursday morning, about six hours before a Umatilla County Planning Commission meeting to discuss windmills, the city council unanimously approved a resolution and letter to the commission declaring its "serious concern" with windmills going up in the viewshed along the Blue Mountains.
It asked the planning commission to come up with rules for where it places wind farms and power lines within the viewshed.
Kittitas County commissioners approved on Tuesday the expansion of the project area of the Wild Horse Wind Power Project to accommodate the addition of 22 turbines.
The 8,600-acre, 127-turbine project east of Ellensburg is owned and operated by Bellevue-based Puget Sound Energy, which has plans to add the turbines to the current project area and to a newly purchased area of about 1,260 acres on the north side of the existing project. ...
The new acreage includes about 960 acres purchased by PSE and lands leased from the state Department of Natural Resources and the state Department of Fish and Wildlife.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
Washington]
Wind turbines are the hottest rage in 'going green' but the technology has a dangerous side for endangered salmon in the Columbia River. ...it is important to understand that there are serious concerns to consider.
You see, when the wind is really blowing and the farms are operating at maximum capacity, the present system will not be able to handle all of that electricity, which ultimately affects fish.
This isn't just a theory - it actually happened recently. At the end of June, there was an unexpected surge in wind power and too much energy was created for the regional grid to handle. To compensate, the dams cut their power by spilling more water.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Oregon]
The Grays Harbor PUD last night authorized an estimated $77 million investment in wind power as it looks for a way to satisfy a citizens initiative requiring utilities to use a certain portion of renewable energy. ...The utility district's commissioners unanimously approved increasing their share of the proposed Radar Ridge wind project from 5 to 10 percent to 64 percent.
Also filed under [
General|
Washington]
Area farmers and ranchers got a rundown Tuesday of how to deal with what could be called Oregon's new gold rush: The land grab for wind power as Oregon and the nation aim for higher and higher green energy standards.
Christian Sarason, project manager with 3 TIER North America, a wind assessment firm, said the rush is on.
"The gold rush is happening right now," he said. "It's the gold rush and there's going to be continuing pressure to prospect all over the place."
County consider allowing wind turbine towers without notice
October 7, 2008 by Jared Paben in Bellingham Herald
October 7, 2008 by Jared Paben in Bellingham Herald
Landowners could erect 100-foot-tall wind energy towers on their property, and their neighbors wouldn't be notified or get a chance to comment, under new rules the County Council is considering.
The draft law aims to make it easier for people to take advantage of wind turbines, an environmentally friendly and renewable form of electricity, to help power their homes.
"It's a great thing if people can produce their own clean energy," said County Council member Barbara Brenner, who, along with council member Carl Weimer, pushed for rules allowing residential wind energy systems. "My biggest concern is if we make it too difficult or cumbersome to get through the process, probably a lot of people who would have done it won't."
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
Washington]
Citizens in the Milton-Freewater area took another opportunity to voice their opposition to wind turbines in the Blue Mountains at a city council meeting Monday night.
What started as an informational meeting by Horizon Wind Farms representative Valerie Schafer-Franklin turned into a discussion between citizens both on and off Weston Mountain about what they want to see happen, or not happen, in the Blues.
Citizens discuss frustration over wind turbines in Blue Mountains
September 21, 2008 by Samantha Bates in The East Oregonian
September 21, 2008 by Samantha Bates in The East Oregonian
The idea of looking out onto the foothills of the Blue Mountains from Highway 11 or Milton-Freewater and seeing wind turbines sounds like a nightmare for some people who look at that view every day.
But not many of those people have had much of a chance to express their frustration.
Citizen Richard Jolly hosted a meeting Thursday in Milton-Freewater where many people got a chance to vet their frustrations and discuss their concerns.
Wind farm plans clash with pristine site in eastern Oregon
August 31, 2008 by Gail Kinsey Hill in The Oregonian
August 31, 2008 by Gail Kinsey Hill in The Oregonian
Steens Mountain stretches through the open lands of southeastern Oregon's Harney County for more than 30 miles, a twisting spine of rock and brush punctuated by steep gorges and rushing streams.
Remote and rugged, it has come to symbolize the state's wild, austere side.
It's also becoming a battleground for a wind power developer that sees gold in the Steens' stiff breezes -- and red in the eyes of environmentalists.
At issue are about 200 wind turbines that Columbia Energy Partners wants to build along the northern boundary of the Steens Mountain Wilderness. ...The conflicts come into sharp relief in a state that prizes its green credentials and its pristine lands.
State asks whether wind farm projects are separate
August 31, 2008 by Gail Kinsey Hill in The Oregonian
August 31, 2008 by Gail Kinsey Hill in The Oregonian
Chris Crowley, head of Columbia Energy Partners, filed separate applications for the three wind projects he called the Echanis, East Ridge and West Ridge wind farms. They lie next to each other ...Each would generate a maximum of 104 megawatts.
Any project with a capacity of 105 megawatts or more triggers review by the state. The county reviews smaller ones.
"These are blatant attempts to circumvent the public process," said Dave Becker, an attorney with the Oregon Natural Desert Association. The state's Energy Facility Siting Council should review the projects, he said.