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Oregon
Neighbors weren't shy Wednesday night about their feelings on the proposed Cascade Wind Project on Sevenmile Hill; they don't want it and they want to know how to keep it out.
Close to 100 people crowded into the Fireside Room at The Dalles Civic Auditorium, where fewer than half that number had been expected.
The dominant, and vocal, viewpoint expressed was opposition.
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A public meeting is planned Wednesday, May 2, at 7 p.m. at The Dalles Civic Auditorium to discuss the Cascade Wind Project proposed on Sevenmile Hill by UPC Wind Development LLC.
The Oregon Department of Energy is holding this public information meeting to help people understand the process, to answer questions, and to hear comments. The applicant's representatives will be there as well.
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Despite their concerns about impacts specific to the Sevenmile site, the second part of the Casdays' presentation showed that their opposition to wind power has evolved beyond the "not-in-my-back-yard" phenomenon.
"We started out as NIMBYs," Gary Casady admitted to the court, employing a term that is used pejoratively to refer to those who oppose development only when it happens near their property.
However, Casady said, after reading thousands of documents and doing extensive research on the internet, the pair has come to the conclusion that many of the positive claims made by the wind power industry need to be questioned.
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VALE - Wind turbines reaching 400 feet into the air are not a normal sight along the high desert plains of Eastern Oregon, but as the federal government continues to provide enticing grant options to entrepreneurs in the state, that form of clean energy technology could become more common locally.
One case in point is a recent decision by the United States Department of Agriculture regarding a grant for a feasibility study for a 10 megawatt family wind farm in Vale.
Casade Wind project files for Sevenmile Hill site
April 13, 2007 by Rodger Nichols in The Dalles Chronicle
April 13, 2007 by Rodger Nichols in The Dalles Chronicle
UPC Wind filed a site certification application with the Oregon Energy and Facility Siting Council (EFSC) Wednesday to build a 60- megawatt wind farm on Sevenmile Hill west of The Dalles.
A Massachusetts-based company has filed an application for a 60-megawatt wind farm near The Dalles.
UPC Wind expects the Oregon Energy and Facility Siting Council to grant certification by early next year. This means commercial wind farm operations could be in place by the end of 2008.
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Oregon Senate approves renewable energy bill
April 10, 2007 by Aaron Clark, Associated Press in OregonLive.com
April 10, 2007 by Aaron Clark, Associated Press in OregonLive.com
After a vigorous debate, the Oregon Senate passed a bill Tuesday to require the state's largest utilities eventually to draw 25 percent of their power from renewable sources like wind, waves, sunlight and manure.
Supporters argued the bill was a necessary step toward reducing global warming and protecting Oregonians from a volatile fossil fuel market.
Opponents said they were concerned that setting quotas would increase the cost to consumers.
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Energy Policy]
Twenty-five percent renewable power by 2025? Northern Wasco County PUD and some other utilities are saying "not so fast."
Gov. Ted Kulongoski's plan to push Oregon to get 25 percent of its power from renewable energy by 2025 could face a vote in the Oregon Senate as early as the end of this week.
But members of Northern Wasco County PUD's leadership team say the bill is poorly designed and doesn't consider what it will cost customers, or the bill's impact on economic development.
Generally speaking, the new bill would require larger electrical utilities to get 25 percent of their power from renewable energy - wind, wave, biomass, geothermal, etc. - by the year 2025, with intermediate goals set every five years starting in 2010. .............Higher costs can be disastrous for economic stability, Langer said.
"Not one business looking at coming here has asked us how green our power is," Langer said. "They want to know about price."
Immediate efforts to meet renewable power standards could have a damaging effect on efforts to recruit new business to the community and maintain economic stability, he said.
"Baseload resources will best serve our needs now," Langer said. "They will actually save money for our customers later on. Those decisions need to be left with the electrical utilities."
The green machine; Industrial customers say proposed new renewable energy requirements are a rip-off for all of us
March 28, 2007 by Nigel Jaquiss in Willamette Week
March 28, 2007 by Nigel Jaquiss in Willamette Week
The goal of making Oregon's utilities more environmentally friendly has got the state's largest electricity buyers saying Gov. Ted Kulongoski, legislators and enviros are selling out all ratepayers in an ill-conceived green-wash.
At issue is SB 838, which would require utilities to derive 25 percent of sales from renewable sources by 2025.
The bill, sponsored by state Sen. Brad Avakian (D-Beaverton), fulfills a campaign promise Kulongoski made while struggling to regain support of his disaffected base in last year's re-election campaign. The measure now also has become one of the issues the governor hopes to build into his legacy.
In addition to traditional enviros, consumer groups such as OSPIRG, the Citizens' Utility Board and even the watchdog Utility Reform Project which usually look askance at anything that might raise rates, are on board with the legislation. Also supporting the measure, still in the Senate Environmental and Natural Resources Committee, are Oregon's largest utilities-Portland General Electric and PacifiCorp.
But the Industrial Customers of Northwest Utilities says the bill, while well-intentioned, amounts to a wholesale transfer of wealth from ratepayers to the developers of renewable energy and the utilities.
Panel: Wind power no cure-all
March 26, 2007 by Joseph B Frazier, Associated Press in Jackson Hole Star Tribune
March 26, 2007 by Joseph B Frazier, Associated Press in Jackson Hole Star Tribune
Wind energy will play a growing role in meeting the rising power needs of the Northwest, but it isn't controllable and it needs total backup by traditional sources such as hydroelectric dams, according to a report released Wednesday by energy specialists.
The six-month study looked at how to integrate wind power into the region's existing power system.
While wind energy sounds attractive, it can be fickle, the specialists said. Sometimes it blows, sometimes it doesn't. And while wind is free, they said getting its energy from a rural windfarm to an urban wall socket isn't.
The report said the existing grid can probably handle the predicted output of 6,000 mostly new megawatts of electricity from wind that are anticipated to be produced by 2024 or earlier. That's roughly the production of two nuclear plants.
"It could be more than that. That's all that we studied," said Steve Wright, administrator of the Bonneville Power Administration.
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Energy Policy]
Power officials debate wind use
March 22, 2007 by Joseph B Frazier, Associated Press in Monterey Herald
March 22, 2007 by Joseph B Frazier, Associated Press in Monterey Herald
Wind energy will play a growing role in meeting the rising power needs of the Northwest, but it isn't controllable and it needs total backup by traditional sources such as hydroelectric dams, according to a report released Wednesday by energy specialists.
The six-month study looked at how to integrate wind power into the region's power system.
While wind energy sounds attractive, it can be fickle, the specialists said. Sometimes it blows, sometimes it doesn't. And while wind is free, they said getting its energy from a rural wind farm to an urban wall socket isn't.
A new wind farm in The Dalles could eventually power 12,000 homes.
Newton, Mass.-based UPC Wind Management LLC needs site approval from the state's Department of Energy before beginning construction on the 60-megawatt facility, which would feature 40 wind turbines.
The proposal would help satisfy a legislative proposal that utilities get 25 percent of their power from renewable energy by 2025. Only 1 percent of the state's power came from wind and geothermal sources in 2002, according to the most recent data from Oregon's Department of Energy.
UPC Wind is building a portfolio of 3,800 megawatts of wind power across several states, including Hawaii, Maine and New York.
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Zoning/Planning]
With wind-turbine farms in heavy construction in Klickitat and Sherman counties, it was only a matter of time before a large project surfaced in Wasco County
That was the case Thursday at the Discovery Center, when a small contingent of local people turned out to hear a presentation by UPC Wind, a Newton, Maine-based company.
UPC's project, Cascade Wind, would place 40 General Electric 1.5 megawatt wind turbines in a seven-mile footprint on (appropriately enough) Sevenmile Hill.
Power generated along the ridge would be brought to a new substation and connected to an existing 115 kilovolt line that runs from The Dalles to Hood River. The total capacity of the project would be 60 megawatts.
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Zoning/Planning]
SALEM - State lawmakers today will take up a proposal to require that a quarter of Oregon's electricity comes from wind turbines, solar panels and other renewable energy technologies.
The proposal for 25 percent of the state's electricity to come from renewable sources by 2025 is one of Gov. Ted Kulongoski's top priorities for the session. The Senate Environment and Natural Resources Committee has scheduled the first hearing today on his plan, Senate Bill 373.
In a briefing with reporters, Kulongoski said he felt upbeat about the bill's chances. About two dozen states already have renewable energy standards, including California and Washington. But Kulongoski said Oregon's would be the second-most ambitious in the country.
The bill calls for intermediate standards to be met along the way to the "25 by '25" target. By 2010, each utility must meet a 5 percent threshold. That would rise to 15 percent by 2015 and to 20 percent by 2020.
Columbia Energy Partners has sold its 200-megawatt wind projects near Arlington to Horizon Wind Energy of Houston.
Horizon is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Goldman Sachs, a New York investment banking firm.
Columbia Energy Partners and its partner, the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, developed the project during the past five years. Situated west of Arlington, the project includes leases for nearly 15,000 acres, five years of on-site wind data, and permits for Phase I construction of windmills to produce more than 300 megawatts of electricity for the Bonneville Power Administration. Dedicated access to the BPA's Jones Canyon substation on the project site also was included in the sale.
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Higher ed budget cause for cautious optimism
January 14, 2007 by Mary Ann Albright in Corvallis Gazette-Times
January 14, 2007 by Mary Ann Albright in Corvallis Gazette-Times
OSU specifically will see about $127.3 million in bonds and other revenue sources for 12 construction projects. This includes $4 million for a planned Biofuels Lab and Learning Center; $5 million for a proposed wind farm project; $20 million for Gill Coliseum renovations; $15.5 million for deferred maintenance and seismic upgrades to Nash Hall; and $62.5 million to build a Pauling Research and Education Building to house the expanding Linus Pauling Institute, currently located in Weniger Hall.
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General]
Governor paints energy budget green
January 5, 2007 by Aaron Clark, The Associated Press in The Register-Guard
January 5, 2007 by Aaron Clark, The Associated Press in The Register-Guard
Oregon Gov. Ted Kulongoski’s eyes light up when he starts talking about the benefits that windmills, solar panels and biofuels could bring his state.
Though the $30 million that Kulongoski allotted in his two-year budget proposal for green energy is dwarfed by the billions he wants to spend on education and health care, the governor thinks it’s the first step in freeing the country from its dependence on fossil fuels.
“I think Oregon can be … this national crucible for the development of this industry,'’ the governor said this week in an interview. “The state government can be a model for the private sector.
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Energy Policy]
For nearly two years, the City of Portland has been in contract negotiations with a local power company, PPM, to provide all of the city’s municipal energy through wind power. The deal will make Portland the first city in the country to use all renewable energy for the government’s power needs—but not unless the two sides can agree on the contract’s terms, something that seems decreasingly likely as the days stretch on.
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General]
Two residents who opposed construction of wind-measuring towers on Sevenmile Hill have given notice that they will appeal the county’s decision to the Oregon Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA).
Gary and Linda Casady, and Mark Womble were the petitioners to LUBA.
At issue were requests by UPC Wind Management, LLC for two-year permits to construct a pair of wind-measuring towers — one 164 feet tall and one 197 feet tall — at two properties on Sevenmile Hill. Three other UPC tower requests for properties farther south and outside of populated areas had been granted without any opposition.
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Zoning/Planning]
An Oregon State University engineering professor has helped design a new “micro” wind turbine that can be mounted along the edges of building roofs to generate electricity.
The new small-scale turbine design could revolutionize the wind power industry, with rows of small rooftop turbines enabling power generation in urban and suburban settings, instead of only from large, towering, traditional wind farms in rural areas.
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