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Impact on People
Chairman's tilt at turbines noise; Domestic applications ‘likely to be rejected' as manufacturers fail to quantify sound levels
August 27, 2008 by Emma Christie in Press and Journal
August 27, 2008 by Emma Christie in Press and Journal
Homeowners in Aberdeenshire hoping to install domestic wind turbines in built-up areas are likely to have their applications rejected unless manufacturers provide the council with information detailing their impact, a councillor warned yesterday.
Garioch area committee chairman Martin Kitts-Hayes made the comment following the "very reluctant rejection" of proposals to erect a turbine at a home at Kinmuck, near Inverurie.
The committee is now planning to write a letter to companies who make the machinery, urging them to provide facts and figures on expected noise levels.
About 150 landowners and concerned residents met in Harper Thursday to discuss possible construction of a private electric transmission line through Gillespie County.
"We basically wanted to get together and pool our information," Martha Stevens, who helped organize the meeting, said. "We live in an awfully pretty part of Texas, and there are important questions we need to ask."
Landowners are concerned, Ms. Stevens said, that construction of power lines will diminish property values and harm the Hill Country's appeal to tourists.
Tra Investments Ltd, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Lee Strand Co-operative Creamery in Tralee that had begun site works for an eight-turbine wind farm in the Ballincollig Hill-Maghanknockane area, said that it had instructed geotechnical consultancy AGEC Ltd to undertake a study into the cause of the landslide and that it would make the findings public.
In a statement, the company said that they had planning for the wind farm and that "initial site works have taken place over the past two weeks".
Specter stops in Bedford, Johnstown; Alternative energy hot topic of the day
August 27, 2008 by Jessica VanderKolk in Altoona Mirror
August 27, 2008 by Jessica VanderKolk in Altoona Mirror
"We've been really derelict," Specter said of Congress' response to the energy issue. "We're gonna have to go to alternate forms of energy, and I've been supporting that."
Virginia Deeter from Somerset County told Specter her home of 30 years soon would sit between two wind turbine facilities: one 1,400 feet away from her back door and the other 1,800 feet away from her front door.
"Our home is going to be worthless," she said she was told by real estate agents. "Where do we turn?"
Communities in North Cornwall are battling to stop the county's biggest wind farm from dominating the skyline over Bodmin Moor.
Emergency meetings have been called by Camelford Town Council and parish councillors following a similar move last week by Davidstow parish council which saw 200 angry residents pack Otterham village hall.
That meeting was attended by people from a number of moorland villages who are opposed to a plan by energy company Community Windpower to site 20 turbines near Crowdy Reservoir.
Concerned citizens fueled creation of wind turbine health and safety report
August 25, 2008 by Josh Bickford in East Bay RI
August 25, 2008 by Josh Bickford in East Bay RI
Forty pages of health and safety information surrounding the proposed wind turbine project in town may never have been created had it not been for some anxious residents.
Ron Pitt, chairman for the health and safety subcommittee that researched and wrote the report, said interested and concerned residents, including members of the group Citizens Wind Watch, should be credited for pushing forward the process of learning more about wind turbines and the issues that surround them. ...Mr. Russo said the recent health and safety report spelled a certain end to the likelihood the turbine would be constructed at the high school.
Coastal storms over windfarm near Twelve Apostles
August 25, 2008 by Matt Johnston in The Herald Sun
August 25, 2008 by Matt Johnston in The Herald Sun
A $50 million wind farm will be built near Victoria's top coastal attractions, despite State Government promises to keep turbines away from the Great Ocean Rd.
The Government says the Newfield wind farm, about 12km from the Twelve Apostles in the southwest, will bring jobs to Victoria and boost renewable energy.
But residents say it could be the start of a flood of wind turbines near environmentally sensitive coast land.
The Acciona Energy wind farm will include 15 turbines that are 110m tall.
Kerr County may soon play a part in transmitting wind energy from West Texas and the Panhandle to other parts of the state. But what it will take to transport the "green" energy may have some Hill Country residents seeing red.
Four companies have shown interest in building a large, double circuit 345-kilovolt transmission line for the Public Utility Commission of Texas project. ...
According to Robert Weatherford, president of Save Our Scenic Hill Country Environment Inc., another transmission line might be in the works.
Town officials have refused to let residents see a report evaluating the noise study done for Horse Creek Wind Farm.
The officials claim the report, by Cavanaugh Tocci Associates, an acoustic engineering firm in Sudbury, Mass., is too complicated and preliminary to be released.
Residents argue that the original noise study, done by consultant CH2MHill for Iberdrola, also was complicated, but that there are residents with acoustic expertise.
5,000 people without water in north Kerry after landslide
August 25, 2008 by Charlie Taylor and Anne Lucey in Irish Times
August 25, 2008 by Charlie Taylor and Anne Lucey in Irish Times
Up to 5,000 people in North Kerry have limited water supplies today following a landslide of elevated blanket bog in the Stacks Mountains at the weekend which polluted water courses.
The landslide reached over two kilometres in length and up to 55m wide place with mud seeping into north Kerry's most important water sources and the rivers Smearlagh and Feale. ...The Stacks area has been designated for wind farm development and locals had claimed there was a risk of landslides in objections to a wind farm which is under construction.
The beautiful Puketoi ranges will be turned into an "industrial park" if locals don't put a stop to the proposed Waitahora wind farm, the head of an opposition group says.
Last week, Contact Energy announced plans for a $500 million, 177-megawatt wind farm on the remote Puketoi ranges, east of Pahiatua.
Farmer says possibility of power line on his land 'like a punch to the gut'
August 24, 2008 by Joshua Bowman in Herald Mail
August 24, 2008 by Joshua Bowman in Herald Mail
One week after moving in, Loudenslager found out that a swath of the farm where cows graze and alfalfa grows soon could be cleared to make way for a high-voltage power line.
"It's like a punch to the gut," Loudenslager said. "This is where I've wanted to be my whole life."
Loudenslager's farm north of Boonsboro sits on one of several routes that have been suggested for the Potomac Appalachian Transmission Highline (PATH), which would run from St. Albans, W.Va., through Bedington, W.Va., to Kemptown, Md., in Frederick County.
Patricia LaPoint said she wasn't surprised Thursday when an appeals court sided with the wind industry and upheld a lower court ruling that people can't sue simply because they hate the way wind turbines look or sound.
"It's not surprising given the politics of wind energy in the state of Texas," said LaPoint, one of a group of rural Taylor County landowners who sued and claimed FPL Energy created a public nuisance by erecting unpleasant-looking and noisy wind turbines at the company's Horse Hollow Wind Energy Center.
LaPoint's group claimed noisy turbines lowered their property values and stamped out their picturesque views.
Families around Myponga and Sellicks Hill on the Fleurieu Peninsula are fighting the State Government, local council, and an international electricity generator to preserve their region.
Yet the power company which residents say is threatening their tranquillity advertises itself as green, friendly and environment-conscious.
TrustPower is a New Zealand generator which wants to build a wind farm on the hills behind Mt Terrible and around Heatherdale Hill close to Myponga, on two ridgelines some 8km long.
Wolfe Islander shares wind experiences; Visiting mayor offers account of 86-turbine farming development
August 21, 2008 by Sean Tomlinson in Picton Gazette Local News
August 21, 2008 by Sean Tomlinson in Picton Gazette Local News
Jim Vanden Hoek, the mayor of the Township of Frontenac Islands, may not have realized how his words would be taken when referring to the centre of wind turbines development on Wolfe Island as "ground zero" at the public wind energy meeting at the Picton Arena Wednesday night.
"I'm seeing a lot of shaking of heads, just bear with me," he said as he presented to a crowd of over 200 people who, judging by their comments and questions, appeared largely against wind farm development in Prince Edward.
He pointed to a green map of Wolfe Island dotted with red.
Before the 2006 trial, the judge wouldn't let plaintiffs argue that the towering turbines were a nuisance based on their blinking lights or how they looked. After the two-week trial in which noise levels and land values were discussed, jurors ruled in favor of FPL Energy. In a ruling issued Thursday, the 11th Court of Appeals said the trial judge did not err because Texas law "does not provide a nuisance action for aesthetical impact." But the appeals court seemed sympathetic to landowners.
Windmills, power lines, loss of view draw worry
August 20, 2008 by Robert L. Baker in Wyoming County Press Examiner
August 20, 2008 by Robert L. Baker in Wyoming County Press Examiner
If someone were to tell Doug Tewksbury or Tom Baisley to go jump off a cliff, they'd probably seize the moment
That is, of course, if they were at their favorite launch spot on the top of Mehoopany Mountain.
The weekend warriors who can't seem to get paragliding out of their blood are part of a small yet growing group of individuals who are worried.
They're worried that BPAlternative Energy's plan to put an 85-90 wind turbine park in the southern part of Wyoming County will not only spoil their fun, but also disrupt the peace and solitude that the sleepy Endless Mountains have enjoyed for centuries.
Piedmont residents see risks in OG&E power line proposal
August 19, 2008 by Robert Medley in The Oklahoman
August 19, 2008 by Robert Medley in The Oklahoman
About 400 people gathered Monday night at Piedmont First Baptist Church to voice their concerns over a proposed power transmission line scheduled to cut through the community's fastest growing area.
Oklahoma Gas and Electric Co. officials plan to build a 120-mile-long power line from wind farms south of Woodward to northwest Oklahoma City. OG&E officials attended the town hall meeting and fielded questions from residents.
Government departments responsible for the increase in onshore wind turbines are using staff from energy companies to advise them on noise and safety issues.
Concerns have been raised that the potential conflict of interest, denied by the civil servants, could result in the Government making policy decisions which directly benefit turbine manufacturers and energy companies.
Guidance on noise issues was sent to planning inspectors as a result of Government meetings which in one case were chaired by a representative of RWE npower.
It is a debate gradually becoming more polarized.
A calm beginning at Thursday's public meeting about the proposed wind farm project in Norwich, turned into a heated, yet respectful discussion among frustrated community members and representatives from ProWind Canada and MK Ince and Associates, the hired environmental consultant company.
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