Wednesday, December 28, 2011

ENERGY: State panel to revisit Gorge wind farm proposal

Two months after it recommended scaling back the project, Washington?s Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council on Tuesday will weigh in for a final time on a proposed wind farm near the Columbia River Gorge in Skamania County.

EFSEC members met last week for an update on the Whistling Ridge Energy Project. They?ll convene again at 10 a.m. Tuesday for a special meeting to consider numerous legal arguments and responses filed since October. The council is then scheduled to cast its final vote on the matter.

?The EFSEC process ends on the 27th,? said EFSEC manager Al Wright. ?Then it?s up to the governor.?

Wright stressed that the council?s vote is only a recommendation. The project?s fate ultimately rests with Gov. Chris Gregoire, who will have 60 days to make her decision once EFSEC gives its final recommendation.

On Oct. 6, EFSEC called for a scaled-back version of the project that would reduce the number of wind turbines from 50 to 35 ? largely to protect views in the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area. The decision drew objections from both project developer Whistling Ridge Energy and opponents, though for very different reasons.

In a legal petition asking for reconsideration, Whistling Ridge argued that eliminating 15 turbines from the proposal effectively ?kills the project.?

The farm wouldn?t be economically viable in a scaled-back form, the petition argued. It also wouldn?t be feasible to simply squeeze larger turbines into the project area and reach the original intended capacity of 75 megawatts, the developer said.

Whistling Ridge officials urged the council to reconsider the decision based on what they called a ?subjective? reason.

A Skamania and Klickitat county economic development organization also sided with Whistling Ridge, citing the economic boost and tax revenue that could come from the project.

Impact on wildlife

Three advocacy groups ? Save Our Scenic Area, Friends of the Columbia River Gorge, and the Seattle Audubon Society ? took the opposite stance. They argued in petitions that the council?s decision didn?t go far enough, with some calling for a denial of the entire project. In addition to obstructed views, environmental advocates have pointed to the potential impact on wildlife habitat as a major reason to reconsider.

The project area is located just north of the Gorge scenic area boundary, near the city of Underwood. Developers filed the application in 2009.

Tuesday?s EFSEC meeting will begin at 10 a.m. in the state Utilities and Transportation Commission Building, 1300 S. Evergreen Park Drive in Olympia. Anyone can attend, but the council won?t accept public comments.

Similar stories:

  • Wind power fans should

    admit green's not their color

    Wind power fans should

    admit green's not their color

    Wind energy promoters and enablers are finally waking up to the possibility that the public knows there may be adverse effects from wind power.

    That puts them about 25 years behind the rest of the country, at least that part of the country that does not fall to its knees when the word "green" is attached to a concept, no matter how inaccurately.

    Birds might die! That's what the pro-wind farm folks now admit.

  • Energy Northwest cancels first large-scale project on state's west side

    Energy Northwest cancels first large-scale project on state's west side

    Energy Northwest and four southwest Washington utilities have canceled the Radar Ridge wind power project, which had been proposed as the first major wind farm in Western Washington.

    Energy Northwest of Richland announced the decision Wednesday at a board meeting in Portland. About $4 million had been spent on the proposed project since 2007, about half of that from Energy Northwest.

    New restrictions proposed for the project by U.S. Fish and Wildlife were unreasonable, said Jack Baker, Energy Northwest vice president for energy business services.

  • Energy Northwest makes wise choice on Radar Ridge

    Energy Northwest makes wise choice on Radar Ridge

    We won't feign disappointment that Energy Northwest has canceled its Radar Ridge wind power project.

    Some might have gotten perverse satisfaction that the west side of the Cascades was to get a dose of the visual blight that wind power generators bring.

    But frankly, we feel Western Washington is entirely too beautiful to be subjected to those spinning giants.

  • State mulls rules on wind farming

    State mulls rules on wind farming

    OLYMPIA -- Power generated by Northwest wind turbines will likely double in the next two years, but some energy officials are worried the negative effects have not been properly assessed and understood.

    The number of wind turbines in the state, such as those dotting the horizon of the Horse Heaven Hills south of Kennewick to Walla Walla, has boomed in the past seven years, with 2,100 now in operation, according to the Northwest Power and Conservation Council.

    Washington does not require regulatory agencies to consider their effects on nearby property owners or wildlife, and state and local officials are discussing evaluation policies before hundreds -- perhaps thousands -- more are built.

  • Program helps pick site for renewable energy generation

    Program helps pick site for renewable energy generation

    Sunshine and wind are two things we know well in the Tri-Cities and beyond. My own back yard is a perpetual vortex of breezy fun to the point that it almost seems silly not to harness it for something useful. But I recently learned that when we are talking about building renewable energy generation capacity, it is not quite as simple as, "If you build it, they will come."

    In fact, according to renewable energy expert and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory researcher John DeSteese, there are several criteria that make a piece of property suitable for this kind of development. DeSteese and his team recently completed an assessment regarding the use of specific land for renewable power generation through PNNL's Technology Assistance Program.

    The program provides small businesses with up to a week of researcher time for free help with specific technical questions or challenges. This particular project focused on wind and solar power generation.

Source: http://www.tri-cityherald.com/2011/12/26/1765379/energy-state-panel-to-revisit.html

jack dempsey lake malawi hines ward warren jeffs phaedra parks oklahoma earthquake new madrid fault

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.