Save Western Maryland demands Garrett County wind farm comply with Endangered Species Act. UPDATE: NOTICE OF VIOLATIONS ADDED

SAVE WESTERN MARYLAND

For Immediate Release

July 3, 2010

Press Release

Save Western Maryland joined the Maryland Conservation Council and several concerned citizens on a June 23, 2010 letter providing official notice to Constellation Green Energy, LLC, Clipper Wind power, Inc., Criterion Power Partners, LLC, Old Dominion Electric Cooperative, Inc. and the Garrett County Commissioners, that the installation and operation of the Constellation wind energy project will violate the federal Endangered Species Act (ESA).  Available evidence demonstrates that the Constellation wind project will almost certainly result in unauthorized “takes” of Indiana bats and Virginia big-eared bats, triggering criminal and civil enforcement actions.  Upon expiration of a 60 day period, suit may be filed in federal court.

Constellation and others could avoid liability under the ESA by acquiring an incidental take permit (ITP) from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (the Service).  An ITP can be obtained after submission and approval of a habitat conservation plan.  The Service publishes a step-by step guide and assists in the development of such plans.

“The big wind developers purport to be responsible, corporate citizens.  As such, they must live up to their green image by complying with all laws, especially those designed to protect the environment such as the ESA.  Additionally, their business partners, including the local government, must also follow the laws.” states a spokesperson for Save Western Maryland.  “The responsible act would be to halt construction until a conservation plan is completed and a permit is issued.”

Please contact Save Western Maryland for additional information or to offer your support:

PO BOX  81, Oakland, MD  21550

Click on this link:  Save Western Maryland or cut and paste this into your address bar:  http://www.savewesternmaryland.com/default.html

E-mail:   JoinUs@SaveWesternMaryland.com or Info@SaveWesternMaryland.com

For your convenience, we provide the press release in Scribd format.

UPDATE:  Full text of “Notice Of Violations of the Endangered Species Act in Connection With Constellation Green Energy, LLC’s Proposed Wind Energy Project In Garrett County, Maryland” follows:

Posted in Allegheny Mountains, Bat/Bird Kills, Save Western Maryland, US Fish &Wildlife | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Based on “cost, reliability, and cleanliness … an energy plan that is heavily reliant on wind-generated energy is not realistic.”

In his opinion piece at The Daily Caller titled, Beyond the spin: The truth about wind energy generation, Lance Brown suggests that based on “cost, reliability, and cleanliness … an energy plan that is heavily reliant on wind-generated energy is not realistic.”

He states that “the goal of converting to an energy plan relying heavily on renewable sources is noble, but comes with a hefty price tag.”  Further, “with so many clean resources available—including nuclear power and natural gas—we shouldn’t force states to generate power from particular sources mandated by the federal government.”

We at Allegheny Treasures disagree slightly with his summary statement that “although the use of wind energy may make sense in a given state, it doesn’t make sense as a primary source of power nationwide.”  It is our opinion that industrial wind simply doesn’t make sense as a source of power, period!

Mr. Brown is Executive Director of PACE (Partnership for Affordable Clean Energy), a coalition of working people, business owners, environmentalists, and trade organizations who are fighting for fair, responsible energy policies.

Mr. Brown’s full opinion is found at The Daily Caller.

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“The argument for forcing consumers to buy increasing amounts of wind power gets weaker the more we investigate its full impacts.”

Interesting take from The Foundry:  “Wind Power is More Dangerous than Coal or Oil

The article suggests that, with a drop in occupational deaths in recent years, “some might think that workplace fatalities could be reduced even more by moving away from fossil fuels and toward renewable energy.  The facts suggest the opposite.”

Noting that with “10 deaths in the wind-power industry over the years 2003-2008,” one would think industrial wind much safer than coal which, according to the article “had 176 fatalities over the same period.”  On the other hand, “much less energy was generated by wind than by coal.”

In order to “project changes in workplace safety from switching to wind from coal, it is necessary to know the mortality rate per megawatt-hour” and, as a result, “the low number of total deaths in the wind-power industry is undermined by the very low amount of power generated by wind.”

The article concludes that, “on a million-megawatt-hour basis, the wind-energy industry has averaged 0.0220 deaths compared with 0.0147 for coal over the years 2003-2008.”  In case you’re wondering, “the workplace fatality rate for wind also exceeds that for oil and gas on an equivalent-energy basis.”

Certainly, this in itself will not sway wind’s true believers.  But, as the author suggests “the argument for forcing consumers to buy increasing amounts of wind power gets weaker the more we investigate its full impacts.”

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Paul Driessen challenges Obama Administration renewable energy agenda.

The following is provided courtesy of CFACT – Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow.

A few questions for President Obama

President Obama sounds like an anti-business Community Organizer in Chief: pointing fingers, making baseless claims about ending our “addiction to oil,” and leaving no crisis unexploited. His June 15 “vision” raised more questions than it answered.

June 25, 2010

by Paul Driessen

  • America needs decisive leaders who understand what government can (and cannot) do to stop the Gulf gusher, clean up the mess, and get business, jobs and prosperity back on track. Instead, President Obama sounds like an anti-business Community Organizer in Chief – pointing fingers, making baseless claims about ending our “addiction to oil,” and leaving no crisis unexploited to promote job-killing cap-tax-and-trade and renewable energy agendas. His June 15 “vision” raised more questions than it answered.

    1) The President said he can no longer support new drilling unless industry can prove it will be “absolutely safe.” This avoidable environmental disaster happened because BP, its contractors and MMS regulators did not follow procedures or respond properly to tests and warning signs, indicating critical trouble was brewing downhole. But if “absolute safety” is to decide activities and technologies, America will come to a standstill in the absence of impossible-to-obtain proof that nothing will ever go wrong, no one will ever screw up, and no technology will ever malfunction.

    Oil tankers sometimes run aground, unleashing their black cargo on our shores. Will oil imports now be banned, as well? Over 42,000 Americans died in car accidents last year. Will highways and city streets be closed to vehicles? Airports, trains and subways? Wind turbines kill 3,000 eagles and other raptors every year, plus 100,000 to 300,000 other birds and bats. Will they be shut down until that carnage ends?

    2) President Obama demanded that BP “set aside “whatever resources are required to compensate the workers and business owners who have been harmed” by the spill. With thousands of environmental activists, regulators, congressmen and trial lawyers on Team Obama, one can only imagine what creative damages and costs might be concocted, to convert the initial $20-billion BP fund into a bottomless money pit, and what “standards” might guide bird death valuations, for example.

    ExxonMobil paid $600,000 when 85 birds died in uncovered waste facilities. PacifiCorp paid was fined $1.4 million after 230 eagles were killed by its power lines over a two-year period. Will those fines set the standard for Gulf of Mexico oil spill bird deaths? Or will the standard be the zero, zip, nada fines assessed to date on wind turbine operators for their ongoing slaughter? Will BP be required to compensate oil field workers who lose their jobs because Team Obama imposed an arbitrary drilling moratorium, instead of ensuring improved oversight of drilling, blowout prevention and well completion activities?

    3) The President said China is creating “clean energy” jobs “that should be right here in America,” while we send “nearly $1 billion of our wealth every day to foreign countries for their oil.” We will “embark on a national mission to unleash America’s innovation and seize control of our own destiny,” he declared, because “the time to embrace a clean energy future is now.”

    America is not running out of oil. It is running out of places the government allows us to drill. China is creating renewable energy jobs, because it mines the lanthanides, lithium and other minerals that are essential for wind turbines, solar panels and hybrid cars, while we lock up our prospects; burns coal to generate cheap electricity to run its factories, while the White House, Congress and EPA try to drive US coal-based power to extinction; and pays its factory workers a fraction of what American workers receive.

    Companies have been drilling in deep waters, because most onshore and shallow water areas are off limits. Will we now open the ANWR, Alaska National Petroleum Reserve, Rockies and near-shore OCS to drilling – where access and development are easier, and accidents (that we hope, and industry must ensure, never happen again) can be fixed and cleaned up far more easily than in mile-deep waters?

    Will President Obama lift his OCS moratorium (which even his independent safety experts opposed), before it further devastates the battered Gulf economy, rigs head overseas, and thousands of experienced workers permanently leave the industry for other lines of work?

    To advance the President’s “national mission” and generate 20% or more of our electricity with wind and solar, will our legislators, regulators and litigators continue to ignore the environmental review, endangered species, migratory bird and other laws that govern fossil fuel and nuclear power – so that we can rapidly blanket millions of acres of onshore and offshore America with wind turbines and solar panels, to replace coal-fired power plants, regardless of the environmental costs?

    Rather than dozens of “ugly” offshore oil and gas platforms, often dozens of miles from our coasts – will America now enjoy seeing thousands of “beautiful” offshore wind turbines, towering above our beaches and creating obstacle courses for submarines, merchant ships laden with bunker fuel, and more tankers filled with crude oil and far more toxic refined product?

    Will the President and Congress now open some of the hundreds of millions of acres they have made off limits to exploration and mining for the minerals needed to manufacture “green” technologies here in America? Or will we henceforth be dependent on foreign countries and dictators for both our “dirty” oil and the raw materials and finished components needed to build a new “clean energy” economy?

    4) Under a cap-tax-and-trade regime, the price of hydrocarbon energy will “necessarily skyrocket,” to “encourage” companies and families to use less fossil fuel energy, and “persuade” them to switch to wind and solar. How will that affect turbine and panel manufacturing costs and subsidies, and the downstream costs of renewable energy and everything Americans make, grow, drive, ship, eat, drink and do?

    How will US wind and solar factories compete with Chinese and Indian facilities, if the American plants are compelled to pay two, three, five times as much for electricity, under cap-tax-and-trade and renewable energy mandates? How will they compete if they must also pay subsidies, union wages and gold-plated health and pension plans, if government grants are also tied to compulsory unionization, and if non-union shops and right-to-work states are excluded from the bidding and subsidy process?

    How will regulators and “clean energy” companies deal with the nasty pollutants generated in the process of manufacturing hundreds of thousands of wind turbines and millions of acres of solar panels? How will they handle highly toxic silicon tetrachloride, the powerful greenhouse gas nitrogen trifluoride and other chemicals used or generated in making solar panels, fiberglass and other components?

    Even “little” 1.5 megawatt wind turbines require 700 tons of concrete, steel, fiberglass, copper and rare earth (lanthanide) minerals. Add in the transmission lines and backup gas-fired generators, and we’re talking some serious land use, raw material, pollution, bird kill and economic issues. How do our legislators, regulators, litigators and environmental activists plan to address these issues?

    Will solar and wind companies operate under free market principles, to compete and possibly fail against other energy firms? Or will they be kept in business via huge subsidies under government systems that extract countless billions from families and less favored companies, borrow it from our children, and redistribute that wealth to “clean energy” companies? How long will this Grecian Formula be sustainable?

    Spain lost 2.2 traditional jobs for every wind power job its massive subsidies created. President Obama has said we can create 5 million green jobs. How does he plan to compensate 11 million workers who will lose their traditional jobs under the Spanish Scenario? With more stimulus money and red ink?

    Every seven million gallons of corn-based ethanol requires billions in subsidies, cropland equivalent to Indiana, millions of gallons of water, millions of tons of fertilizer, and vast quantities of nutrients flowing down the Mississippi, creating algal blooms and “dead zones” in the Gulf of Mexico – to make fuel that costs more but gets a third less mileage than gasoline. Can someone explain how this is eco-friendly and sustainable?

    When this house of cards inevitably collapses, as it has in Spain, will its congressional and administration creators be held responsible and accountable, under the same standards they are applying to BP?

    Just asking. (Not that I expect our politicians to even attempt a response to these inconvenient questions.)

Paul Driessen

Paul Driessen is senior policy adviser for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT), which is sponsoring the All Pain No Gain petition against global-warming hype. He also is a senior policy adviser to the Congress of Racial Equality and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green Power – Black Death.

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HEAVY TOLL ON WILDLIFE PROMPTS LAWSUIT AGAINST CAPE WIND

From Save Our Sound:

For Immediate Release:  Friday, June 25, 2010
Contact:  Kyla Bennett (508) 230-9933 [PEER]; Paula Dinerstein (202) 265-7337 [PEER]; Jessica Almy (202) 588-5206 [Meyer Glitzenstein & Crystal]

HEAVY TOLL ON WILDLIFE PROMPTS LAWSUIT AGAINST CAPE WIND
Scientific Reviews of Impact on Endangered and Threatened Birds Skewed

Friday, June 25, 2010, Washington, DC – A coalition of groups filed suit today against federal agencies responsible for approving the proposed Cape Wind turbine farm on the grounds that the project will exact a terrible toll on federally protected migratory birds.  The suit contends that required scientific studies were not done and that mandated protective measures were ignored in approving the controversial 130-turbine project slated for Nantucket Sound, a principal bird migration corridor off the Massachusetts coast.

The lawsuit filed today in federal district court in Washington, D.C. contends that the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement (until recently known as the Minerals Management Service) and Fish and Wildlife Service violated the Endangered Species Act, Migratory Bird Treat Act, and National Environmental Policy Act in green-lighting the offshore wind farm. Plaintiffs include Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER), Cetacean Society International, Lower Laguna Madre Foundation, Californians for Renewable Energy (CARE), Three Bays Preservation and the Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound, as well as Cindy Lowry, Barbara Durkin, and Martha Powers.  They are represented by the Washington, D.C. public interest law firm Meyer Glitzenstein & Crystal.

Among the issues raised by the suit are the –

  • Refusal to adopt recommended protective measures for the endangered Roseate Tern and the threatened Piping Plover, such as shutting turbines down during peak migration periods;
  • Refusal to collect or submit acoustic, radar, infrared, or observational data on bird migration; and
  • Failure to prepare a supplemental environmental impact statement when new information came to light that a large aggregation of the highly imperiled North Atlantic Right Whale was present in the project area.

As a result of these failures, there is no reliable information on how many birds will perish in the huge turbine blades despite requirements that the best scientific information must be used.  In addition, there are questions about whether the project will harm, harass, or kill critically endangered Right Whales.

“We are in this lawsuit because science was manipulated and suppressed for political reasons to which the Obama administration turned a blind eye,” stated PEER New England Director Kyla Bennett, a biologist and lawyer formerly with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, noting the role of the (now former) Minerals Management Service and Interior Secretary Ken Salazar.  “Condemning rare birds to extinction is not required for offshore wind development.”

A January 2010 Interior Inspector General report found that the agencies reviewing the project’s environmental impact study were unnecessarily rushed in their reviews because of the applicant’s desire to complete the environmental review prior to the exodus of the Bush Administration.  Moreover, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service biologists protested that the lack of data that made it impossible to adequately assess the project’s impacts on birds.  The agency then reassigned the lead biologist.

“After years of personally witnessing the destruction of precious coastal habitat to wind industrial complexes, I am disturbed to see the federal agencies entrusted with the protection of our public waters act so recklessly in approving the Cape Wind project,” concluded Walt Kittelberger, Chairman of the Lower Laguna Madre Foundation.

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Industrial wind paid to do what it does best – ZILCH!

Were I once worked, we used to joke about the do-nothings backing in to accept their paychecks.  If industrial wind had any shame, it would probably send another to pick up the check.

Here’s the latest sham from the wind business in Britain – “Wind farm owners get fee to switch off turbines in heavy winds.”  Seems, according to the Daily Mail, the National Grid says the payments are essential to prevent the supply of electricity from overloading the network.

I know!  Wind farms are pitiful performers at best with optimum wind, but now they’ll receive money to purposely not produce.

Reader fenbeagle’s comment to the article says it all:

NETA energy figures for this morning….Great Britain’s wind fleet was producing 0.0% (18MW)

GAS…46.5% (17,712MW)
COAL..37.0% (914,071MW)
Nuclear…15.6% (5,930MW)
Hydro…0.1% (35MW)
PUMP STORAGE…).8%(286MW)
TOTAL 38,052MW
What part of 0.0% is so difficult to understand?

– fenbeagle, lincs, 21/6/2010 19:26

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Giving new meaning to “Police Force,” Dalton McGuinty has directed his Ontario Provincial Officers “to investigate members of Wind Concerns Ontario and, if necessary, visit our homes.”

Normally, if you offer a product of real value, customers will break down your door to have it.  Unfortunately, industrial wind requires a slightly different approach.

You might recall a month ago we published this post:  And your thoughts on industrial wind? “I say North America must REVOLT big time and put a stop to this madness!”

The post included commentary from a concerned Ontario citizen, the Wind Concerns Ontario citizen group and an article from the Toronto Sun.  The Sun piece, titled Wind revolt won’t die; Rural opposition to massive turbine farms in the countryside won’t blow over was written by Michael Den Tandt and spoke to the growing furor of private citizens unhappy with the industrial wind scam.  The article concluded with this comment from the author:  “this revolt will not go away!”  He is, of course, absolutely correct!  The “resistor” groups are expanding rapidly.

So how does Ontario’s Premier McGuinty handle citizen dissent?  Take a look at the incredible post which follows, courtesy of our great friends to the north – Wind Concerns Ontario:

OPP (Ontario Provincial Police) calling us “resisters” – phone calls, visits, background checks on WCO members

“Excuse me, Mrs. X, we are from the Ontario Provincial Police. It is our duty to ask you whether you’re planning on attending and somehow opposing the grand opening of the International Power windplant?”

Dalton McGuinty has directed the Ontario Provincial Police Force to investigate members of Wind Concerns Ontario and, if necessary, visit our homes.   They refer to us as resisters. They already have been attending most meetings but now they claim they need to call our homes and visit our homes to “quell any possible violence”.

One member in Essex, a middle-aged, college-degreed educator to Ontario farmers on pesticide issues. Married. Mother of a teenage boy.  The OPP have done background checks, knew very personal information and have been around town asking people about her and her character. Enemy of the people?

Another woman in Chatham Kent has been called on the phone and the OPP insist on visiting her home.  A a stay-at-home mom who is also a farmer and enjoys gardening and baking.   Enemy of the people?

Their crime?   They opposed the erection of these turbines in their communities.

What is this all about? A simple ribbon-cutting ceremony headed by the CEO of International Power Inc. who happens to be the President of the Federal Liberal Party (Ontario).   This “ceremony” will be held Friday, June 25 at 11:00 am on Gore Road in Harrow.    Map

The OPP claims they are  following up on people who are strongly opposed to wind development in order to maintain public safety.    Where were the concerns for public safety when the MOE allowed these 40 story spinning structures to be built so close to where children sleep and play?

Here is a letter from one who is being targeted:

A few days ago a telephone call from an OPP officer from the Provincial Liaison Team called and questioned me if I was planning a protest against the AIM/IPC Wind Turbine project in my area which has scheduled a ribbon cutting ceremony for June 25th @ 11:00 am in Harrow.  When I asked how this officer  got my name,  he clearly indicated that I was identified through his research, as a strong and vocal resistor to Industrial Wind Energy and since the resistance to these projects seem to be mounting across Ontario, it was his job to identify those who could be involved in these protests in order to insure public safety.  I relayed to him that I wasn’t aware of any kind of protest since nobody had contacted me indicating an interest.   Two days later, this officer with another showed up at my house, (I wasn’t home) and left their contact information expressing their wish to talk to me.  I never asked them to come to my home nor did I express further interest in discussing  the issue.

Reflecting on these events,  it has  become quite clear to me, that our society has been turned upside down,  when those who wish to stand up for what is right and truthful become the target of  persecution and scrutiny, while an industry like Industrial wind energy is allowed, without proof of their claims, to pursue large scale development that will ultimately change everything about  rural Ontario.    Because of my efforts to simply call a spade a spade in order to deny these impostors the opportunity to gouge Ontario taxpayers of billions of dollars for a source of electricity that will not solve our energy issues, will not reduce our dependence on fossil fuels, and contrary to popular perception, will no solve our environmental problems, I am the one being scrutinized by the police  as would a criminal contemplating his next harmful action.   Instead of outrage from the public, wind developers are allowed to continue to wrap themselves in the cloak of clean, green and free energy which merits them the moral high ground based on the perception that they are at least trying to do something about global warming.   After4 years of researching wind energy and energy issues,  I have yet to find the independent, objective studies (using real-world data, not models) that show that wind energy actually is technically, economically and environmentally beneficial.

I understand this officer was only doing his job, yet I can’t help to ponder that, if violence is of concern, than why are police officers not present during  hockey games or at school yards across Ontario when public displays of violence occur on weekly basis?  Why is this  public gathering any different?  Why is a  law abiding citizen, being observed so closely?  These tactics are disconcerting and somewhat unprincipled if one is to believe that we live in a democratic society.  Taxpayers should be outraged across this province since it appears that law abiding citizens are scrutinized with our own dollars rather than the unscrupulous activities many of these wind developers get away with over and over in each community they invade.

If this project had been transparent from the start with it’s information, I dare say that many would have trounced the idea of Industrial Wind Energy and we would have all been able to see that Industrial wind energy has very high costs with very low benefits.  Instead, residents like myself are allowed to be thrown under the big green bus and then questioned  and intimidated by the police regarding  our intents towards a simple ribbon cutting ceremony.  I hope all who read this can see that this is more than the police doing their “job” and in fact is a censure of our rights as Canadians to exercise our democratic rights of free speech.

WCO post ends.

Methinks the Premier might be taking his title a little too seriously.  After all, sending “troops” to intimidate civil dissenters is so third world.  Plus, the “genius” is simply exposing industrial wind’s failure as a viable source of energy.

Keep up the good fight WCO.  We are cheering you on.  When you finally succeed in sending the Premier and his hacks packing, please don’t send them to the US.  We disposed of our own Dalton Gang long ago and good riddance.

We urge readers to visit Wind Concerns Ontario often to follow the ongoing industrial wind shenanigans, and support them in any way you can.

Posted in Wind Concerns Ontario, Wind Energy Shenanigans | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

Does Ohio seek to become industrial wind’s new Spain?

Duncan Davidson, in his article Investing in green tech at Wall Street Pit, suggests “European wind developers are fleeing the EU’s expiring wind subsidies.”  Lacking government subsidies, we at Allegheny Treasures think a likely place for the swarm of European Mordecai Jones clones to land might just be the Buckeye state.

Just as Europe cuts back, Ohio’s Gov. Ted Strickland signs a wind energy bill which seems pleasing to, at least, Spain’s Iberdrola Renewables.  According to a Times Bulletin article, Iberdrola Business Developer Dan Litchfield is excited about SB 232 getting Strickland’s signature, telling the Van Wert County Commissioners soon to consider how to handle the elimination of the tangible personal property tax for wind energy companies, “I see this legislation as a win-win, as it will provide for significant new revenue for the local governments for years to come, and it gives us the certainty we need to proceed with our project,” he said.

Maybe it’s my suspicious nature, but when an industry relying on government subsidies for its very survival is thrilled with tax legislation, it might be time for taxpayers to challenge their Legislator’s actions.

But even beyond the subsidy issue, Mr. Davidson plays on one of Yogi Berra’s quips, “In theory, theory and practice are the same.  In practice, they are not,” saying of industrial wind:  “In theory, wind power makes sense. In practice, it doesn’t.

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North Dakota Public Service commissioners will be in Grand Forks on Wednesday to meet with Air Force officials about the impact of potential wind farms and the base’s mission.

On the heels of Sweden’s decision to halt all wind farm activity within @25 miles of 10 military airfields, The Grand Forks Herald report that the US Air Force and the North Dakota Public Service Commission will meet to discuss the impact of potential wind farms and the base’s mission.

According to the article, Commissioner Tony Clark stated, “In discussions I have had with Grand Forks officials, it has become clear that wind farm siting and permitting is a significant concern.  “My goal is to ensure that any wind farms that are built in North Dakota are done in such a way that they do not interfere with the critical missions of our state’s air bases.

Good for North Dakota for delving into the issue and not taking the Oregon “pass.”

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Due to concerns over groundwater issues, Board of Health advises against wind farms in southern Wisconsin county.

According to the Green Bay Press Gazette article, “Wind turbines pose groundwater, health issues, panel says,” the Board of Health has recommended that no wind turbines be built in the county’s southern region where a 100-turbine wind farm has been proposed.

Construction of these massive devices may well have a serious impact on water resources.  You might recall this cautionary post by Art and Pamela Dodds here a short while back:  Industrial wind’s rubber stamp? “Rather than being effective regulatory agencies, the state authorities have simply opted to be the permitting agencies.”

This is an issue that deserves attention.

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