Wow! Someone’s starting to get the message: “Senator (Schumer): No fed money for US-China wind project”

The AP reports this morning:  “Senator: No fed money for US-China wind project

H. Josef Herbert – WASHINGTON — A Democratic senator is calling on the Obama administration to reject an expected request for federal economic stimulus money as part of a $1.5 billion West Texas wind energy project because he says it will generate Chinese, not American, jobs.

The U.S.-China venture, announced last week, would erect 240 huge Chinese-manufactured wind turbines on 36,000 acres in West Texas, with the Export-Import Bank of China committed to handle most of the financing.

But Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said the project reportedly may also be seeking 30 percent funding from economic stimulus grants from the Energy Department — funds he said would used to buy turbines and other components made in a Chinese plant.

“The idea that stimulus funds would be used to create jobs overseas is quite troubling,” Schumer wrote in a letter to be sent Thursday to Energy Secretary Steven Chu. The senator urged Chu to reject any request for funds from the Texas project.

“The purpose of the (stimulus program) was to jump start the economy to create and save jobs — American jobs,” the senator wrote. “Yet the Texas wind farm project would create an estimated 2,000-3,000 clean energy manufacturing jobs in China. … American taxpayer dollars should not be used to finance those Chinese jobs.”

A draft of the letter was provided late Wednesday to The Associated Press.

The project, announced a week ago, is a joint venture of China’s Shenyang Power Group, Cielo Wind Power LP of Austin, Texas, and a private equity firm, U.S. Renewable Energy Group. It would be the largest renewable energy investment made by China in the United States.

Under the agreement, A-Power Energy Generation Systems Ltd. of Shenyang, China, would be the exclusive provider of 240 2.5-megawatt wind turbines for the 600-megawatt wind farm, which would produce enough electricity to serve 180,000 homes.

Project officials could not be immediately reached for comment on the senators’ concerns.

In a news release when the project was announced Oct. 29, Ed Cunningham, USREG’s managing partner, said the wind farm would “create new high-paying jobs on both sides of the Pacific.”

Cappy McGarr, the group’s managing partner, said that in addition to the Chinese financing, the project expected to tap U.S. stimulus money earmarked for development of jobs in the renewable energy industry.

Schumer said the federal stimulus funding should be provide only for wind projects where major components, including wind turbines, are manufactured in the United States.

Chu frequently has expressed concern that China and European countries have overtaken the United States in the commercial development and production of clean energy technologies, even in some cases where the technologies originally were developed in the United States.

While turbine production has been dominated by largely European manufacturers, Schumer maintained that U.S. plants are capable of making the products. “U.S. wind farms financed with stimulus money should be buying American-built turbines and parts,” maintained Schumer.

Related: Oh! … and about that wind energy stimulus money going overseas … you’ll really like this!” and “Chugging soon into your home town – “The Green Energy Subsidy Express” – be careful not to play on the tracks!” and “More good news from the Wind Energy Sector – “More than eight out of 10 US stimulus dollars spent on wind energy farms have gone to foreign companies

Posted in Wind Power subsidies | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Filed under “maybe I’m picky,” is the latest Mineral Daily News-Tribune front page softball for US WindForce, LLC.

Maybe some will say “softball” is a little unfair.  I don’t think so, but if the word got you here to read what follows, I’ll take the criticism.

Published this morning in the Keyser, WV based Mineral Daily News Tribune is this article titled “Managers say firm is focused on safety and community.” The article seems, in my opinion, to have missed a golden (eagle) opportunity to provide truly useful information to the citizens of the Potomac Valley.  Or perhaps, as I mention in the title – I’m just being picky!

This blog recently published a list of open questions related to the very project touted in the “article,” but perhaps the questions were unknown to the article’s writer – Mr. Richard Kerns, the Community Advisory Panel for the Pinnacle project, or even Mr. Doug Vance, operations and maintenance manager for the two wind “farms” discussed.  Or, perhaps, all the questions have been answered, and the writer of the post you’re reading is clueless.  I’ll link to the list of questions HERE for ready reference with the hope I can follow up with a post full of answers.  I know you’re out there somewhere!

What follows is the entire article as published at newstribune.info.  I’ve taken the liberty to add a few comments and questions to the original article, which I might have asked of Mr. Vance.  For clarity, I highlighted my comments in bold text.  I make every effort to insure accuracy so, in the event I’ve erred, please notify me immediately.  I invite all readers to utilize the comment section at the end of this post to discuss both the article and my comments.  The goal here is not to pick a fight on style.  The goal is to address issues very important to the discussion, about which some members of the community are not up to speed, including yours truly.

All that being said, here’s what I hope is a starting point to that discussion.

BEGIN NEWS-TRIBUNE ARTICLE

Managers say firm is focused on safety and community

Keyser, W.Va. – By Richard Kerns
rkerns@newstribune.info
tribune staff writer

KEYSER — The manager of two wind farms in Somerset County, Pa., whose company is poised to assume ownership of the proposed Pinnacle Wind Farm near Keyser, described his firm as community oriented and heavily focused on both employee and turbine safety.

Speaking Monday night to the Community Advisory Panel for the Pinnacle project, Doug Vance, operations and maintenance manager for the Forward and Lookout wind farms near Berlin, said Edison Mission Group is a national energy producer committed to both alternative energy and coal-generated power.

“We’re looking at all sorts of alternative fuels,” he said, noting that 80 percent of the company’s energy is still produced by coal-fired plants. (How many coal-fired plants have been, or will be shut down as a direct result of the two “local” wind projects you manage?  How many coal-fired plants have been, or will be shut down as a direct result of the total inventory of Edison Mission wind projects?  US wind projects?  World wind projects?  The reason I ask is that it has been suggested thatWith nearly 100,000 huge wind turbines now in operation throughout the world—35,000 in the USA—no coal plants have been closed anywhere because of wind technology. And there is no empirical evidence that there is less coal burned per unit of electricity produced as a specific consequence of wind)

The advisory panel was commissioned by U.S. WindForce, which as the developer of the 23-turbine Pinnacle wind farm, has invested several years in designing the project, researching its effects on the environment and addressing the many other issues related to wind energy development. If the West Virginia Public Service Commission approves the $131 million project, WindForce will essentially turn the keys over to Edison Mission Group, which will build and operate the wind farm.  (Will Edison Mission assume and honor any and all contractual obligations negotiated between each and all parties and US WindForce LLC and Pinnacle Wind Force, LLC for the life of the installation? e.g. County Commissioners, landowners, etc.)

Vance said Pinnacle would likely employ five to six full-time technicians once the wind farm became operational.  (Were the employees at Forward and Lookout sourced from the local community?  Will you be hiring and training local labor for these jobs? … open to union and non-union labor alike?)

Hundreds would be employed during the nine-month construction phase, which will begin next spring if the PSC approves the project in January.  (Are you saying that the “hundreds” will be fully employed throughout the entire nine month construction cycle?  It seems those doing the foundation work might begin a little ahead of erection and finish before erection is complete.  Sorry to again be picky, but wouldn’t the project schedule provide a more accurately constructed labor content by summarizing detailed task and hour contribution in terms of total “man” hours?  That would be necessary to cost the project, it seems.  Anyway, slinging the often repeated PR phrase of hundreds for nine months only makes skeptics salivate.  Being a little more precise takes away the reason for the last few sentences, and that’s a start.  In addition, it is said by some that the majority of labor used to construct Pinnacle may come from outside the area.  Based on the near term starting schedule for the project, can you speak to the local labor availability issue, the type of work to be done and any training local labor can expect prior to construction?)

An 18-year employee of Edison, and a native of Fairmont, W.Va., Vance said his company goes the extra mile to serve as a good corporate citizen.

“We are heavily involved in the communities where we are,” he said.

In Berlin, Edison is located just outside the town in an former auto dealership. The company allows its lot to be used for an annual tractor pull, works with the fire department, and is a regular presence at the community fair. The company has also purchased specialized equipment for the fire department to mount high-angle rescues on turbines or high-rises.

“Edison Mission is very, very flexible when it comes to working with those kinds of groups,” Vance said.

As for its employees, Edison not only stresses safety but invests in it. After a worker at a Wyoming wind farm was injured while climbing the 300 foot turbine tower to reach the generator at the top, Edison invested more than $200,000 in development of a motorized harness that effectively lightens a man’s own load while climbing. Using the device, a 200-pound man climbs the ladder’s heights feeling as if he weighs 75 pounds.

“That’s an example of a company that will spend money to do the job right,” Vance said.

Aside from the specialized lifting harness, employees scaling the towers for daily maintenance checks go through a rigorous and mandatory check list of safety gear, and are tethered at all times to cables and tie-off points. A sure firing offense, Vance said, is disregarding such safety measures.

As for the work the technicians perform, Vance said each of the 32 turbines at Forward and Lookout are shut down every two days to allow technicians to perform visual checks on the rotors and other equipment. Once every six months, workers check the towers from top to bottom, surveying every nut and bolt.

Vance said there are 311 different reasons for taking a turbine off line.

“It’s a lot of maintenance,” he said.  (Speaking of the interest in safety and recognizing that turbines do self-destruct, with two such failures this week, and that debris from rotating blades can cause serious injury or death, what is the minimum set-back required to prevent such disaster at Pinnacle’s turbines?)

While such attention to detail promotes safety and efficiency, it also makes good business sense. Wind turbines are like any other finely calibrated machine, subject to any number of problems, from vibration to inadequate lubricant. The key to producing energy is having the turbines ready to spin when the wind rises.

“Availability is everything with wind,” he said. “You’ve got to be ready when the wind is there.”  (When the wind doesn’t blow, the contribution is ZERO.  What is the actual efficiency/output v. nameplate to be expected from the Pinnacle project when measured at operation? … What has been the measured performance at the two systems you manage? … During the times the units are not performing, do they not require fossil fuel plants to operate?  Isn’t it extremely inefficient to treat fossil and nuclear plants as secondary and ramp them up and down to support wind? … If so, and the wind turbines are supplemental, actually unreliable sources of energy, highly subsidized by taxpayers and rate payers, do they add any real value to the grid?  Is the grid able to compensate for the unsteady input of wind?  Are they really worth all the money being invested by taxpayers?)

Vance also said that Edison works closely with the landowners who lease their mountaintop property for the turbines. If the landowner wants the area seeded with clover to attract deer, or felled trees piled up to harbor other wildlife, the company will gladly make it happen.  (The USF&W and WVDNR both stated disagreement with the risk assessment provided by Pinnacle Wind Force regarding bat/bird kill potential at site.  How would you suggest that these assessments be reconciled prior to construction?  For how long and with what intensity will you conduct, or allow outside agencies to conduct surveys to insure endangered bats, golden and bald eagles that call the ridge home, are not being killed?)

“We’ve got a great relationship with the landowners,” he said. “They’re heavily involved.”  (Who is responsible for any nuisances such as noise, bird and bat kills, damage from water run off or other environmental issues that may surface as a result of the installation – Edison Mission or the Landowners?  Who is responsible to remove the equipment at the end of its productive life?  According to a documentary produced by Jon Boone, “Life Under a Windplant” (included for your convenience at the end of this post), the aforementioned became serious issues in the real world, and were not resolved by the developer, operator or landowners.  Have you experienced any such issues at the two plants you supervise and, if so, how has the issue been resolved.)

(Finally, I often see the term “adaptive management” used by the legal folks who protect the interest of developers.  Does “adaptive management” mean you would you stop production and remove the turbines if it is found they are killing endangered bats, golden and bald eagles?  Will you adapt your operation should any noise issues, health concerns or danger to the public by shutting down or modifying the operating schedule of the turbines?)

The PSC last week held its evidentiary hearing on the Pinnacle project. A decision on the wind farm is expected in early January.

END NEWS-TRIBUNE ARTICLE

I recognize the Mr. Vance is not available to answer, and in fairness may not be in a position to do so.  But hopefully, the discussion will continue and include these questions.  If they have been addressed, please accept my apology for not having seen them and allow the excuse that I’m not the only one.  The rather interesting reaction from our commissioners a couple of weeks ago, when voting to endorse the project, leads me to believe that one or two items might remain a little fuzzy.  At the risk of redundancy however, it might be helpful if we could, just one more time put all the issues in the same spot – much like a checklist – for all to see.  It would be a great public service were the News-Tribune to do so.

These turbines will change the way of life here in the Potomac Valley.  Beyond that, with international migratory bird treaties, the environment, grid issues, cost and taxes to name a few, this project reaches far beyond us.  So, it might be worth the time to put these issues to bed.  I respect Mr. Vance’s mention of community service and it’s not that high angle rescue equipment and tractor pulls aren’t important things, but if that’s all that remains on the agenda to discuss, I’ve got to cut back on the Ambien.

This amateur blog routinely publishes information intended to provide the “other side” of the wind energy issues.  We make every effort to be accurate and back up our postings with reliably sourced information and commentary from interested citizens.  Should you find an error, omission or broken link, please contact via the comments section which follows.  We encourage all points of view in the belief that a well informed community will make the best decision for themselves and, looking generations into the future, the Allegheny Mountain community which will follow.

Life Under a Windplant



Posted in Bat/Bird Kills, Eagles, Mineral County WV, Pinnacle Knob, US Fish &Wildlife, US WindForce, Wind v Coal | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

The Windpower Industry’s “top ten” False and Misleading Claims … Number 9 – “Those who are concerned about windpower are not true environmentalists”

I’d thought about waiting a day or two before posting the environmental illusion, but this showed up in an email interchange – “Wishful thinking about reducing dependence on fossil fuels should not be an excuse for becoming an environmental terrorist,” courtesy of Jon Boone.  And from his Stop Ill Wind web site, we’ll continue the count down of the windpower industry’s “top ten” illusions.

# 9 – Those who are concerned about windpower are not true environmentalists.

The facts demonstrate otherwise. Notable environmentalists such as Robert Kennedy, Jr. and Chandler S. Robbins have studied the issue and urge that wind technology be carefully evaluated before implementation decisions are made. Many are mindful that the claims for windpower mirror those made one hundred years ago for hydroelectric dams, another clean, renewable power source now known to be environmentally devastating. One should note especially that John Muir used his newly found Sierra to protest the destruction of the Hetch-Hetchy valley viewshed by a hydroelectric dam—because he so valued the valley’s aesthetic qualities.

Today, the dean of American ornithologists, Chan Robbins, is outspoken in his concern for placing thousands of wind turbines along the Allegheny ridges, which are well known for hosting billions of migrating songbirds. The American Bird Conservancy’s Michael Fry has testified before Congress about the threats to especially vulnerable species of wildlife. Bridget Stutchbury, a Canadian ornithologist and author of the recent book, Silence of the Songbirds, has called for an end to industrial wind projects on the mountains of the East. And Donald Heinzelman, the noted raptor specialist from Pennsylvania is organizing efforts to protect key mountaintops in his state, New York, and Maryland from industrial wind development.

An environmental group, The Center for Biological Diversity has sued twelve windplant companies to stop the slaughter of eagles, hawks, and owls at Altamont Pass in California. Moreover, because of the many thousands of bats and birds killed at a recently constructed windplant atop an Appalachian ridge, Congressmen Alan Mollohan and Nick Rahall of West Virginia have called for a windplant moratorium in their state, while the governor of New Jersey has mandated a moratorium on wind along the Jersey shore to prevent unintentional harm to wildlife and the viewshed.

Other environmentalists urge construction of smaller scaled, locally distributed wind projects that pose significantly less risk to wildlife, habitat, viewsheds and property values. This should not excuse, however, wind prospectors who seek to place a few 400 foot tall wind turbines on their property merely to obtain tax credits. Such prospecting is at best unneighborly and insights civil discord. Many environmentalists also point out the similarities between factory farms and contemporary industrial windplants, and note how the size and scale of each corrupts the economy, diminishes the ecosystem, and blights the landscape.

What all these environmentalists have in common is a concern that deployment of massive, irresponsibly sited windplants poses unacceptable risks to much they hold dear, with correspondingly little benefits. See Notable Quotes.

Related posts:  ““Environmentalists ignoring long-term issues” – Rick Webb, Virginia Wind” … “California has a novel idea to protect birds and bats. Don’t build wind plants where they fly! UPDATE: VIDEO SHOWS WHY! … “A Conversation with Jon Boone – Toward a Better Understanding of Industrial Wind Technology” … “Even if you accept the theory of man-made climate change, wind turbines are a rotten way to reduce CO2 emissions, or to improve energy security.” – Roger Helmer, MEP

Posted in Allegheny Mountains, Bat/Bird Kills, Environment, Jon Boone, Windpower Industry False Claims | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

“Environmentalists ignoring long-term issues” – Rick Webb, Virginia Wind

From the Cumberland Times-News, November 2, 2009

To the Editor:
Cumberland Times-News

Only a few years ago, habitat loss was front and center among causes for concern about the future well-being of the American ecological landscape. Not much has changed to allay this concern; sprawling development continues, and alteration and loss of natural habitat is largely unchecked.

What has changed is the focus of many mainstream environmental organizations. Concerns about future effects of climate change have taken precedence over immediate and observable effects of habitat loss.

Some who label themselves environmentalists would allow and even advocate industrial-scale renewable energy development in our remaining wild areas, including national forests and other lands set aside for permanent preservation.

Among evidence for this shift in perspective was the near silence of environmental organizations when environmental review requirements were eliminated from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, an economic stimulus package that will provide grants to large corporations covering as much as 30 percent of the cost of megamillion-dollar industrial-scale wind energy projects.

The act explicitly exempts the award program from provisions of the National Environmental Policy Act. It’s fair to say national environmental organizations turned their back on what has apparently become yesterday’s issue.

The assumption seems to be that any trade-off is worth it; that long-held concerns about habitat conservation and the need for careful environmental assessment are irrelevant in the context of climate change. Perhaps nowhere is the need for objective analysis made more clear than in the forested Appalachian Mountains where the wind industry and its advocates argue that ridgeline wind development can replace coal and other problematic energy sources.

Tennessee Sen. Lamar Alexander addressed this in a Wall Street Journal commentary, “We’re about to destroy the environment in the name of saving it.” To put things in perspective, he said we could line 300 miles of mountaintops from Chattanooga, Tenn., to Bristol with 50-story wind turbines and still produce only one-quarter of the electricity provided by one TVA nuclear power plant.

Similar comparisons can be made even closer to home. It would require more than 300 miles of wind turbines, stretching the entire length of the Blue Ridge Mountain chain in Virginia, from Mount Rogers to Harpers Ferry, to match the August peak-demand period output of Dominion’s controversial new coal-fired power plant in Wise County.

It’s not necessary to deny that climate change is a real problem nor is it necessary to support either coal or nuclear power to conclude that wind energy development on Appalachian ridges is not a realistic alternative.

One can even acknowledge that industrial-scale wind energy development might make sense in other places with perhaps less environmental trade-off. The better alternative in the eastern U.S. is offshore, where the wind resource is dramatically more reliable, where deforestation and road construction are not required, and where turbines can be arrayed in relatively compact and efficient grids rather than in single-file corridors along ridge crests.

The next time you see wind turbines portrayed on television and in other advertising, notice that they are depicted in treeless landscapes, typically plains and deserts, or in the ocean, and ask yourself why it is that images of turbines strung out along forested ridge crests are rarely part of the wind industry’s PR campaign.

Once enough people ask this question, we will perhaps start to take a more rational and conservation-minded approach to wind energy development and solving the climate change problem.

Rick Webb

Monterey, Va.

Webb is a senior scientist with the Department of Environmental Sciences at the University of Virginia and manager of the Virginia Wind website: http://www.VaWind.org.

Posted in Allegheny Mountains, Appalachian Mountains, Wind energy, Wind v Coal | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

The Windpower Industry’s “top ten” False and Misleading Claims … Number 10 – “Locals who oppose the wind industry are NIMBYS”

Over the next few weeks, courtesy of Jon Boone’s Stop Ill Wind web site, we’ll count down the windpower industry’s “top ten” illusions.

To begin, since many of us who continue to ask questions are considered such, we present:

Number 10 – “Locals who oppose the wind industry are NIMBYS”

One of the most persistent hypocrisies from corporate wind and its supporters is the accusation that locals who resist the industry are selfishly holding back progress. However, many politicians who vote to enable industrial wind do so fully aware that windplants will be built in someone else’s back yard, realizing they would not survive the political backlash if one were constructed in their district. Wind investors—and the politicians who enable them—live hundreds of miles away from the results of their handiwork. Although there are many areas of good wind potential available, the industry focuses on rural, often economically depressed areas which don’t have much money or political influence. In Maryland, for example, the Chesapeake Bay has the best overall wind potential in the state. Yet the wind industry, aware of the probable political repercussions, avoids this region, preferring instead to target Appalachia and the mountains in the far western region of the state. It is the old story of colonialism, with distant capital exploiting the people and resources of the hinterlands to give the illusion of progress.

Nedpower, one of the most aggressive wind companies in the country, is in the midst of constructing a huge 200-wind turbine facility along a 14-mile strip of the Alleghany Front east of Mount Storm Lake in West Virginia. Frank Maisano, a Washington, DC lobbyist and media spokesman for Nedpower and who lives near the Bay, said that any allegation that a wind-powered project will be an “eyesore” is generally a claim without merit.” However, when asked by a reporter, he declined to say if he would want such a project built within two miles of his home. “I’m not living next to one, so I’m not going to answer hypothetical questions for you just for the sake of answering them,” he said. (Charlotte, WV Gazette, November 30, 2005.)

As has been shown, there are legitimate, unselfish reasons for locals to be concerned about how massive windplants will affect their lives.

Related links – “A Conversation with Jon Boone – Toward a Better Understanding of Industrial Wind Technology” … “West Virginia’s Pinnacle Knob Wind Project – So many questions, so little time!” … “The Allegheny Highlands – Where eagles dare!” … “Agencies sworn to protect must not permit the kill.

Posted in Friends and Citizens Groups, Jon Boone, Windpower Industry False Claims | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Oh! … and about that wind energy stimulus money going overseas … you’ll really like this!

According to the New York times, “A consortium of Chinese and American companies announced a joint venture on Thursday to build a 600-megawatt wind farm in West Texas, using turbines made in China.”

And, “Construction of the $1.5 billion wind farm will be financed largely by Chinese banks, with the help of loan guarantees and cash grants from the United States government.”  That’s interesting, since the US government is likely backing the project with loans and grants funded by money we borrowed from the Chinese in the first place.

But hey, surely some of the product will be build here in the US.  I’ll just go over here to the Houston Chronicle.  OOPS!  “Chinese wind turbine manufacturer A-Power Energy Generation Systems will begin shipping the 2.5-megawatt turbines in March, built in the company’s plant in the city of Shenyang.  A-Power uses technology developed by Germany-based Fuhrlander and Erie, Pa.-based GE Drivetrain Technologies.”

So, does that mean GE Drivetrain Technologies won’t actually be building anything in Erie, PA?  Are the Chinese just paying a license fee or something?  I don’t know, but maybe someone can tell us how many folks, here in United States factories, will be making equipment for this project.

Why do I ask?  Because, “the joint venture also plans to tap into U.S. stimulus funding for alternative energy, said Cappy McGarr, managing partner of U.S. Renewable Energy.”  And we all know how that “tapping into stimulus” thing turned out so far – “More good news from the Wind Energy Sector – “More than eight out of 10 US stimulus dollars spent on wind energy farms have gone to foreign companies

And you see, the only real mention of jobs is back over at the New York Times piece and they say, “Construction is scheduled to begin in March 2010, and the project is expected to create 300 temporary jobs and about 30 permanent jobs.”

Gee, that’s more permanent jobs than we’re promised for the Pinnacle Knob project in Mineral County, WV.  Oh, did I mention that the US WindForce specs call for Mitsubishi Turbines.  I probably did, but I just can’t get over how little “made in America” means to these folks.

And, for those of you looking to invest in companies developing wind technology, here’s a tip – “Rob Gramlich, the wind energy association’s senior vice president of public policy, said China has put in place aggressive renewable energy targets and is rapidly building up its manufacturing base. He said wind development potential is attracting investors from both within in the U.S. and from overseas.

Denmark is the biggest importer to the U.S., at 28 percent, according to the U.S. International Trade Commission. Spain, Japan, Germany and India follow.”  Where’s the US in all this?  “U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu told lawmakers that the U.S. was falling behind China and others in alternative energy investment.”

Well, by golly – I say go for it!  If the Chinese make a huge profit from us by selling the contraptions they manufacture in China to us, using our tax dollars to fund them, they’ll have enough left over to lend us more money to buy more of the contraptions.  And, if they can build them fast enough, and we continue to back the loans and provide them grants from the money they loan us, the Chinese can sell us thousands of windmills to plop down all over the United States before someone catches on to the fact that the darned things are worthless.  And, after all, since the Chinese seem to be the only source of available credit, we should want their economy to be healthy.

Gee, I wonder if I can call Bernie Madoff in jail.  I want to make sure I understand all this correctly.

Posted in Mineral County WV, Pinnacle Knob, US WindForce | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Chugging soon into your home town – “The Green Energy Subsidy Express” – be careful not to play on the tracks!

Via National Wind Watch – “State lowballed cost of green tax breaks

Seems over in Oregon they have a little squabble over subsidies for “green” energy.  The OregonLive.com post suggests that “State officials deliberately underestimated the cost of Gov. Ted Kulongoski’s plan to lure green energy companies to Oregon with big taxpayer subsidies, resulting in a program that cost 40 times more than unsuspecting lawmakers were told, an investigation by The Oregonian shows.”

But, au contraire – “(Governor) Kulongoski staff members deny that the governor or anyone on his staff directed the Energy Department to lowball the costs and said the huge disparity between early cost projections and actual expenses was simply a bad guess.”

Bad guess or intentional misleading, the result’s the same – taxpayer money wasted on profiteers.

Here are a few interesting bullets from the article:

  • A wind energy project received four separate $10 million tax credits even though it will generate less electricity than projects getting one-tenth the $40 million subsidy.
  • A Clatskanie ethanol plant got $12 million in tax subsidies plus a $20 million state energy loan, then promptly went bankrupt and stopped operating. The plant, Cascade Grains, claims it’s still owed $10 million in tax credits, and it may sue to try to get them.
  • A Boardman tire recycling plant got $3.4 million even though, after more than two years, it has yet to recycle tires. Investors are suing founders of Reklaim Technologies, now known as McKinstry-Reklaim, alleging they were misled about the project’s solvency.
  • Thirty-five companies that had applied for smaller tax breaks under the old rules were granted the higher subsidies — essentially giving them windfalls that cost taxpayers $2.1 million.

So when your political leaders say they’ve got things under control, that they’ve negotiated firm agreements with wind developers or that they’ve “studied and studied and studied it. No matter what we do, we’re not going to make everybody happy. I don’t know what the answer is, but I do know that we need jobs and we need the taxes,” you might want to ask them to do just a little more homework.

By the way, what’s that whistle I hear coming across the Allegheny Mountains?

Posted in Mineral County WV, Wind energy, Wind Power subsidies | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

More good news from the Wind Energy Sector – “More than eight out of 10 US stimulus dollars spent on wind energy farms have gone to foreign companies”

With all the talk of stimulus, job creation and impact on the US economy there’s this, via Industrial Wind Action Group, “The 11 US-based wind farms that received cash grants from the US Treasury have imported 695 of the 982 wind turbines that are to be installed. Since the manufacture of turbines is by far the largest employment generator in wind energy, it is estimated to have created 4,500 jobs overseas – far in excess of the jobs created in the US from these grants.”

Seems, “of the $1.05bn handed out in grants so far – the majority since August – 84 per cent has gone to European companies, with the US subsidiary of Iberdrola Renewables, the Spanish company, taking the largest share.”

As I recall, Pinnacle Knob in Mineral County, WV is specifying Mitsubishi turbines.  Hmmm…

 

Posted in Pinnacle Knob, Wind energy | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

California has a novel idea to protect birds and bats. Don’t build wind plants where they fly! UPDATE: VIDEO SHOWS WHY!

Video link courtesy of Jon Boone:

Now to the original text:

According to the Californian.com, a new “Report paves way for wildlife-friendly wind power in Monterey County.”

So, exactly how do they achieve this ground-breaking harmony between endangered species and the massive wind turbines?  Well, according to the article,  “Recently constructed wind turbines in San Luis Obispo, Santa Cruz and San Benito counties are not situated in the flight path of the condors as turbines in the wind-rich lower Salinas Valley would be.”

Now, I’ve got to admit, that’s pretty creative PR.  The turbines are called wildlife-friendly simply because they’re not built anywhere near the wildlife.  I bet if they never took the silly contraptions out of the box, it would be even better!  The amount of worthwhile energy produced to the grid would be about the same.

You see, that’s exactly what the Allegheny Front Alliance has been trying to tell folks in Mineral County, WV.  Don’t build the darned things in the path of migratory birds, eagles and endangered bats.  So, now perhaps, now we can all just get along!

It seems to me, that it doesn’t take much to please an environmentalist any more.  The article states that “The thousand of birds killed by the wind turbines at Altamont Pass tainted the reputation of the renewable energy source.”  Makes you feel bad for the industry, doesn’t it?  And then, this: “But according to a recent report by the Ventana Wildlife Society and the Stanford Solar and Wind Energy Project, smaller wind-power projects may be able to harvest energy in some parts of Monterey County without harming the endangered California condor.”

Oh, yes … but then there’s the bat issue.  Seems “Bats may be the next species to consider, said Dave Johnston, a bat expert for H.T. Harvey & Associates, a Bay Area-based ecological consulting firm.

“It’s potentially a very serious problem,” Johnston said.

Bat fatalities have been documented at wind turbines on the East Coast, but scientists have not gathered any data on bats at wind-power facilities in California, Johnston said. Several bat species, including some that may soon be considered endangered, may feed in the Salinas Valley or pass through during migration.

According to Humboldt State University professor Joe Szewczak, bats eat one-third to one-half of their body weight in insects every night. The snacking habits of millions of bats save agriculture and forests from many insect pests.

While the proponents of these tinker toys continue to grab any inkling of positive press to promote their wares, thankfully, common sense is arriving on the scene.

The Altamont Pass was discussed briefly in today’s earlier post “A Conversation with Jon Boone – Toward a Better Understanding of Industrial Wind Technology.”  Perhaps Mr. Boone will expand on his views of this topic, as well as the “collision” between wind plants and the environment, in his next discussion.

Related posts:  Alex Eastman’s letter posted at “Agencies sworn to protect must not permit the kill.” … also see – “The Allegheny Highlands – Where eagles dare!” … “Bats deaths at wind farms attributed to lung hemorrhage … aka – the bends! As we move full speed ahead, is the remedy in place?” … and at the Beech Ridge project “Federal Judge asked to halt Beech Ridge windfarm – a matter of bats.” and ““Bat-gate: Cover-up at the Beech Ridge wind facility” – Editorial from the Industrial Wind Action Group

Go to the Mountain Communities For Responsible Energy web page for additional information.

Posted in Allegheny Front Alliance, Allegheny Highlands Eagles, Archives, Bat/Bird Kills, Beech Ridge, Jon Boone, Mountain Communities for Responsible Energy, US Fish &Wildlife | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

A Conversation with Jon Boone – Toward a Better Understanding of Industrial Wind Technology

Jon Boone – Environmentalist, Artist, Author, Documentary Producer, and Formal Intervenor in Wind Installation Hearings

Introduction: It’s been extremely difficult to bridge the gap that exists between those who know little about the issue and those who have a more comprehensive understanding of the workings of the electrical grid and the related technologies that supply it, like wind energy.  For many, their only information comes from the local press, “green” promotions by so-called environmental organizations, and occasional visits to web sites dedicated to one side or the other.  It’s often a mind-boggling quagmire! The following conversation with Jon Boone, who now lives in Oakland, MD after a 30 year career at the University of Maryland, College Park, is an attempt to bridge that gap, perhaps allowing us to better understand the limitations of and problems associated with industrial wind technology. He has no dog in the fight.

Michael Morgan is Writer/Editor for Allegheny Treasures – An information resource dedicated to countering popular misconceptions regarding the impact of wind installations, and help preserve the historic mountains of West Virginia.

Allegheny TreasuresMr. Boone, wind developers and their supporters portray their technology as a viable source of renewable electricity, providing “nearly” free power by capturing the wind – a virtually inexhaustible source of energy. Their mantra is that wind energy is “free, clean, and green.” Can you explain your concern with this portrayal?

Mr. Boone:  Industrial wind technology is a meretricious commodity, attractive in a superficial way but without real value—seemingly plausible, even significant, but actually false and nugatory.  Those who would profit from it either economically or ideologically are engaged in wholesale deception. All adults should know that if something seems too good to be true, it almost always is. Although the wind itself may be “free,” the cost of converting it to electrical energy is extremely expensive. A 100MW wind project would cost, in today’s market, about $350 million, most of it paid for by taxpayers.

AT – MorganAnd—sorry to interrupt—what about its benefits, such as its alleged ability to shut down fossil fuel plants?

Boone:  In contrast to wind proponents’ alluring but empty promises of closed coal plants and reduced carbon emissions is this reality: wind energy is impotent while its environmental footprint is massive and malignant. It can’t dent a grape in the energy scheme of things; it’s a sideshow technology with great potential for mainline environmental harm. In some ways, it’s almost the perfect enterprise for our era, as it produces no meaningful product or service but is subsidized up to 80 percent by rate and taxpayers. Like many “celebrities,” it is famous for being famous, not for its actual performance.

AT – MorganWould you explain?

Boone:  A wind project with a rated capacity of 100MW, for example, with 40 skyscraper-sized turbines, would likely produce an annual average of only 27MW, an imperceptible fraction of energy for most grid systems. The electric generating units supplying the PJM grid, which serves much of the Middle Atlantic region, produce over 140,000MW at peak demand times.

AT – MorganWhen you say “average,” does that mean that even when the wind is inconsistent, we can expect equal contributions from other generators?

Boone:  In truth, more than 70% of any wind project’s rated capacity must come from other generators. More than 60% of the time, a 100MW project would produce less than 27MW and, at peak demand times, often produce nothing.

AT – MorganNothing … at peak demand times?

Boone:  This would be the case frequently. And it would rarely achieve its rated capacity, producing most at times of least demand.  Whatever it generated would be continuously skittering, intensifying, magnifying the destabilizing effects of demand fluctuations, for wind volatility is virtually indistinguishable from the phenomenon of people whimsically turning their appliances off and on. But wind fluctuations are in addition to those of demand, and even more volatile—both on a minute-by-minute basis and at wide scale, where whole days can pass with wind production at less than 10% of its rated capacity.

AT – MorganYou used the term “producing most at times of least demand” … and … “whatever it generated.”  Isn’t there an expectation of “control” to meet demand, even when the wind increases and decreases at peak and off peak hours?

Boone:  Control is expressed by the idea of capacity value, which is the ability to dispatch responsively just the right amount of energy to do the job—and withdraw it as desired. Wind projects can never produce capacity value, which is something that should be anathema to regulatory agencies, with their task of ensuring reliable, secure, affordable electricity. Most grids attempt to predict how much wind energy might be available at peak demand times by a statistical hedge known as capacity credit, which is based upon calculating historical averages of wind availability. Presently, the PJM has assigned wind a capacity credit of 13%, meaning that, over a three year history, the small number of wind installations in the grid produced 13% of their rated capacity at key peak demand times. Most regional grids have capacity credits of 10% or less. But, for the same reason that a baseball player’s batting average cannot predict what he’ll do in his next at bat, the grid cannot know how its fluctuating wind plants will do at any future time, despite such a statistical “credit.” Given the random nature of the wind, the past is never a certain predictor of the future. Persistent industry “predictions” about improved weather forecasting for wind availability have proven to be as reliable as rain dances.

The only way to control wind volatility is to shut the wind turbines down completely. This is in stark contrast with all conventional generators, which, of necessity, are completely controllable and highly responsive, able to dispatch their rated capacity, or a desired portion thereof, whenever asked.

The ability of machines to perform as expected on demand is the basis of modernity, underlying contemporary systems of economic growth, wealth creation and well-being.  Machinery that doesn’t do this is now quickly discarded.

This wasn’t the case for much of history—look at the early days of television or radio or even the automobile.  Only in the last hundred years or so has the West come to rely on machines with this standard. Wind energy is a throwback to pre-modern times. And the physical laws governing wind technology assures it will stay rooted in the past.

AT – MorganWould you please expand on the term capacity value?

Boone: Capacity value is a crucial idea, central to the success of our way of life.

Here’s a practical way to think about it. You don’t drive your car all the time, with the result that its capacity factor—the percentage of your car’s potential (its rated capacity) that is actually used—is something like 15-20%. But when you do wish to drive it, the car works virtually all of the time, getting you from point A to point B in line with your own continually changing schedule. This is its capacity value. Ditto with your chain saw—or television, or any modern appliance we all take for granted—because they work when we want them to work. Appliances that don’t do this are dubbed “lemons,” and we have even passed laws to protect consumers from such appliances. Conventional generators that fail to reliably respond on demand are quickly removed from the grid.

The critical test for “capacity value” is:  how much electrical output can we really count on when electricity demand is at peak levels?  Since we don’t know if the wind will be blowing at the time of peak demand, the real answer to the question is “zero.”

Consequently, wind provides no capacity value and can pass no test for reliability. One can never be sure how much energy wind machines will produce for any future time. And generating units that don’t provide capacity value cannot be meaningfully—and favorably—compared with those that do, just as unreliable automobiles—lemons—cannot be accurately compared with reliably proven automobiles.

Modern power vastly improves productivity and our quality of life. Wind energy reduces them. The best wind can be is an occasional substitute—a supernumerary; it is not, as frequently claimed, a rational part of any energy solution for modernity. Trading nuclear, or coal, or natural gas, or hydro generation for wind is akin to trading Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Sandy Koufax, or Willy Mays for a third string high school baseball player who made the team because of his father’s contributions to the alumni fund.

AT – Morgan: I understand the concept now, but I’ve heard that, even though the input from wind energy is variable, the electricity generated by these projects can still be added to the grid and somehow controlled. If so, doesn’t it really contribute overall?

Boone:  Adding wind instability to a grid may be someone’s idea of job security. But for rate and taxpayers, and a better environment, it’s criminal. For the grid is then forced to extend itself, since variable energy at industrial scale cannot be stored, at least not economically. As the wind bounces randomly around the system, operators must continuously balance it to match supply precisely with demand, compensating for the ebb and flow much in the way flippers keep the steel ball in play during a game of pinball.

I coined the term “Windball” to describe this concept.  Windball expends a lot of energy and takes a lot of coins. In real life on most American grids, more than 70% of any wind project’s rated capacity must come from the flippers of reliable, highly flexible, fossil-fired generation (typically natural gas) constantly turned up and back inefficiently to compensate for wind fluctuations. These inefficiencies will result in substantial carbon emissions and increased consumer costs. Wind volatility cannot be loosed on the grid by itself: it requires companion generation to make it whole. And the higher the wind penetration is on the grid, the more wind cuts into the grid’s marginal reserves, the greater the odds that the grid will TILT, ending the windball game—until compensating reliable generation is brought on board to secure it.

AT – Morgan:  But can’t the grid engineers somehow compensate for the variance? And why is it so important to balance supply and demand so precisely?

Boone:  Given what is known of demand cycles, grid operators, using computerized automatic generation controls, bring supply to match demand on a less than second-by-second basis within plus/minus one percent. And this includes balancing on-going demand fluctuations. After more than a hundred years of experience, grid engineers can predict demand very accurately, which is possible because aggregate demand is not fundamentally random, unlike wind volatility. If there’s too little supply, widespread brown-outs and black-outs will occur; if there’s too much supply relative to demand, the surge can fry both transmission lines and appliances. Even brief dips, like surges, can harm sensitive electronics that many of our lives depend on. Excess supply is also sometimes dumped, which is a financial loss to all tax and ratepayers. Dumping excess wind energy and/or shutting down the turbines, is a common situation in Germany, Spain, and Texas, made necessary when large spikes of wind threaten the grid’s security.

Yes, engineers can make-work by adding wind flux to the system, which further destabilizes the match between supply and demand. They can lead a horse to water; but they can’t make it change its spots.  By its nature, wind will require repeated flippering—lots of whips and whistles, even at small levels of penetration—in ways that will negate the very reason for its being—which is reducing CO2 emissions and backing down coal. This is why people quickly switched to steam 200 years ago. Retrofitting modern technology to meet the needs of ancient wind flutter is monumentally “backasswards.”  It’s also a sure sign that pundits and politicians, not scientists, are now in charge. It will take much more than a smart grid to incorporate such a dumb, antediluvian idea successfully.

And it’s not just the engineers who would benefit, for there are many “suppliers” only too happy to profiteer from this situation. General Electric, which bought out Enron’s wind projects when the latter company went belly up in 2001 and is today one of the world’s largest wind suppliers, recently gave a presentation to the Canadian government detailing all the problems with wind—followed by a long list of products that would assist wind’s grid integration. Look for GE wind ads on its subsidiary, NBC.

AT – Morgan: Isn’t there some discussion about hydropower working in tandem with wind … pump–storage systems similar those operating in the TVA network, for example?

Pumped storage and wind has a history of problems, not least involving economics and availability at critical times. Besides requiring new reservoirs, at least half of the energy produced by wind would simply go to pumping the water. Pumped storage’s time frame (mostly diurnal) is different from wind and its gustiness. The pumps are reversible, not separate. And they generally can’t respond fast enough to account for minute-by-minute wind flux. Balancing wind skitter with hydro, which also emits no carbon, would produce relatively “clean” energy. But a wind/hydro tandem would hardly be green, since both would collude to degrade vast sections of sensitive habitat. Besides, most locales have very little hydro—and what they do have is already being used for producing electricity. However, even if hydro were abundant, a wind/hydro combination would offset only marginally fewer amounts of CO2 than hydro would offset by itself—without any wind at all. Ditto for natural gas units, which do burn about 50% cleaner than coal. But a duo of wind and natural gas would offset, at best, only about 15% more CO2 emissions than could be offset with natural gas units alone, without wind.

Large coal and nuclear plants aren’t sufficiently flexible to be quickly turned up and back to balance flux, and therefore aren’t usually good partners for wind volatility.

AT – MorganSo the promise of wind power as a replacement for current power plants is, perhaps, not achievable?

Boone:  Physicists define energy as the ability to do work, while power is the rate at which work is done. Huge turbines can convert wind energy into electrical power. But they do so with the same performance standards that powered sailing craft and water pumps in the early nineteenth century. Wind therefore provides “power” capacity appropriate to 1810, not 2010. Consequently, wind provides only energy to a grid, not modern power. Pretending that zero capacity wind technology is an answer to building a responsive supply to replace aging power plants or to meet new demand is perverse.

Ontario has long promised to retire (but has never been able to do so) all its coal plants. Officials tout that they will be replaced by “renewables.” To hedge its renewable energy bet, the Ontario government is building natural-gas facilities as insurance against new wind projects. In other words, the province expects to replace coal with natural gas, not wind. The latter could not exist without either hydro, which presently provides the province about 25% of total generation (wind is about one percent) or flexible natural gas generators. Projections by the Ontario Power Authority depend upon planned conservation savings and natural gas, not wind, as a means of displacing coal. Similarly, boasts by the governor of Kansas that her state will not approve a new coal plant because of its increasingly expansive wind projects conveniently forget to mention how the state plans to increase its importation of, you guessed it, natural gas–at higher cost. 

Because of wind’s unpredictable variability, it can never replace the power performance—the capacity value—of conventional generation, especially a power source as reliable and inexpensive as coal, which is why China and India will continue to build new coal farms for many years to come. For example, a wind plant consisting of 2,500 turbines, 450-feet high and spread over five hundred miles, can mathematically offset a large coal or nuclear plant.  Unfortunately, they cannot do so functionally–for what do you suppose must happen when 5000MW of volatile wind is only producing 100MW at peak demand times, a common occurrence?

With nearly 100,000 huge wind turbines now in operation throughout the world—35,000 in the USA—no coal plants have been closed anywhere because of wind technology. And there is no empirical evidence that there is less coal burned per unit of electricity produced as a specific consequence of wind. Due to this reality, in many areas, particularly Germany and the USA, along with India and China, a large number of new coal plants are in the offing, as reported in Der Siegel and The Washington Post. This will be especially true when demand for electricity increases as the world recession improves.

There is simply no substitute for capacity value.

Most people simply assume, falsely, that any power plant wind displaces on the grid is coal-fired. It may in fact displace hydro, or natural gas. To the extent it displaces coal—sporadically—it also causes the coal unit to ramp up and back more inefficiently than it would do otherwise, in the process creating more CO2 emissions. One need only to examine wind performance in Denmark and Germany, two of the wind industry’s poster wind countries, to see this effect. Denmark’s wind displaces Scandinavian hydro, with no CO2 savings while, in Germany, there is evidence that, on a per capita basis, the nation has the world’s highest CO2 emissions, despite its 21,000+ wind machines.

Perhaps the dirtiest—and best kept—secret about industrial wind technology is that the increased thermal effects produced by “windball” largely subvert much of the CO2 offsets that wind might induce on most grids—and in some cases may even cause more CO2 to be emitted than would have been the case without the addition of any wind volatility.

AT – MorganYour statement is very timely.  Just a couple of weeks ago, speaking at the Grid Week conference in Washington, DC, Energy Secretary Steven Chu cited Bonneville Power in the Northwest noting, “it gets about one-fifth of its power from wind energy when the wind is blowing.”  “But when it stops blowing, that share drops to zero.” He did allude to “smart” grids and huge investments to compensate for the variability of wind, but, in reality, do you see a place for wind in the energy business?

Boone: This business is absurd. The whole point of modern power systems has been to move beyond the flickering flutter of variable energy sources.  Prostituting modern power performance to enable subprime energy schemes on behalf of half-baked technology is immoral, as is implementing highly regressive tax avoidance “incentives,” to make it appear that pigs can fly.

No coal plants will be shuttered and little, if any, carbon emissions will be reduced as a result of one 100MW project—or thousands of them. There is not a shred of evidence in the real world that coordinating the aggregate output of widely scattered wind projects will substantially improve upon wind’s predictability sufficient to give it meaningful capacity value—as is claimed by wind pundits.

AT – MorganJohn Droz, Jr. commented on a recent article by Dr. Michael Trebilcock at the Financial Post that “Wind needs to be in our energy mix to the same degree that Twinkies need to be in our diet.”

Boone:  Indeed!  Wind technology mirrors the subprime mortgage scams that wreaked havoc with the economy. Both are enabled by wishful thinking; bogus projections; no financial restraints, accountability, or transparency; no meaningful securitization; and regulatory agencies that looked the other way, allowing a few to make a great deal of money at everyone else’s expense while providing no meaningful service. As Twinkies have done for food, leading to a society that is overfed but malnourished, wind will do for electricity.

When placed on forested ridges, industrial wind projects will clear-cut hundreds of acres. Even small 100MW wind facilities would hover for miles over sensitive terrain, threatening vulnerable wildlife while mocking endangered species protections—and scenic highways strictures. They will cause unlawful, unhealthy noise for miles downrange. They will devalue properties in the area as much as 50%, if owners could sell them at all.

Dynamiting will threaten wells and aquifers. Out-of-region workers would perform most of the temporary construction jobs and only one or two permanent jobs would result, at modest wages. There would be little value added revenue. Claims about local tax revenues would be typically unsubstantiated and unsecured. Claims about union jobs are grotesquely overinflated.

AT – Morgan:  I must admit, in our community, the flash of tax revenue and jobs has sold the town council and two of our three commissioners.  Citizens who dare to question the concept are ridiculed as near Neanderthals, lacking vision.

Boone:  Wind is a faith-based initiative, to be sure. And there are none so blind as those who will not see, speaking of a lack of vision. Promises of tax revenues are merely hopeful thinking; they are not secured. What people should keep in mind is that claims made by limited liability wind companies are strictly put forth in a blatant attempt to gain a larger profit. Assertions by state tax offices are based on general mathematical formulas (vs. real world guarantees) that only indicate what may be obligated BEFORE ANY DEDUCTIONS THAT A WIND LLC MAY USE TO REDUCE THAT FORMULA OBLIGATION.

This is really what industrial wind is about, after all—finding ways to shelter income through tax avoidance, although a new Treasury Department program now provides the option of cash grants for production tax credits.

AT- Morgan:  You mention the state tax office.  It was noted in a recent article that a “senior official with the WV State Tax Department confirmed that property-tax revenue projections by the developer of the proposed Pinnacle Wind Farm are correct, and that the project will deliver an average of $433,000 annually to Mineral County WV, for a total of $11 million over the 25 years of its projected life.”  But the article immediately followed with, “If nothing else changes, these numbers are very solid numbers,” said Scott Burgess. “We’re pretty confident, given the level of costs, that that would be the tax generated for Mineral County.”  The term, “if nothing else changes …” seems a disclaimer by the State even before the first piece is delivered.  How do we know who or what to believe?

Boone: Citizens should demand promissory notes that unambiguously obligate the LLC to pay specific amounts of revenue at specific times. But they shouldn’t hold their breath waiting for this miracle to occur.

AT – Morgan: But if the taxpayers receive a commitment from the owners, or the LLC as you call them, aren’t they obligated to live up to them.  Won’t they face legal issues if they back away from their promise?

Boone: What are the penalties to a wind LLC for lying? If the amount of local taxes promised your community failed to materialize because of arcane legal tax offsets known only to skilled accountants, what could local officials do—contemplate a lawsuit? Wind developers anticipate and budget for the possibility of lawsuits from local government, as well as suits brought by private citizens aggrieved by the range of nuisances and adverse health effects wind projects produce. That’s also a major reason they are LLCs. What happens if an LLC goes bankrupt; e.g., the project doesn’t produce as expected and there isn’t enough revenue to pay creditors?  Is there any recourse to the parent company?

AT – Morgan: Before you go any further, could you explain the LLC concept and how it might play in the favor of the wind plant owners.  The project seeking approval here in Mineral County is a double LLC of sorts.  US WindForce LLC appears to have set up Pinnacle Wind Force LLC.  I’m sure the lawyers understand all that, but for some of us private citizens, it just looks like an additional shield to the parent company.  Am I off base, or is this just normal business?

Boone: All wind operations are limited liability companies—for a reason. They are structured to incur as little liability as possible for problems they create, allowing the LLC to dissolve quickly and morph into another LLC at the stroke of a pen, dodging responsibility—and blame. As I noted in “Life Under a Windplant,” even their “confidential” leases with property owners typically include language exculpating the LLCs from causing the very nuisances they claim don’t exist, while permitting the LLCs to abandon all the “equipment” to the property owner, usually on 30-day notice—all this while holding the owners feet to the fire for up to 50 years.

They know that costs of legal actions are difficult for private citizens and rural municipalities to maintain over the many years it often takes to resolve them. Moreover, if there’s illegal noise, who is going to shut a wind plant down, once it’s constructed? If, as is the case at California’s Altamont Pass, a wind facility slaughters thousands of wildlife species, the courts will likely refuse to intervene, arguing that those concerned about wildlife have no legal standing. When I asked a wind developer in the Maryland Public Service Commission hearing whether he would vouch for the $750,000 in first year taxes his company had pledged to a Maryland county in its written application, he stated only that he would “do what the law requires.”

AT – Morgan: But that runs counter to everything we’ve been led to believe.

Boone: We have arrived at a point in our legal culture where no negative consequences seem to exist for making false or misleading claims to sell energy. There is a wide range of wind plant-generated nuisances verified across three continents. The failure of many local governments to provide appropriate leadership on this issue is appalling—but not surprising, considering the highly technical nature of this situation. After-the-fact lawsuits brought because of predictable nuisances are difficult, expensive, and time consuming.

AT – Morgan: Your technical and economic arguments are quite convincing. What about the effects these projects have on communities?

Boone: These massive wind plants also precipitate incivility, pitting neighbor against neighbor. A major duty of government is to anticipate, then eliminate or mitigate this kind of incivility. Those who endorse or profit from placing such industrial complexes near the homes of others evidently don’t have a clue about how to foster civil society.

There is little that is cognitively more dissonant than supporting the concept of minimizing the human footprint on the earth while cheerleading for the rude intrusiveness of physically massive/energy feckless wind projects. The slap and tickle of wind propaganda flatters the gullible, exploits the well intentioned, and nurtures the craven. Industrial wind is a bunco scheme of enormous consequence. And people who value intellectual honesty should not quietly be fleeced by such mendacity, even from their government.

As even Huckleberry Finn knew, the Dukes and Dolphins of flim/flam lurk everywhere, dressed today in thousand dollar suits, spouting technical mumbo jumbo, bribing politicians, and selling all the stuff that dreams are made of… in an attempt to separate people from the contents of their wallet. They are a re-incarnation of the snake oil salesmen of our past. In those days, uneducated citizens were scammed of their hard-earned savings in hopes of attaining a miracle cure by swilling kick-a-poo joy juice. Despite our modern sophistications and our evident belief in our superiority over those who lived a hundred years ago, little seems to have changed….

AT – MorganMr. Boone, thank you very much for your time.  I noticed that among your many credentials, you chose to lead with Environmentalist.  This seems a clear signal that the environment is a high priority for you.  I hope you’ll consider another conversation in the very near future to discuss your position regarding the impact of wind plants on landscape and wildlife.

Boone: It would be my pleasure.

Jon Boone has been a formal intervenor in two Maryland Public Service Commission hearings. He produced and directed the documentary, Life Under a Windplant, which has been freely distributed within the United States and many countries throughout the world. The documentary is also available in three-part, YouTube format, here.  For your convenience, the Google presentation is at the end of this section.

Mr. Boone also developed the website Stop Ill Wind, where anyone can read his complete direct testimony, with many related documents, in the Synergics wind case before the Maryland Public Service Commission.

His essay, The Aesthetic Dissonance of Industrial Wind Machines, was published in the journal, Contemporary Aesthetics. A revised copy of his June, 2006 speech given in Wyoming County, The Wayward Wind, was published last year by McGraw Hill. His paper, Less for More: The Rube Goldberg Nature of Industrial Wind, is pending publication.

A lifelong environmentalist, Mr. Boone helped found the North American Bluebird Society and has been a consultant with the Roger Tory Peterson Institute in New York.

He is a former university academic administrator and now a painter who receives no income from his work on wind technology and resides miles from any proposed wind project. .

Mr. Boone seeks only informed, effective public policy–and an environmentalism that eschews wishful thinking because it is aware of the unintended adverse consequences flowing from uninformed, unscientific decisions.

Allegheny Treasures was formed to counter popular misconceptions regarding the impact of wind installations, and help preserve the historic mountains of West Virginia.  Our goal is to provide news, links and commentary to the general public to raise awareness of the impact the wind industry has on our society.

It is our intent to be accurate.  Please report any errors, omissions or broken links via the comments section at this link.



Posted in Jon Boone, Mineral County WV, Wind energy, Wind Installation, Wind Power Reliability Factor, Wind v Coal | Tagged , , , , | 10 Comments