Wind Project puts bald eagles in danger

Industrial wind not held accountable for violating the Golden and Bald Eagle Protection Act.
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Showing posts with label bald eagle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bald eagle. Show all posts

Minnesota Court of Appeals Rubber Stamps T. Boone's Lost A#@!

Time for the Minnesota Supreme Court? In an opinion rendered today by the Minnesota Court of Appeals, the three judge panel not only supported the June 30, 2011 decision by the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission, they donned their own cheer-leading skirts, picked up the pom poms and championed T. Boone Pickens' AWA Goodhue project.  The judges were SO enthusiastic they even made up new promotional "facts" never before presented even by the wind developers themselves:


"...modeling studies show that the 10-RD setback would essentially prevent all wind energy projects in Goodhue County—an ideal location for wind development—and, if applied throughout the state, would preclude wind development in the vast majority of Minnesota and thereby drive up the cost of wind power."

Every map ever generated for wind development shows Goodhue County's wind resource to be "fair" at best. "Fair" is not "ideal". 



The question of whether or not the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission (MPUC) decision precludes construction of the AWA Goodhue project, or any other industrial wind project, was not the question before the Court. The question before the Court was whether or not the MPUC had acted properly in accordance with Minnesota law when they trampled Goodhue County's duly adopted land use ordinance. 


The Court also stated that the MPUC has a duty to aid Minnesota's public policy to "promote" industrial wind. "The Minnesota Public Utilities Commission's mission is to create and maintain a regulatory environment that ensures safe, reliable and efficient utility services at fair and reasonable rates". Of course, it's impossible for the MPUC to promote industrial wind and fulfill their Mission at the same time.


The only "substantial evidence" cited by the judges in their "unpublished" opionion, are models presented by the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA) and by the Minnesota Department of Commerce on behalf of AWA Goodhue. 

The same models were used to determine there would be no noise problems in other Minnesota industrial wind projects such as Bent Tree and Elm Creek II- where post construction measurement demonstrated that the projects failed to meet the Minnesota Noise Standard for audible industrial noise. This is the same Minnesota Noise Standard that does not measure unique wind turbine noise, but is the only basis for determining turbine setback from a home.

The same models said projects would not interfere with television reception - that model for signal interference was also proved wrong in the Bent Tree project.

The same models showed no electrical current going to ground - even while the Grand Meadow and Nobles wind projects were burning up underground cables.

AWA Goodhue is the same project and involves the same State employees who stated that there are "Zero bald eagles nesting in the proposed project footprint..." Below is a photo taken last week at one of many nests in and near the proposed AWA Goodhue industrial wind project. The photo shows two of 2012's hatch of American Bald Eagles with either "mom" or "dad". Siting Eagle blogger, Kristi Rosenquist, saw and photographed Juvenile Bald Eagles on or near four of the seven nests she looked at last week. "There may have been eaglets on the other three nests, but the leaf canopy is so dense this time of year that some nests are difficult to see from the public roadways."



T. Boone Pickens said "I've lost my a%& in the [wind] business". He owns the AWA Goodhue project. Citizens of Goodhue County and across American stand to loose a lot more if this project ever moves forward. Citizens will need to decide whether to continue the pursuit for justice.  You can help by making a donation to The Coalition for Sensible Siting.
Adult Bald Eagle with two juveniles 6/22/2012
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A Hunting License for Bald Eagles?

Senator Lamar Alexander explained why the federal Production Tax Credit (PTC) for industrial wind is like "Going to War in Sailboats". In today's address at the Heritage Foundation, Senator Alexander mentions the AWA Goodhue project's application for an Incidental Take Permit (at 19:50) comparing it to a hunting license for bald eagles. He also mentions that oil companies have been fined for killing birds, but wind turbine owners have not.

Senator Alexander hits on three main themes:

1. There is no money.
2. Wind is unreliable.
3. Environmental damage.

“We hear a lot of talk about federal subsidies for Big Oil. I would like to talk about federal subsidies for Big Wind – $14 billion between 2009 and 2013, according to the Joint Tax Committee. And what do we get for these billions in subsidies? A puny amount of unreliable electricity that arrives disproportionately at night when we don’t need it. Americans are finding out that these are not your grandma's windmills. These gigantic turbines – which look so pleasant on the television ads paid for by the people getting all the tax breaks – are three times as high as football stadiums, taller than the Statue of Liberty, with blades as wide as a football field; you can see the blinking lights for 20 miles, and on top of that, these giant turbines have become the Cuisinart in the sky for birds. It’s time to end Big Wind’s big loophole.”
– Lamar Alexander

The Coalition for Sensible Siting agrees. Citizens have been oppressed long enough by tax and rate money being squandered through Big Wind. The eagles of Goodhue County should not be sacrificed on the alter of Green Greed.


Adult Bald Eagle photo by Kristi Rosenquist March 6, 2012

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Permit to Kill Bald Eagles?

While citizens were sleeping, mercenary biologists working for faux environmentalists like T. Boone Pickens (Pickens Plan) have crafted environmental assessments of proposed wind turbine sites. The goal: maximize profits by siting as many turbines as possible by writing deceptive environmental assessments to hide the damage turbines must do to get the job done.   The Coalition for Sensible Siting found this sprint for federal 1603 cash has gutted US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and State protections. Lobbyists waving the “Global Warming” banner swarmed Capitol Hill and begged permission to destroy eagles, bats, passerines, and the lives of countless citizens under the guise of “saving the planet”.   The result?  Debilitating health impacts on thousands of citizens, decimation of golden eagle populations across the country, grave concerns about extinction of bats, and hundreds of thousands of passerines killed annually... and we’re not even to the halfway mark for proposed wind energy installation. 

The AWA Goodhue Avian and Bat Protection Plan prepared for AWA Goodhue of Dallas, TX was recently posted to the Minnesota Public Utility Commission (MPUC) public document docket.  It’s not difficult to see that it is a sham Plan.  Lay it side by side and compare it to the US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) documentation on how to obtain an Incidental Take Permit for bald and golden eagles.  

(CAUTION: the new Pickens Plan contradicts itself and contradicts the previous avian survey. Reading the Plan is likely to cause you to feel dizzy and confused by the “new” information provided by Pickens’ consultant Westwood.   Please remain seated for the duration of the comparison to avoid injury from dizziness and nausea.) 

AWA Goodhue's lead up to the 'Avian and Bat Protection Plan':

1. Fail to perform studies recommended by USFWS
2. State there are no bald eagles in the "footprint" of the proposed wind project
3. Get proved wrong by local citizens
4. Insist bald eagles are only present due to citizens"baiting" eagles using dead things
5. Try (unsuccessfully) to get farmers in trouble with the MN Board of Animal Health
6. Harass citizens and eagles using a low flying helicoptor

After reading the USFWS material and the AWA Goodhue proposal it quickly becomes evident that the mitigation strategies proposed by Pickens, under the direction of the Certified Wildlife Biologists with Westwood [un?]Professional Services calls for: starving the eagles out of the project footprint by removing habitat that supports their prey, removing all habitat eagles rely upon for roosting, perching and sheltering during harsh Minnesota winters so eagles will leave, harassing the birds with helicopters for behavior modification, and disrupting breeding and nesting habitats by using construction equipment within 1/2 mile of the nest sites.   None of the eagles that have been calling this area home for the past decades will survive this onslaught - which is apparently Pickens’ desired outcome.

Concerned citizens and USFWS officials have had numerous discussions about the USFWS recommendations for siting industrial wind turbines near active bald eagle nests with AWA Goodhue. This developer has routinely insisted that there is no siting recommendation related to active bald eagle nests and has insisted that the 2 mile distance explained by citizens is fantasy.   An email exchange with the USFWS was recently posted to the MPUC docket making it very clear that the Service recommends a two mile setback from active nests.

The Coalition for Sensible Siting is curious to see what excuse the developer will come up with now that they can no longer say, “We didn’t know....”  If AWA Goodhue is not successful in driving the birds from the project area, there seems no doubt Pickens’ wind farm will kill and maim bald eagles as the birds try to forage and hunt in fragmented habitat divided by 7 ton blades with tips spinning between 140 and 200 miles per hour.  

The birds that travel the Mississippi Migratory Flyway depend upon maintenance of these critical habitats to support them as they move from the Arctic Circle to as far away as Patagonia.  The cumulative effects of allowing this level of predation upon the land will be severe as other wind energy developers follow the precedent set by Minnesota’s ill-advised Public Utilities Commission ensuring birds and bats transecting the US are killed by the hundreds of thousands. 

The MPUC determined that T. Boone Pickens’ AWA Goodhue wind project is “Not Needed” to meet Minnesota’s renewable energy mandate.  And yet, the developer’s proposed "mitigation strategies" would lead one to believe that placing 400 foot wind turbines in Goodhue County Minnesota is critical infrastructure and so, while unfortunate, it is necessary to collapse one of the healthiest ecosystems in SE Minnesota. Clearly, such a claim is fantasy to dazzle the MPUC into allowing turbine construction to move forward.
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Promiscuous Ice Fishing in the New Pickens Plan

Readers could not fail to notice the term "promiscuous ice fishing" in the "Avian and Bat Protection Plan" for T. Boone Pickens' AWA Goodhue wind project. Ice fishing is a passion in Minnesota, but I'd never before heard the term "promiscuous" attached to it. Speculation about the definition and appearance of "promiscuous ice fishing" among Minnesotans has ranged from the hilarious to the unprintable. Yesterday's blog comments by "rural55027" provide a pretty complete range of thought on the subject.


Ice fishing accommodations for humans vary from an upturned bucket for sitting to portable small houses complete with beds, kitchen and satellite television. Given the amount of clothing required to keep the average human comfortably warm while ice fishing, "promiscuous ice fishing" sounds risky.


In fairness to the Pickens Plan, it's not clear whether the consultant thinks the humans or the eagles are fishing.  It's also difficult to discern whether "promiscuous ice fishing" should be considered "natural" or not:


"...driving surveys are being carried out...two times per month from early November 2011 to early
April 2012." "Data being collected during the driving surveys includes:"

"Distribution of observed natural and man-made winter food sources (e.g. road kills, livestock carcass dump sites, unburied garbage, locations where promiscuous ice fishing are allowed and water bodies that stay open allowing access to fish and/or waterfowl)."


Terry Ingram of the Eagle Nature Foundation visited the AWA Goodhue wind project footprint last month to assess the eagle activity.  At the Belle Creek Watershed structure, Mr. Ingram observed and photographed two juvenile bald eagles standing on the ice. Perhaps theses unsupervised young eagles were engaged in "promiscuous ice fishing"?

Yesterday's blog already exposed T. Boone Pickens' concerns that bald eagles are engaging in "risky flight behavior" in an apparent attempt to thwart his wind farm desires. Perhaps the eagles are also engaged in "promiscuous ice fishing".  Who knew Minnesota could be so hot in winter?
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Pickens Plan - Rapid Response Roadkill Removal

There is a new 'Pickens Plan'.  T. Boone Pickens' AWA Goodhue industrial wind project filed an updated "Avian and Bat Protection Plan" two weeks ago. The Plan includes immediate pick-up of road kill as-well-as central reporting and disposal of carcasses. Wind project Operation and Maintenance staff will be specially trained to identify what AWA Goodhue calls "artificial" bald and golden eagle "baiting" activity. By "artificial", Pickens' Avian and Bat Protection Plan apparently means: cows giving birth out-of-doors; dead deer during deer hunting season; people throwing roadkill off the roadway; and farmers spreading dung in their fields. 

This new Pickens Plan claims that the bald eagles, and other migratory birds, have "problematic flight patterns" and engage in "risky flight behavior". The bird behavior modification plan is to put up "stationary pylons" that birds can't perch on around the "turbine clusters" to create a "barrier effect".  It sounds like some sort of wind turbine Stonehenge.

The Pickens Plan jumble of gems continues: "If fossorial mammals burrow near tower footprints,...burrows will be filled and the surrounding pad covered with gravel at least 2 inches deep..."  I guess Texas badgers, woodchucks and gophers must be feeble compared to their Minnesota cousins if 2 inches of gravel would hinder their digging.

If the carefully crafted Pickens Plan still fails to stop raptors from engaging in risky flight behavior, the Plan is to lure the birds from the proposed wind project area by making habitat somewhere else and convincing the eagles to move there. 

Is the new Pickens Plan a sign of desperation?

AWA Goodhue engaged in activity that citizens find annoying, harassing, and risky.

Bald Eagles engaged in behavior Pickens finds "problematic" and "risky" in the AWA Goodhue footprint.
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Wind Turbine Siting - Year in Review

Concerned citizens across the US have been clamoring for sensible siting of industrial wind turbines. Local government control and protection of private property rights are fundamental principles in a free society. Well-documented problems caused by utility scale wind energy range from low-frequency noise to wide-spread killing of bats and birds. Wind industry promoters deny or obscure any facts that might interfere with the free flow of tax money and publicly regulated electrical rate money.

When Xcel met with citizens of Goodhue County Minnesota this week, they asked if bald eagles were the main concern.  Citizens responded that eagles are not the only important concern, but eagles are proving to be the easiest for citizens to prove and the most difficult for the wind company to deny. 

Below is a December 22, 2011 photo of a nest near me that T. Boone Pickens' AWA Goodhue said:

1. Does not exist. (June 2011)
2. Is a Red Tailed Hawk nest (November 2011)

On the eve of 2012, I'm thankful for citizens across America protecting the US abroad, in our back yards, and in rural farm fields.  I'm also thankful for our symbol of freedom, the American Bald Eagle, shining a bright light on my home turf in Goodhue County.

Happy New Year!





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New Wildlife Guidelines From the Federal Department of the Interior

Are guidelines strong enough in the face of Minnesota's bald eagles living under the threat of wind energy farms expansion?

Announced this week, July 25, 2011, the federal Department of the Interior proposed new voluntary wildlife protection guidelines for wind energy projects. The guidelines were denounced by environmental and bird-loving organizations as grossly inadequate. At minimum, such rules should be mandatory, the American Bird Conservancy said.

The Coalition for Sensible Sitings invites you to use this blog to voice concerns you may have that more protections need to be in place.
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