THE BAY CITY TIMESWisconsin developers have plans forwind turbines in Lake Michigan
by
Associated Press with Local Reports
Friday
April 25, 2008, 6:38 AM
The
Although
contemplated from the The
Wisconsin projects are being discussed as several Badger state agencies
have launched a study to determine the feasibility of erecting wind
turbines on the two Great Lakes that border the state -- Interest
in lake-based wind farms comes amid growing demand for renewable energy to
help reduce greenhouse gas emissions and calls for more home-grown energy. There
are no offshore, or water-based, wind projects operating in the There
are many hurdles to getting such projects built, including cost and the
need to pay for transmission lines to connect turbines to the power grid.
Other likely concerns: potential objections from lakefront property owners
and worries about the environmental effect of turbines on migratory birds. Best
spots Wind
energy consultant Robert Owen of Middleton, who has studied the potential
of building a wind farm in Lake Michigan, said he considers the portion of
the lake east of Owen
said interest in offshore projects has increased in part because of
opposition to land-based wind farms. Several
Steve
Ugoretz, lead wind energy analyst with the state Department of Natural
Resources, agreed there's heightened interest in offshore wind, but noted
that no developers have submitted detailed plans to the state. The
developers are circling with concepts but have not reached the stage of
submitting formal, detailed applications, Ugoretz said. Any
lake-based wind farm would require approval from numerous state and
federal agencies - an unprecedented process that would likely take years
to complete. Federal
review One
of the Lake Michigan proposals, dubbed Radial Wind, calls for erecting 390
turbines about 18 miles east of The
location would be an area known as the Mid-Lake Plateau. Similar to a sand
bar, the plateau is a section of the lake that is slightly shallower than
the area just offshore from William
Goldstein, an energy engineer and real estate developer from Goldstein
said he's been delayed by a bureaucratic hurdle - the completion of a
federal review of offshore wind projects by the U.S. Interior Department's
Minerals Management Service. But Ugoretz and Gary Strasburg of the
Minerals Management Service said that while the federal agency has
jurisdiction over offshore wind power, it doesn't have jurisdiction over
the Two
other projects that have been discussed with state environmental
regulators would be much closer to the shore: Ewindfarm Inc. of Meanwhile,
another unidentified developer has approached state officials with initial
plans to build "a couple hundred" turbines in an area that would
be located "within a few miles of shore" in east-central Yearlong
study Last
month, the Global Warming Task Force appointed by Gov. Jim Doyle
recommended that the state conduct a yearlong study of the energy
potential of the Dan
Ebert, chairman of the Public Service Commission, said recently that "We
need to look at what are the economics of that, how feasible is it, what
are the environmental issues that are involved. To understand those issues
and examine it as an option is something we clearly should do," Ebert
said. Opposition
can be expected from people who are concerned about looking at the towers
in the lake. The
nation's first offshore wind proposal, the Cape Wind project in Nantucket
Sound, has generated opposition from Sen. Ted Kennedy, (D-Mass.), in part
because that project would be located five to 13 miles offshore and would
be visible from the Kennedy family compound on Cape Cod. Concerns
about the effect of wind turbines on migratory birds will also have to be
addressed, Clemency said. Objections
to a land wind farm proposal near |