The Best Alternatives
By The Bennington
Banner - Brattleboro Reformer
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Burlington Electric
Strongly Supports
Wind Power
Burlington Free
Press - Letter to the Editor
by Patty Richards
The simple act of
turning on a light switch or a computer triggers a
complex chain reaction of events. Generation turns
on, transmission lines energize, and electricity is
delivered. As we consider Vermont's energy future,
we need to make the connections between our energy
use and where that power comes from.
Having recently listened to many
debates and discussions on energy issues for the state
of Vermont, I want to reiterate why Burlington Electric
Department is a strong supporter of wind energy. Over
the years, BED has made wise energy decisions; our
rates are testament to that. If Vermont is going to
have a strong economy and build sustainable communities,
in-state renewable generation is a necessary part of
our energy future. Consider the following facts:
- Wind produces electricity 80
percent of the time -- similar to a run-of-river
hydro plant.
- Wind will lower BED's cost of
power by 20 percent, which means lower rates.
- Wind adds fuel diversity to the
power supply portfolio.
- Wind doesn't produce pollution
when making electricity.
- Wind increases tourism when appropriately
sited.
- Wind reminds people that electricity
comes from somewhere.
Much of the debate around wind focuses
on aesthetics. Many people who fear how wind farms
will look have never seen one. I encourage people to
visit Searsburg in southern Vermont or the Madison
and Fenner wind farms in central New York State. Owned
and operated by Green Mountain Power, the 11 Searsburg
turbines have been providing electricity to Vermont
since 1997. Most visitors find them visually appealing
and in harmony with the landscape. Skeptics often come
away impressed. Tourism has not suffered.
When the 50 MW McNeil wood chip
plant located in Burlington's Intervale was on the
drawing boards back in the early 1980s, opponents said
that such a plant would cause the end of Vermont's
forests from clear cutting and that tourism would be
negatively affected. Not only has this not happened,
but the local generation has been an economic boost
for Vermont and has increased reliability for the region.
McNeil helped to spare Vermont from
the blackout in the summer of 2003 and kept the lights
on for all of Vermont during the summer of 2000 when
transmission equipment failed near Plattsburg. I'm
glad people did not cave to the fear tactics 20 years
ago with McNeil, and I hope they don't today with wind.
Our Green Mountains will not be ruined by appropriately
sited wind turbines, but rather by acid rain and other
pollutants coming from fossil fuel, especially coal-fired
electric plants.
Some opponents say that if we develop
wind energy some of the electrons may go out of state.
Vermont now is a net importer of power, so most electrons
will stay here. Only if power is left over will it
flow out of state.
As Vermont gets closer to 2012,
when Vermont Yankee and the bulk of the Hydro-Quebec
contract ends, we have choices to make. If we do nothing,
then we are making a choice for more transmission lines
to bring in out-of-state generation. However, if we
instead choose to increase energy efficiency and promote
in-state renewables, we are securing a stronger economic
and environmental future for our state.
We do not need to fear what we can
see -- wind turbines spinning gracefully in a few spots
along our hill tops -- but rather what we cannot see
-- the mercury contamination that is poisoning our
fish and making them non-edible, acid rain that is
acidifying our lakes and destroying our forests, and
carbon dioxide that is bringing us global warming.
When you compare all the facts and
make the big picture connections, I think most people
would find these unseen air emissions pretty scary
and find wind power a good choice. Let's face it; electricity
has to come from somewhere.
Patty Richards
Director of Resource Planning
Burlington Electric Department
From our email "Inbox"
Dear Endless Energy Corporation,
I am a resident of Arlington, Vt
and work in Manchester. I feel those who
are against the project are receiving a disproportionate
percentage of
representation in the media and in town council/commission
meetings and
votes. Often those who support projects such as these
are a lot quieter
than those who oppose, even though the support may
be the majority of
residents. Has a letter of support for the project
been circulated anywhere
in the area? I support wind energy and would be happy
to speak up on the
issue, but it is difficult to track when and where
to give my input.
Best
of luck,
Todd Halvorsen
Made in Vermont
Burlington Free
Press - Letter to the Editor - 3/16/05
by Li Ling Young
As I viewed Killington ski area
from I-89 today, I wondered how visible wind turbines
would be on that same ridge. Would I be able to see
them 20 or 30 miles off as one can see the wide ski
trails cut into the mountainside? As a snowboarder,
those trails represent a fun day outdoors serving my
need for speed. To a small business owner, they could
represent income that out of town skiers bring. To
a wildlife conservationist, perhaps they represent
destructive human intrusion into a fragile alpine environment.
If the Vermont aesthetic can accommodate the scarred
mountainside of a ski resort, can we not accept wind
turbines on mountain ridges? Just like the ski area,
a view of wind turbines is full of meaning: clean energy,
use of a local resource, the mark of human use of the
landscape.
In the past week there has been
news of mercury pollution in Vermont, primarily due
to coal fired electric power plants, and new rules
for regulating emissions from the dirtiest power plants.
Vermont can take responsibility for our energy use
and its political, environmental and economic side
effects by embracing renewable energy. When we expand
our aesthetic to appreciate the value and beauty of
wind power, while protecting the mountaintop ecosystem,
Vermont will again lead the way with vision for a long
term energy future, made in Vermont.
Wind Power: Aesthetic
Judgments are Often Based on More than Looks
Rutland Herald
and other papers - Letter to the Editor - 3/25/04
by Keith Dewey, AIA Weston, Vermont
Judgments of beauty are not always
based only on the way thinks look. There is also an
intellectual facet to all aesthetic experiences.
Unfortunately, many of us in Vermont
have not been careful to consciously monitor the quality
and validity of information which we are digesting
into our subconscious process of aesthetic judgment
relating to windmills. Purely visual aesthetic judgments
about windmills seem to be taking a backseat to what
people perceive them to mean. There are many unjustified
fears and partial-truths being peddled by those who
oppose wind power about their visual impacts and the
future of our environment, ecosystems and energy situations.
They are busy trying to make us all see windmills as "bad" when
we think of them so that their NIMBY aesthetic opinions
will rule the day. I appreciate the efforts of these ‘Good
Samaritans’ to decide for me that windmills are
new, different, and therefore inappropriate, but as
an architect, citizen and parent, I think I’m
qualified to think for myself.
These self-appointed keepers of
aesthetic righteousness have been busy spinning tales
about the evils of wind power. Their words are painstakingly
crafted to subconsciously bias the public with phases
like "industrial factories along our ridgelines" and
that a handful of sensibly-sighted windfarms will turn "Vermont
into the pinwheel state"… I could go on
for pages and pages.
The net result of these distortions
of reality has been a subconscious aesthetic conclusion
by some Vermonters that windmills are "evil", "bad" and "ugly".
The purely visual aesthetic judgment of wind turbines
is being overpowered by what people
have come to believe they mean.
Unfortunately, many of the NIMBY’s
have simply not yet found the courage to open their
minds to the possibility of "joy" and the
magnificently positive result which these projects
could provide for our society, our children and our
planet. In my mind, the aesthetic experience of viewing
sensibly designed wind turbines is one of profound
beauty. A "positive" aesthetic experience.
New and different utilitarian structures
that provide a service to man do not have to be seen
as "inappropriate" or "bad" to
a creative and open-minded soul. If that were true,
how did awkward-looking lighthouses, dams, monuments,
public art and flagpoles ever end up as focal points
on our post cards, calendars, photographs and landscapes?
Following the logic of wind power opponents, aren’t
sailboats, ski resorts, all architecture and man-made
entities that stand out as separate from nature then
visually offensive too? What is the subconscious aesthetic
impact of watching a daily dose of soldiers in the
Mideast die on television in order to perpetuate the
lifestyle of the 20th century fossil fuel generations?
What is the total sum aesthetic impact of alternative
sources of power when we include infrastructure and
delivery systems such as strip mining, oil spills and
fossil fuel power plant smokestacks? How beautiful
will our mountains be with little life or snow on them
due to pollution and climate change?
I love to look at modern windmills.
Their simple, clean and graceful form and kinetic movement
carries strong visual aesthetic appeal to me because
of how they look and for what they really mean. They
are a bright symbol of hope. When I look at windmills,
they symbolize and trigger comforting emotional meanings
like sanity, intelligence, maturity, peace, environmental
congruency, bright future, harmony, energy and political
freedom, high morality, legacy to our children, free
fuel forever, sophisticated simplicity, cleanliness,
planetary stewardship, the constant power of nature
and a reminder that maybe we can be intelligent enough
to save ourselves and the planet after a century of
ignorance, hedonism and bad choices relating to self-preservation
and sustainability. They silently convey to me that
our society is finally evolving to become smart enough
to produce what it consumes while minimizing the soiling
of our fragile nest.
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