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September 28, 2009
State officials meet with residents to discuss wind energy proposal
By SUSAN WEST
Construction
of a demonstration wind energy project in Pamlico Sound could begin as
early as next year, according to state officials who met with Outer
Banks residents to discuss offshore wind energy on Friday, Sept. 25.
Gov. Beverly Perdue, Senate President Pro Tempore Marc Basnight, and
Rep. Tim Spear hosted the meeting at Cape Hatteras Secondary School.
“If water levels are rising as predicted and we take no action,
we will have made a terrible mistake for the people who come after
us,” Basnight said in opening remarks to a crowd of more than 250
people assembled in the school auditorium.
Perdue told the audience that the state could position itself as a
leader in “green energy,” developing innovative ways that
would help the environment and also create jobs.
“Make no mistake though, every governor in America is thinking
about this. North Carolina has to do as much as we can do safely
or we will fail,” she said.
The Pamlico Sound demonstration project would be located 7 to 10 miles
offshore between Avon and Buxton and would consist of as many as three
turbines, explained Harvey Seim, a marine science professor at
University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.
Duke
Energy and UNC-Chapel Hill are putting the final touches on a contract
for the energy company to build the towers. Officials said they
still need to determine what permits would be needed for the test site
because the state has no regulatory framework for development of wind
farms.
The project would provide researchers with more information on
environmental impacts, operation and maintenance, and other issues, and
could lead to full-blown farms in the sound or in the ocean.
A UNC-Chapel Hill feasibility study released in August found that large
areas of Pamlico and Albemarle Sounds and some parts of the ocean are
incompatible with wind farms because of limited wind resources,
ecological impacts on birds, fish, and critical habitat, close
proximity to cultural artifacts such as shipwrecks, or conflict with
military operations, commercial fishing, and recreational activities.
Seim said the wind resource over the ocean waters off North Carolina
“is among the best along the eastern seaboard.”
Frisco resident Johnnie Baum urged researchers to pay heed to the weather conditions that can strike the Cape Hatteras area.
“Hurricane resistance is very important here,” he said,
during the public comment period of the meeting, which lasted almost
two hours.
Seim said the UNC-Chapel Hill study found that an offshore wind farm might create 9,000 permanent jobs.
But Ted Vogel who developed the state’s largest wind turbine
located in Camden County, cautioned that North Carolina doesn’t
have enough workers trained in turbine technology and would end up
importing workers.
“I’m worried about the visible pollution of these sites,
“ said Stewart Couch, owner of Hatteras Realty. Couch urged
the state to study the economic impact of wind farms on tourism and on
property values.
Some members of the audience raised concerns about the cost of electricity supplied by wind farms.
“Offshore
wind power will cost more, and the economy here is already
hurting,” said Frisco resident Virginia Luizer. She also
said any further studies should be put on hold until the state received
assurance that environmental groups and federal agencies would not
protest development of wind farms because of habitat protection
concerns.
But William Howard of Ocracoke disagreed.
“The
cost of investment is far less than the cost of inaction. We must
change the way we think and account for all costs, including
environmental degradation and war and protecting areas overseas,”
Howard said.
Jim Kinghorn, general manager of Cape Hatteras Electric Cooperative,
said wind farms might lower the cost of electricity on the island very
slightly. He said they could help the cooperative come into compliance
with a state law requiring utilities to buy 10 percent of their power
from renewable energy sources by 2018.
Most
speakers indicated that they supported the concept of developing
renewable energy sources, but they still had many questions for state
officials.
Rom Whitaker, a Hatteras charter-boat captain and avid hunter, said he
wanted to know whether access to areas around turbines for fishermen,
hunters, and other traditional users would be restricted.
Pete Peterson, a UNC-CH scientist who worked on the feasibility study,
said access for fishermen would be regulated by the state Marine
Fisheries Commission. He said judging from experiences in other
places, trawling, gill netting, crab potting, and recreational fishing
shouldn’t be impacted, but long hauling and dredging could be
restricted in the area.
Allen Burrus, member of the Dare County Board of Commissioners, urged
the state to make wind energy development a transparent process with
information easily available to the public.
Elfland, the demonstration project manager, said the meeting Friday was only the first step in actively engaging stakeholders.
The Coastal Wind Study report is available at http://www.climate.unc.edu/coastal-wind.
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