Subscribe

Key Documents

Resource Library

Research Links

Alerts

Press Releases

Help keep this education resource going strong!

Other ways to help

FAST FACTS

Publications & Products

Photos & Graphics

Videos

Allied Groups

add NWW to your search bar ]

News Feed

RSS

Subscribe to RSS feed

Add NWW headlines to your site (click here)


add NWW News to your search bar ]

Location/Source

Wind turbine inquiry begins

A public inquiry gets underway on Tuesday into plans for a development of wind turbines on the southern edge of Exmoor, near Knowstone.

The Exmoor Society, which is fighting the plans, is appealing for donations to their fighting fund to oppose the plan.

The Society has dubbed the proposals, “the biggest threat to the integrity of the National Park since the failed proposal to afforest The Chains in 1958 and the loss of moorland through to the 1970s.”

The proposals, for Three Moor and Bickham Moor is for nine turbines which will be 105 metres high to the blade tip and a second proposal for four turbines at 100 metres high to blade tip.

The Ministry of Defence has requested that all of them should be lit up at night.

The Society has joined with the Three Moors Campaign and the CPRE to form the Rural Exmoor Alliance to fight all the proposals.

The society objects to the impact the turbines will have on the “landscape, character and special qualities of Exmoor” — “a jewel in the crown of our countryside” — and points out that Government policy states that wind turbines are not acceptable if their environmental effects are damaging.

“It could be seen as cultural vandalism to impose industrial turbines on the dubious benefit of providing a small amount of unreliable electricity,” said a spokesman.

North Devon Journal

4 June 2009

Bookmark and Share

Tags: Wind power, Wind energy

The copyright of this article is owned by the author or publisher indicated. Its availability here constitutes a "fair use" as provided for in section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law as well as in similar "fair dealing" exceptions of the copyright laws of other nations, as part of National Wind Watch's effort to advance understanding of the environmental, social, scientific, and economic issues of large-scale wind power development. For more information, click here.


« Later PostNews Watch HomeEarlier Post »

Bookmark and Share

National Wind Watch

HOME ABOUT CONTACT DONATE
© National Wind Watch, Inc.
Use of copyrighted material is protected by Fair Use.
"Wind Watch" is a registered trademark.
Formerly at windwatch.org.

Click here to translate from English
Click here to translate to English
Get the Facts