June 20, 2007
Pennsylvania

Meeting on Armenia wind farm sought

A company planning the Armenia Mountain Wind Farm in Bradford and Tioga (Pa.) counties is seeking a meeting with Armenia Township supervisors.

At the last township meeting, township Secretary Mallory Babcock informed the supervisors that AES Armenia Mountain Wind, LLC, the company planning the project, would still like to meet with them about the project. Babcock said she will have AES contact one of the supervisors to set up the meeting.

When asked for comment, Babcock said the meeting has not yet been scheduled. She said it would be “an informal discussion between the parties.”

AES, meanwhile, is planning to discuss the project in Troy.

Robert J. White, the vice president of the company, confirmed that AES will hold a project presentation at 7 p.m. June 26 at Troy Area School District’s Memorial Auditorium. The public is invited.

Earlier this year, AES held an open house in Mainesburg, Tioga County, on the project.

“We’re finalizing how we’re conducting this one,” White said of the meeting in Troy. “It’s likely to be a presentation of the project and then a question-and-answer session.”

The project is planned for Armenia Mountain in Armenia Township in Bradford County and Sullivan and Ward townships in Tioga County.

Currently, a number of studies are under way and are in various stages, White said in an earlier interview.

According to a flier, the studies include bird and bat studies, a shadow flicker analysis and even a timber rattlesnake survey.

“Hopefully, in the late summer, we’ll be in a position to submit our applications to the respective county planning commissions and then start the public review and approval process,” White said.

Construction would start in 2008.

According to a handout from AES, the project would be approximately 150 MW in size and the electricity produced would serve about 47,000 homes. It notes that property tax payments would be more than $200,000 per year and lease payments would be about $700,000 per year with 70 landowners participating. There would be 80 to 100 construction jobs and 12 operations jobs with “significant local purchases during construction” and improvements to some local roads.

AES is based in Arlington, Va., and is one of the world’s largest global power companies with 25 years of experience developing, constructing, financing and operating power projects with operations in 26 countries and 123 generation plants, according to an AES description.

By Eric Hrin
Staff Writer

The Daily & Sunday Review

20 June 2007


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