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Residents oppose ‘overscale’ Otago windfarm 

Credit:  Ian Telfer, Otago reporter | Radio New Zealand | www.radionz.co.nz ~~

An Otago community’s dream of putting up its own windfarm has been challenged by the people living closest to the site.

A resource consent hearing on the Blueskin Energy project is under way in Dunedin. It would be New Zealand’s first community-owned windfarm.

Today three sets of residents on Pryde Road, just a few hundred metres from the proposed site, spoke passionately about their fears.

They said the windfarm would have a massive impact on their lives, ruining their rural paradise with 90m towers, night noise and bird deaths.

Others questioned the lack of a public business plan, the quality of technical reports and the benefits to the community.

Six submissions were positive, saying the plan was exciting and held the key to local energy generation, but only two of those were from people living in the area.

The plan is to put three wind turbines on Porteous Hill, above Blueskin Bay estuary about 25km north of Dunedin.

Andy Barratt, who lives nearby, told the hearing he had long supported the community trust driving the project, and its aims, but he said there must be better sites.

He said the wind turbines’ effect on close neighbours was too great and the benefit to the community very questionable.

Lawyers for two property owners closest to Porteous Hill then argued the plan had to be rejected because the impact on them, particularly their views, would be too high.

Landscape architect Jeremy Head said the windfarm was an industrial development which would loom over the sensitive Blueskin Bay area.

“It’s an overscaled, unusual addition to what I consider an intact rural landscape.

“The turbines would appear ambiguous and in my opinion the landscape is currently coherent and it maintains the anticipated rural character very well.”

Mr Head said the windfarm would be too close to houses and needs to be sited somewhere else.

Supporters of the project spoke to the hearing this afternoon.

Jen Rodgers, who would be able to see a pioneering Otago windfarm from her window, said she loved the idea.

“I live in Waitati and I’m quite excited about the project, even the fact of being able to see it from my place, and that’s because it’s a physical representation of a community doing something to be resilient – and they’re thinking about the future.”

Ms Rodgers said the windfarm would be a New Zealand first to reduce reliance on oil and carbon, and should be copied.

The 140 submissions received were evenly split for and against the windfarm.

Source:  Ian Telfer, Otago reporter | Radio New Zealand | www.radionz.co.nz

This article is the work of the source indicated. Any opinions expressed in it are not necessarily those of National Wind Watch.

The copyright of this article resides with the author or publisher indicated. As part of its noncommercial educational effort to present the environmental, social, scientific, and economic issues of large-scale wind power development to a global audience seeking such information, National Wind Watch endeavors to observe “fair use” as provided for in section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law and similar “fair dealing” provisions of the copyright laws of other nations. Send requests to excerpt, general inquiries, and comments via e-mail.

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