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Lake Erie wind project: do benefits outweigh risks? 

Credit:  Mary Kuhlman | Public News Service | February 11, 2019 | www.publicnewsservice.org ~~

CLEVELAND, Ohio – The first freshwater wind-energy installation in North America could be coming to Ohio. While agreeing that a move to cleaner sources of energy is important, opponents say there’s not enough evidence that the benefits of the project outweigh the risks.

Final approval could come soon for Icebreaker, a six-turbine wind installation in Lake Erie, eight miles off Cleveland’s shoreline. Lake Erie Foundation board member John Lipaj noted it’s actually a pilot project for a massive, 1,500 wind turbine installation throughout the Great Lakes. The developer has said each turbine holds about 400 gallons of industrial lubricants and 55 gallons of oil, and Lipaj said that’s just not worth the risk.

“Lake Erie, which is the source of drinking water for 11 million people, isn’t the place to be building an industrial wind facility,” Lipaj said. “Build the wind turbines onshore; build them where farmers need that extra income. It just makes so much more sense and it’s better for the lake.”

Supporters say the project will create jobs and renewable energy, and note that no significant environmental impacts were found in a federal review. Lipaj countered that the review did not examine the effects of hundreds of additional turbines on the lake.

The Ohio Power Siting Board could decide on the project at a hearing February 21.

Among sticking points in the months-long negotiations between the board and the developers were measures to protect and monitor migrating birds and bats. Research director with the Black Swamp Bird Observatory, Mark Shieldcastle, explained that more than 1 million birds use the area for migration and foraging habitat every year.

“The central basin of Lake Erie has been designated as a globally important bird area because of the concentrations of some certain species,” Shieldcastle said. “So it’s extremely important to birds and it’s not a place where you start putting up obstructions without good knowledge as to what that risk is.”

There are also concerns that the 480-foot-high turbines could ruin the aesthetics of lake communities, and potentially impact tourism dollars. While local officials and trade groups support the project, Lipaj said there’s a misconception about who will truly benefit, since the project’s developer, Icebreaker Windpower, is a multinational corporation.

“This is really about a Norwegian company reaping U.S. taxpayer subsidies,” he said. “It’s not just $55 million in Department of Energy subsidies, but there are also production tax credits and investment tax credits.”

Supporters say Icebreaker is bringing positive attention to the region, and could make Northern Ohio a leader in the booming offshore wind-energy sector. But Lipaj noted no other freshwater wind project has been approved in the U.S., and he argued Lake Erie shouldn’t be the guinea pig.

Source:  Mary Kuhlman | Public News Service | February 11, 2019 | www.publicnewsservice.org

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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