Great Lakes Information Network

GLIN==> Picture of wind energy generation in the Great Lakes takes shape in Cleveland (repost - previous post truncated)

Laura Andrews landrews at glc.org

Wed Sep 22 17:32:49 EDT 2010

Apologies for reposting – previous post was truncated.  Full post is below.

 

 

For immediate release: September 22, 2010

 

Picture of wind energy generation in the Great Lakes takes shape in
Cleveland

http://www.glc.org/announce/10/09glwc.html

 

 

Cleveland, Oh. - State, provincial and federal officials, wind developers
and other stakeholders tackled tough questions at the meeting of the Great
Lakes Wind Collaborative this week in Cleveland, including environmental and
social impacts and a regulatory landscape that is still evolving. 

 

The third annual meeting of the Great Lakes Wind Collaborative (GLWC)
brought together over 125 participants including U.S. and Canadian federal,
state and provincial agency personnel along with interested stakeholders
from the wind energy industry, academics and non-governmental organizations.
“The Great Lakes Wind Collaborative’s annual gathering of stakeholders is
another step toward capturing the region’s $100 billion wind potential,”
noted Larry Flowers, principal project manager at the National Renewable
Energy Laboratory. The meeting was hosted by Case Western Reserve University
and facilitated by the Great Lakes Commission, which coordinates the
Collaborative from its office in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

 

“We are all here because we recognize that when we talk about creating a
dynamic wind power economy on the Great Lakes, many, if not most, of the
needed qualities exist in all of our states,” said keynote speaker Sean
Logan, director of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources. “Our qualities
have proven their value in the past. But we are opening a new chapter here.
It asks all of us to think, and act, in new ways.”

 

Among the states and provinces, there was plenty of activity to report,
particularly in the area of offshore wind turbine development in the Great
Lakes and St. Lawrence River. Among those moving ahead most aggressively in
this area are New York and Ohio, which are actively reviewing offshore wind
proposals.

 

However, Ontario, which has a streamlined approval process for onshore and
offshore wind proposals and has the first power purchase agreement for
offshore wind in the Great Lakes, is slowing down some of its activity as it
takes a closer look at environmental constraints.

 

Ohio and Michigan, with less installed capacity that most other Great Lakes
states to date, have made recent decisions that will substantially increase
wind capacity in each of those states. Indiana, Illinois and Minnesota,
which already produce over 1,000 megawatts of wind each, also have new
projects and initiatives underway to increase capacity and improve decisions
with respect to reducing wildlife impacts.

 

On that same front, Pennsylvania discussed its unique “voluntary cooperative
agreement” where projects can limit liability with respect to wildlife
impacts by agreeing to follow a series of protection protocols, including
pre and post-construction monitoring of bird and bat impacts. 

 

Wisconsin described pending rules to establish state-level siting
regulations, and Québec’s report included a related announcement of a water
turbine pilot project that has two underwater river turbines in the St.
Lawrence River in an underwater application of the wind turbine concept. The
meeting also included sessions on the economic impact of wind, wind wildlife
impacts and regional infrastructure capacity and needs.

 

Addressing the need for federal, state and provincial regulatory agencies to
accelerate and fine tune development of the regulatory playing field, Ohio
DNR Director Logan emphasized the “need to get it right and get it right
quickly.” He cited the 2008 Great Lakes St. Lawrence Water Resources Compact
as a model of how the region has historically worked together, saying, “The
Compact proved that we can accomplish more when we act cooperatively. It
proved that the world takes the health and sustainability of the Great Lakes
as seriously as we do. And now, I think we are just beginning to see just
how closely the world is watching how we manage our race to bring wind power
to the Great Lakes.” 

 

In other action, the GLWC elected Cathryn Loucas, deputy director of the
Ohio DNR, as its new co-chair, replacing Joyce McLean of Toronto Hydro.
Loucas will serve alongside existing co-chair Terry Yonker from Youngstown,
New York, who said,  “States, provinces and both Canadian and U.S. federal
governments have expressed agreement in the shared responsibility and need
for steps to ensure that wind power development in the Great Lakes is both
economically and environmentally sustainable.”

 

 

Contact: Victoria Pebbles
E-mail: vpebbles at glc.org
Phone: 734-971-9135

 

 

###

 

The Great Lakes Commission, chaired by Gov. Patrick Quinn (Ill.), is an
interstate compact agency established under state and U.S. federal law and
dedicated to promoting a strong economy, healthy environment and high
quality of life for the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence region and its residents.
The Commission consists of governors' appointees, state legislators, and
agency officials from its eight member states. Associate membership for
Ontario and Québec was established through the signing of a "Declaration of
Partnership." The Commission maintains a formal Observer program involving
U.S. and Canadian federal agencies, tribal authorities, binational agencies
and other regional interests. The Commission offices are located in Ann
Arbor, Michigan.

 

 

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://www.great-lakes.net/lists/glin-announce/attachments/20100922/0851fee3/attachment.html 
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: GLWC_PR_09-2010.pdf
Type: application/pdf
Size: 141456 bytes
Desc: not available
Url : http://www.great-lakes.net/lists/glin-announce/attachments/20100922/0851fee3/attachment.pdf 



News | Calendar | Great Links | SOTM | E-Lists | Info Center | About GLIN
The Great Lakes | Environment | Economy | Education | Maps and GIS | Tourism

 

Great Lakes Information Network
Maintained by: Christine Manninen, manninen@glc.org
Selected Photos: Copyright ©John and Ann Mahan
Contact Us | Search | Site Index
© 1993-2008