Tuesday, December 15, 2009

PACE News: Earthquakes and Bats slow renewable energy projects

The Partnership for Affordable Clean Energy keeps a close eye on what's happening with the climate change debate, and legislation that could impact people here in Alabama. PACE was organized and is run by Lance Brown, who sends out e-mail updates every once in a while, and we'll start sharing them with you. Check out the PACE website to learn more.

PACE NEWS (12/15/09)

Renewables Meet Reality: From Earthquakes to Bats, Ambitious Projects Hit Roadblocks

According to a New York Times article from December 12th, "the company in charge of a California project to extract vast amounts of renewable energy from deep, hot bedrock has removed its drill rig and informed federal officials that the government project will be abandoned."

According to NYT reporter James Glanz, "the project by the company, Alta Rock Energy, was the Obama administration's first major test of geothermal energy as a significant alternative to fossil fuels and the project was being financed with federal Department of Energy money at a site about 100 miles north of San Francisco called the Geysers." The abandonment of the project by AltaRock comes on the heels of a permanent shut down of a similar project in Basel, Switzerland, that caused damaging earthquakes in 2006 and 2007. The geothermal project at the Geysers relied on $6 million from the Department of Energy and five times that amount in venture capital.

On the other side of the country, a major wind project in West Virginia has been stopped in recent days by a smaller - and furrier - concern: bats.

On December 8th, a federal judge in Maryland concluded that "there is a virtual certainty that Indiana bats will be harmed, wounded, or killed imminently by the Beech Ridge Project...", located in Greenbriar County, West Virginia, and operated by Beech Ridge LLC. The company planned to build and operate 122 wind turbines along 23 miles of ridgelines. According to published reports, 40 of the wind turbines are already under construction.

According to this first-of-a-kind ruling, Beech Ridge LLC did not properly determine whether Indiana bats were present at the project site. Acoustic data later revealed that Indiana bats were likely to be present at the project site in the Spring, Summer, and Fall and would be endangered by the wind turbines. The bats hibernate in Winter.

"Whether it's the shut down of geothermal in California or wind in West Virginia, I think we are starting to see that the build-out of renewable energy can be a treacherous road," says Lance Brown, PACE Executive Director. "It should make us think at least twice about whether aggressive national renewable mandates are even achievable in the proposed timeframes, much less equitable or affordable."