February 05, 2024
By
Courtney Flatt
Largest proposed wind farm in WA
slashed in half, firefighting issues are part of the problem
A controversial wind farm that was set to be the
largest in Washington has been slashed nearly in half. Flickr Creative
Commons
A controversial wind farm that was set to be
the largest in Washington has been slashed in half. The proposed
project outside the Tri-Cities has raised concerns about endangered
hawks and viewsheds. However, the project developer said these new
restrictions could be bad for renewable energy development in the
state.Scout Clean Energy, developers
of the Horse Heaven Hills Clean Energy Center, hoped to build
hundreds of wind turbines, potentially 50 feet taller than Seattle’s
Space Needle. The wind farm would be built along 24 miles of ridge
lines in southeastern Washington. Scout Clean Energy also has plans
to build solar arrays and battery storage at the site.
However, during a meeting Wednesday, the
state’s Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council, or EFSEC, limited
where turbines could be built within the project site. The goal
would be to curb concerns for nearby ferruginous hawk nests and
wildlife corridors.
EFSEC councilmember Lenny Young said
prohibiting development east of Straub Canyon would have limited the
harm to traditional cultural properties; however, the council denied
that restriction.
“The dominant driver for this, for me, is to
address the significant, unmitigable impacts to traditional cultural
properties,” Young said.
In documents submitted to the council, the
project developers called the restrictions arbitrary.
According to a letter sent to the council from
Scout Clean Energy President and CEO Michael Rucker, the
restrictions “are unsupported by scientific or any other evidence in
the record and would render the Project both technically and
economically nonviable without substantial amendment to the
application.”
The council will recommend whether to
approve the renewable energy project. Gov. Jay Inslee will have the
ultimate say.
It’s expected the public will be able to
comment on the restrictions before the council sends its
recommendations to the governor.
Also at the meeting, the council discussed
how wind projects could affect aerial firefighting capabilities.
The height of the turbines would likely prevent
some aerial firefighting, including the use of drones and
helicopters,Washington State Department of Natural Resources leaders
told the council.While the turbines
could reach up to 657 feet, most aerial firefighting happens below
500 feet, according to Russ Lane, manager of the DNR Wildland Fire
Management Division. Aerial firefighting could be unsafe in the
middle of the proposed project.
“The density and spacing of the towers would
essentially create a no-fly zone over the entire project area. We
would apply an additional ‘safety buffer’ of one-to-two
tower-heights around the project to ensure safe separation for
aircraft operations,” Lane wrote.
If a water or flame bucket got tangled in a
turbine blade, the results could be “catastrophic,” he said.
During the meeting, Amy Moon, EFSEC siting
and compliance lead, reported Lane’s thoughts to the council.
Fighting fires from the air by dropping water or flame retardant
could do more damage to wind projects than the fire, she said.
“These drops come down with the force of
gravity and many thousands of pounds of water or retardant that
could easily snap off blades and could do other damage to towers,”
Moon said.
In addition, Lonnie Click, Benton County Fire
District No. 1 Chief, told the council the fire district’s responses
would be “nearly exact” to DNR’s responses.
Young raised the concern that fire plans for
fighting from the ground should be really well thought out – making up
for a lack of ability to fight fires from the air. It’s a problem for
all wind projects, he said.
A Washington bill to address these concerns is
making its way through the House this session.
Council chair Kathleen Drew said she was
concerned about firefighting on the perimeter of the projects. Other
wind projects outside Ellensburg saw minimal damage after recent fires
burned around the turbines. [Copyright 2024 Northwest News Network]
Green Play Ammonia™, Yielder® NFuel Energy.
Spokane, Washington. 99212
509 995 1879
Cell, Pacific Time Zone.
General office:
509-254
6854
4501 East Trent
Ave.
Spokane, WA 99212
|