Wind Picks Up in Michigan As More Farmers Plant
Turbines BAD AXE, Mich. - Dec 18 - Sunday Gazette - Mail;
Charleston, W.V.
At a time when most people choose to avoid the harsh winter winds that roar
past corn stubble and whip up billowing dust clouds over table-flat fields,
farmers in the Thumb of Michigan now talk about catching the wind and all
the money that comes with it.
Michigan's first commercial wind farm - a collection of 32 towering turbines
that conjure visions of H.G. Wells' "The War of the Worlds" - is scheduled
to begin operating in a few weeks, spurring for some a near-gold rush
mentality in this sparsely populated area.
Thousands of dollars in a guaranteed annual harvest come with each windmill
placed on a farmer's land, and that lure has gone a long way toward
interrupting the horizontal sameness of vast corn and bean fields.
"I can't wait till they get going," said Bob Webber, who turned over
easement rights to a portion of his property in Huron County for a proposed
second wind farm, with 42 turbines.
"I'm looking forward to seeing a lot more of them. ... This would be a big
deal for me," Webber said.
For generations the tallest structures in the agricultural Midwest have been
grain elevators, but the rapid growth of the wind- power industry is
altering the landscape in states such as Iowa, which has about 960 turbines,
and Minnesota, which has about 860 turbines, according to the American Wind
Energy Association, a trade group.
Michigan gives thumbs up to wind power
Iowa and Minnesota rank third and fifth, respectively, in annual electrical
power generated by wind, and a utility executive in Detroit said he
envisions the tip of Michigan's Thumb planted with more than 1,000 wind
turbines. The 32 Michigan turbines reach 400 feet from the base to the tip
of the rotor blade and are projected to provide electricity to more than
15,000 homes served by Wolverine Power Cooperative in western and northern
Michigan.
Because of consistent wind speeds that buffet the Thumb, a region that juts
into Lake Huron and Saginaw Bay, "Huron County is the sweet spot," said
Trevor Lauer, vice president of retail marketing for DTE Energy Co. The
Detroit-based electric utility has bought easement rights to 30,000 acres in
the county, taking advantage of good winds and what appears to be a path of
least citizen resistance.
"Agricultural land and wind play together very well," said Lauer, adding
that wind power has "reached a tipping point. It's no longer a question of
if but when, and to what extent."
Last month TPI Composites announced it would open a factory in Newton, Iowa,
to build wind turbine blades. That will be the fifth turbine parts
manufacturer that has set up operations in Iowa in the past two years,
driven by a soaring national demand for turbines. During the first nine
months of this year, Texas, the nation's leader in wind energy, installed
nearly 600 turbines. Another 136 were scheduled to be installed by the end
of the year.
"The world of wind has been substantially reshaped in the past three or four
years," said Randall Swisher, executive director of the American Wind Energy
Association. "There's a rush of capital into it."
There is, of course, a wide chasm separating the dream of large- scale
alternative power and the actual implementation of it. Energy transmission
problems and political obstacles - namely resistance from people who find
the turbines ugly or a threat to birds - loom large. Wind power accounts for
a mere 1 percent of energy generation nationwide. Turbine proposals in
resort and seaside areas such as Cape Cod have provoked loud protests.
Federal tax credits are a vital lifeline to the industry.
But the investment in wind power is taking root in sparsely populated areas
of the Midwest and across the country, due in large part to state mandates
forcing utilities to generate a certain percentage of their electricity -
say, 10 percent to 20 percent - from alternative sources. At least two other
wind power ventures are under consideration in Huron County. Michigan's
entry into wind power is notable because this state, by virtue of its long
marriage to the automobile industry, is perhaps the ultimate fossil fuel
state.
State officials say the wind farm due to open around Jan. 1 will save
Michigan residents $4 billion on power generation over the next 20 years.
"This makes a statement very clearly that we think renewables [energy] will
be part of the future," said Craig Borr, executive vice president at
Wolverine.
The support, however, is not unanimous. In the northernmost part of the
county, along the shore of Lake Huron, critics have raised objections about
the windmills' potential harm to birds and property values. This is a lake
resort area, popular in the summertime. It's an eagle nesting site and part
of the migratory path of thousands of tundra swans.
"Our township is unique because it is resort and agricultural," said Louis
Colletta, the planning commission chairman for Lake Township.
The township last month rejected DTE's request to set up testing towers to
measure the speed and consistency of the wind. Colletta said there are many
questions to be answered about the wisdom of installing windmills, "and we
can't go at it too fast." In that regard, Huron County is a microcosm of the
national debate.
Russell Lundberg, director of the Huron County Building and Zoning
Department, said there is growing acceptance of wind power in the county.
People see it as a way of preserving farmland and the historical heritage of
the region and, at the same time, embracing new technology.
Originally published by Chicago Tribune.
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