State questions proposal for wind turbines
Nov 17 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Peter B. Lord The Providence
Journal, R.I.
Governor Carcieri's chief energy adviser, Andrew Dzykewicz, was dismissive
of the New York company that is proposing to bring wind farms to Rhode
Island's coastal waters and said the state plans to continue with its own
wind farm project so it can control the power output.
Dzykewicz said Carcieri hopes to have the state start its own permit
application process by the end of the year. If the state resolves all of the
permitting issues in a non-adversarial process, it could then sell the
permit to a private company that would build and install the wind turbines.
As for the proposal reported in The Providence Journal yesterday by Allco
Renewable Energy Group Ltd. to erect up to 338 turbines, Dzykewicz said he
hasn't heard from the company and it hasn't returned his calls. He described
its effort as a fishing expedition and said, "I'm not sure how real this
company is."
"You don't sandbag the top energy official and the governor of a state where
you want to do business," Dzykewicz said.
But late yesterday, Allco managing director Jim Wavle returned a call The
Journal placed to the company's New York offices on Thursday. Wavle said the
company's proposal was serious and it plans to be in Rhode Island for the
long haul.
The company didn't immediately return calls because its lead person on the
Rhode Island proposal, senior vice president Gordon D. Alter, has been out
of the office, Wavle said. But Wavle said Alter should be available to
discuss the proposal next week.
In September, Allco dropped off a brief outline of its plans and an $8,000
application fee at the offices of the Coastal Resources Management Council,
the state agency that regulates coastal development.
Allco proposed erecting 235 to 338 wind turbines off Watch Hill, south of
Block Island and south of Little Compton and Middletown.
It was asking CRMC for a "preliminary determination," a listing of the
information that CRMC would require in a formal application. CRMC, which has
no regulations or plans governing wind farms, still has not responded. But
the agency announced this week it would do a planning study of Rhode Island
coastal waters so it can best determine where alternative energy devices
should go.
Allco said it would assemble the turbines at Quonset Point. But David
Preston, a spokesman for the state industrial park, said yesterday no one at
Quonset has spoken to Allco. Quonset would be interested in hearing
proposals though, he said.
Dzykewicz has been meeting with local "stakeholders" and utilizing
consultants to determine where the best offshore sites would be for a wind
farm. So far they have identified 10 offshore and one on land, in Little
Compton.
Carcieri wants to develop wind farms similar in scope to the Cape Wind
proposal in Nantucket Sound. Dzykewicz said the wind farms could supply 18
percent of Rhode Island's energy needs.
But the Cape Wind project has been stalled by five years of legal and
political battles over the local, state and federal permits it needs.
Dzykewicz said a plan is evolving in Rhode Island that would avoid much of
that trouble.
"Rather than select a site and ram it down people's throats, we're trying to
keep everyone in the loop," Dzykewicz said. He said he met with Block Island
residents last week and found that even people who didn't want to see a wind
farm built nearby saw the need for it, particularly if Block Island could
use the power to replace the power it generates at very high costs with
diesel powered generators.
He said he is planning to have the state apply for a siting permit from CRMC
and the Army Corps of Engineers. Once granted, he said such permits would be
"incredibly profitable" to private companies that would bid for the right to
build and operate the wind turbines.
"If we can eliminate the siting risks, that makes it a much safer ballgame
for companies," he said. "There is absolutely no benefit in having the
process being adversarial. We should work with people and accommodate their
legitimate needs."
Wavle said Allco is fully aware of all the controversy surrounding Cape Wind
and that is why it is not taking its proposal lightly. With climate change
and growing "energy security issues," he said more and more people agree it
is time to utilize alternative energy sources such as wind. |