The AWEA Blog: Into the Wind


Letter writers take NY Times to task for anti-wind op-ed

Several readers of The New York Times wrote to take issue with Steve Wright's negative opinion article last week on a wind farm in Vermont (see Vermont's wind energy: Responding to a New York Times op-ed, October 3).

They included Dorothy Schnure, manager of corporate communications for Green Mountain Power, the utility that is building the project; Philip Warburg, author of a forthcoming book, "Harvest the Wind"; David Blittersdorf, chief executive of AllEarth Renewables; and Tim Smith, an assistant research professor in physics and environmental studies at Dartmouth College.

Here are some of the points they made:

- The wind farm Mr. Wright objected to is strongly supported by voters (75 percent) in the town of Lowell, where it is being built, and Vermonters have registered 90 percent approval of wind power in previous polling.
 
- The mountain where the wind farm is located is not wilderness, but rather is currently being commercially logged.

- While the project will occupy 175 acres, more than 2,000 acres of prime animal habitat will also be conserved as mitigation for any wildlife effects.

- A number of other mountains in Vermont are currently used by ski resorts, yet tourists still flock to the state.

- Opposing or failing to build clean energy projects in Vermont and elsewhere means developing other energy sources that are more damaging to the environment and climate.

Food for thought, as other wind projects slowly make their way through the permitting process in the Northeast.
 


3 responses

  1. Kevin Long October 10, 2011 01:28PM
    From first hand construction knowledge, there is extremely minimal disruption of any natural habitat in wind farm construction...Being part of the Sheffield Project recently completed, great extremes were went to to meet environmental restrictions and future site operation... I think this individual should worry much more about the condition of Vermont's current aging nuclear plant, rather then throwing out claims of environmental disruption from clean energy alternatives,
  2. robert October 7, 2011 07:51PM
    it hase already been proven that if we don't start with all these alternative scorces of energy we will not be here on this planet for much longer as we are currently burning our planet up with fossell fuels
  3. William Carr October 7, 2011 03:30PM
    Commercially logged ? That settles the objection about creating new roads through trackless forests, and contaminating Sylvan Pools. Loggers create roads; therefore installing the wind towers will not, in fact, create further disruption.

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