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Wind Farms - Saskatchewan

PostPosted: Wed Dec 02, 2015 10:14 am
by Oscar
Morse wind farm on stream soon.

[ http://www.pressreader.com/canada/leade ... 6/TextView ]

BRUCE JOHN­STONE March 11, 2015

By the end of the month, SaskPower will be pro­duc­ing an­other 23 megawatts (MW) of wind power from the Morse area, where Al­go­nquin Power and Util­i­ties Corp., is putting the fin­ish­ing touches on its in­de­pen­dent wind power project.

SaskPower re­cently com­pleted work on a 14 km trans­mis­sion line and sub­sta­tion in south­west­ern Saskatchewan to put the wind power on the grid, the Crown cor­po­ra­tion said in a press re­lease Tues­day.

The $81-mil­lion wind power project will pro­duce an av­er­age of 104 gi­gawatt hours (GWh) an­nu­ally — enough en­ergy to power 8,000 to 9,000 homes and busi­nesses.

When com­pleted, the Morse project will add to the 25 per cent of Saskatchewan’s power pro­duc­tion that comes from re­new­able sources, said Guy Bruce, SaskPower’s vice-pres­i­dent of re­source plan­ning. “By 2020, we fore­cast that 10 per cent of our ca­pac­ity will be from wind and we are work­ing to make that num­ber go even higher.”

Con­struc­tion on the Morse wind fa­cil­ity in Saskatchewan be­gan in early Au­gust with foun­da­tion and ac­cess road work. De­liv­ery and in­stal­la­tion of the 10 Siemens tur­bines com­menced in Jan­uary, with com­mer­cial op­er­a­tion of the fa­cil­ity ex­pected by the end of March.

Morse is one of three wind projects in Saskatchewan where Al­go­nquin has part­nered with SaskPower. Al­go­nquin has a 75 per cent stake in the $69-mil­lion Red Lily wind farm near Moo­somin, a 26.4 MW project us­ing 16 Ves­tas tur­bines com­pleted in 2011.

Al­go­nquin is also de­vel­op­ing SaskPower’s Chap­lin wind farm project, uti­liz­ing 77 wind tur­bines gen­er­at­ing 177 MW of power at a cost of $340 mil­lion.

The project is slated to be com­pleted by the end of 2016. Toronto-based Al­go­nquin owns seven op­er­at­ing wind farms across North Amer­ica.

In­creas­ing the use of wind en­ergy in Saskatchewan will help pro­vide com­pet­i­tive, sta­ble prices, while re­duc­ing emis­sions and di­ver­si­fy­ing the prov­ince’s elec­tric­ity sup­ply, said Robert Hor­nung, pres­i­dent of the Cana­dian Wind En­ergy As­so­ci­a­tion.

“Wind en­ergy has rapidly be­come one of the low­est cost op­tions for new elec­tric­ity gen­er­a­tion, and we ap­plaud SaskPower’s ef­forts to take ad­van­tage of its world­class wind re­source,” Hor­nung said in a state­ment.

The Saskatchewan En­vi­ron­men­tal So­ci­ety also praised SaskPower’s ef­forts to ex­pand its wind power ca­pac­ity. “They’re start­ing to move in the right di­rec­tion,’’ said Peter Preb­ble, di­rec­tor of en­vi­ron­men­tal pol­icy for the so­ci­ety. “We’d like to see them go fur­ther.’’

Preb­ble noted that U.S. states, like South Dakota and Iowa, are gen­er­at­ing 25 per cent of their power from wind.

“South­ern Saskatchewan has an ex­cel­lent wind regime and the eco­nom­ics of wind power are at­trac­tive,’’ Preb­ble said. “Over the course of the next decade, wind power could read­ily be in­creased to 20 per cent of to­tal elec­tric­ity pro­duc­tion in Saskatchewan.”

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Proposed Chaplin Wind-Energy Project – September 2014
[ http://www.environment.gov.sk.ca/2013-0 ... fReference ]

77 wind turbines at Chaplin Lake will place birds at risk

PostPosted: Wed Dec 02, 2015 10:37 am
by Oscar
77 wind turbines at Chaplin Lake will place birds at risk

[ http://trevorherriot.blogspot.ca/2015/0 ... -will.html ]

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

The Endangered Piping Plover will be even more endangered if the Chaplin wind farm goes ahead - (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

It is nearly impossible to keep abreast of the threats to our prairie wildlife that arise each week. I hear or read about some fresh mayhem to be spread upon the land and then I hear of another imminent disaster and the first one slips my mind.

Some time ago I read in the paper that the province had approved a large wind farm project to be constructed at Chaplin Lake.
[ http://www.pressreader.com/canada/leade ... 6/TextView ] I read the article over a couple of times, thinking at first there must be another Chaplin Lake. Surely Environment Canada and Saskatchewan's Environment ministry would not approve a wind farm near the Chaplin Lake, the one that is an internationally recognized migration stopover for a million or more birds each spring and fall, the Western Hemisphere Shorebird Reserve, the Birdlife International Important Bird Area, the place where one-third of North America's Sanderlings feed each year on their way north, where several species at risk nest, including nearly 4% of the planet's Piping Plovers.

Now, like most people, I like the idea of wind energy. There are some big environmental benefits to be had with wind, but they can easily be negated if the siting is wrong.

Still not quite believing our environmental agencies are that far gone, however, I looked for more details online.

I found a "Terms of Reference for Environmental Impact Statement" drafted by Stantec Engineering for Saskatchewan's Ministry of Environment, and paid for by the private company building the wind project.
[ http://www.environment.gov.sk.ca/2013-0 ... fReference ]

The plan, indeed, is to erect 77 massive wind turbines just north of the Chaplin Lake reserve and start operating in 2016. Here is a map showing the area affected by the turbines.

I also found a slide show put together by Stantec for an open house in 2014, in which they reassure everyone that there is a very low risk to birds. (PAGE HAS BEEN REMOVED. Ed.)

I not convinced. Why? First, because people who have worked for these consulting companies have told me how frustrated they are knowing that the work they do is not sufficient to assess the risk to the habitat and species concerned. They put in the hours and do their best, but in the end they know that their research is just not up to the job.

Second, independent grassland biologists have told me in confidence that no scientist would take the research of companies like Stantec seriously; that their "science," often conducted by people with undergrad degrees in biology, is bogus; and that they are sent out to do a minimal amount of field work in studies that are not properly designed--all to jump through the hoops and satisfy the Environmental Impact Assessment requirements, which in this province have proven again and again to do very little to protect our environment.

To properly ascertain the threat to birds that nest in the native grassland where the turbines will go and to the waterbirds that use the wetlands at Chaplin, you would need several skilled field technicians on the ground for at least a couple of years, spring, summer and fall. What's more, their data gathering methodology would have to be designed by a qualified scientist to ensure that it has some integrity and rigour. If Stantec's "research" at Chaplin were ever submitted to a refereed journal on avian ecology my guess is that it would be promptly filed under "G" (garbage or greenwashing, take your pick).

Seventy-seven turbines sited next to a globally significant shorebird reserve, but not to worry. The presentation by Stantec states that "WTGs [wind turbine generators] present low collision risks to shorebirds."

Gee, they better have that right because hundreds of thousands of shorebirds head directly north of Chaplin every spring. Are they all going to dodge the gauntlet of whirring blades?

Let's see what another study says on shorebird mortality--a study that is not paid for by a wind farm company. A Montana study sponsored by The Nature Conservancy (totally independent from the Nature Conservancy of Canada) looked into how best to site wind farms in that state without hurting prairie ecology. (Hmm--what a great idea.) Here is what they said about shorebirds and wind turbines: [ http://www.nature.org/media/montana/wind-report.pdf ]

"Stewart et al. (2007) reviewed numerous avian and wind studies and noted that birds in the order Charadriiformes (shorebirds) were among those most impacted by wind energy globally (second only to waterfowl)."

Go the executive summary of that paper by Stewart et al and you find this statement which mentions the high risk to shorebirds and also calls into question the often slap-dab approach used to assess risk for birds: [ http://journals.cambridge.org/action/di ... aid=986904 ]

"Windfarms may have significant biological impacts, especially over longer time scales, but the evidence-base is poor, with many studies being methodologically weak, and more long-term impact assessments are required. There is clear evidence that Anseriformes (wildfowl) and Charadriiformes (shorebirds) experience declines in abundance, suggesting that a precautionary approach should be adopted to windfarm development near aggregations of these taxa. . . ."

Now, this is the point at which proponents will argue that, while wind farms may kill some birds, high rises and roads kill many more. This is dubious logic at best, in part because we have far more buildings and roads than we have wind turbines on the landscape. Also, we generally try to keep glass high rises and roads out of internationally important bird migration and breeding habitat.

Wind power is a great thing--we need wind farms, but why site them on native prairie in a place through which great multitudes of birds move each year? In a single day there can be as many as 73,000 shorebirds pass through Chaplin.

We have all kinds of windy landscapes in this province where there is little habitat to attract birds--we call it cropland. A lot of our cultivated landscape is an ecological desert--birds stay away in the thousands and go to places like Chaplin. There is no good reason to site a wind farm in native grassland next to a wetland of international significance. Period.

The conclusion of the Montana study is instructive here:

"We estimate that in total about 17 million acres of available good-to-superb wind energy potential exists within Montana. Of that total, we have identified roughly 7.7 million acres with high risk [for wildlife]. We strongly suggest that these areas be avoided as locations for wind energy development, rather than considering mitigation approaches, as the lands identified are often critical habitat for multiple species. Through our analysis we have identified about 9.2 million acres that most likely present a lower risk of impact to resident and breeding species. This total includes the roughly 4.4 million acres of cropland we noted earlier in the report."

Anyone can see that this just makes sense.

Here are some more photos of the shorebirds that come to Chaplin each year and will be placed at risk by the wind farm if it goes ahead: (Go to URL above . . .)