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Clean Wind Power

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Clean Energy in New Jersey is Important to meet Environmental Needs Fossil Fuel derived energy contributes to: Global Warming / Air Pollution Local Air Quality ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Clean Wind Power


1
Clean Wind Power in New Jersey
2
Clean Energy in New Jersey is Important to meet
Environmental Needs
  • Fossil Fuel derived energy contributes to
  • Global Warming / Air Pollution
  • Local Air Quality Problems
  • External Effects

3
Focus Pollution and Birds
  • "Neotropical migratory birds are important for
    our ecosystems. They work as nature's pest
    controllers and pollinators and provide many
    hours of enjoyment for birdwatchers and outdoor
    enthusiasts. " (Secretary Gail Norton 6/9/04
    USFW press release)

4
  • Importance of Birds
  • Insect control and pollination
  • Seed dispersal
  • Enjoyment- in 2001 wildlife watchers spent 1.23
    Billion in New Jersey (USFWS).
  • Changes in weather mark the initiation of
    migration.

5
Global warming threatens to create shifts in
vegetative communities and regional climatic
patterns.
  • These changes could greatly disrupt migratory
    birds if the plants they depend on for food
    become absent in a region, flower or fruit
    earlier or later due to climatic changes.
  • A study of 35 North American warblers found that
    the range of seven species have shifted northward
    an average of gt 65 miles over the past 24 years,
    while none of the 35 species shifted southward
    (Price and Root, unpubl. data in Price and Glick
    2002).

6
  • Scientists have discovered behavioral changes in
    birds that correspond with warming spring
    temperatures, resulting in earlier migration.
  • Changes in migration chronology could have
    devastating consequences for some birds.
  • Birds that are associated with very specialized
    habitat types are very vulnerable to climatic
    shifts because such shifts may eliminate their
    habitats. (Both and Visser 2000). These include
    Black-throated Blue Warbler, Golden-winged
    Warbler, Chestnut-sided Warbler, Blackburnian
    Warbler, and Rose-breasted Grosbeak (Price 2002).

7
Pollution can have other effects on ecological
communities
  • Concentrations of air pollutants common in many
    areas of the United States can alter vegetational
    communities.
  • Leaching of calcium from the soil by acid rain
    may be having a negative impact on the nesting
    success of species dependent on environmental
    calcium for egg laying (Hames et al. 2002).
  • Changing of ecosystem structure will likely cause
    an impact on avian, and other wildlife,
    populations.

8
POINT Green Matters! Increased use of clean
energy is needed to protect the ecological health
of our environment.
  • Potential Solution
  • The effects of global warming will need to be
    ameliorated through changes to rules governing
    emissions, and incentives for increased fuel
    efficiency, energy conservation, and renewable
    energy.

9
Wind Energy is Compatible with Ecology
Sticking with birds
  • A major environmental concern with the locating
    and development of wind turbines or wind power
    farms is the impact the facilities may have on
    bird (and bat) populations.

10
Is avian species mortality really an issue? -
Yes
  • Wind derived electricity now represents only
    small component of the total electric produced in
    the U.S. (0.3?), but growing rapidly.
  • Today's utility-scale wind turbines can be quite
    large blades 130' in length, total heights of
    400'. See the web site for the American Wind
    Energy Association for background data on wind
    plant operations http//www.awea.org.
  • Any structure has the potential to harm birds.
    It has been estimated that communication towers
    kill up to 50 million birds a year, 90 of which
    are neotropical migratory birds. Tall-building
    collisions (office buildings) kill millions of
    birds each year.

11
  • Wind turbines impact birds through
  • i) collisions with the turbine blades, towers,
    power lines, or with other related
  • structures
  • ii) Turbulence / wind shear
  • iii) habitat impacts (the infrastructure)
  • Recent information from U.S. projects indicates
    that bird mortality at wind turbine projects
    varies from less than one bird/turbine/year to as
    high as 7.5 birds/per turbine/year.

12
The numbers of fatalities add up quickly.
  • The Mountaineer Wind Energy Project in West
    Virginia, a wind farm of 44 large turbines and
    related structures, is believed to have caused an
    estimated mortality of 4.80 birds per turbine in
    2003 (211 birds).
  • The National Wind Coordinating Committee reported
    that the annual estimate of all avian mortality
    from the 15,000 operational wind turbines in the
    U.S. in 2001 was 10,000 to 40,000 birds. See the
    National Wind Coordinating Councils web site at
    www.nationalwind.org.
  • Poor planning could conspire to cause significant
    mortality. One calculation for a proposed 180
    turbine facility calculates a potential for
    15,000 bird/bat kills per year at that site
    alone.
  • Add to this the cumulative effect on migrating
    populations as they move across multiple wind
    farms, and population impacts become an issue.

13
POINT
  • Development and implementation of wind-power
    facilities have the potential to cause
    significant harm to avian species, and so to
    ecological systems in general

14
POINT CONTINUED BUT IT DOES NOT HAVE TOO.
  • We need wind energy
  • WHY?

15
Can we develop ecologically friendly wind power?
Very Likely YES
  • Prior to constructing wind power projects, the
    potential risks to birds and bats can be
    evaluated.
  • Pre-construction, a proper siting analysis can be
    done for each new wind turbine farm.
  • Sites known to be used by rare birds could be
    avoided, as could known heavy migration pathways,
    or landscape features known to attract large
    numbers of birds.
  • Lighting could be minimized.

16
What Are We Doing About All This?
  • Power industry, wind industry, private parties,
    NGO's and government agencies are collaborating
    to design policies and guidelines to implement
    wind power in an ecologically friendly way.

17
Bottom Line
  • We believe that by engaging in open dialogue
    with commercial interests and regulators, and by
    carrying out research on potential impacts and
    impact avoidance in the mid-Atlantic flyway, we
    will likely be able to implement much needed,
    commercially viable, technologically feasible,
    and ecologically friendly wind energy in New
    Jersey.

18
Clean Energy Is Environmentally Necessary and
Ecologically Viable Help It Happen
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