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Birds ground Xcel wind deal 

Credit:  Article by: DAVID SHAFFER , Star Tribune, www.startribune.com 5 April 2011 ~~

On the plains of North Dakota, two rare birds have sparked an unusual fight between giant energy companies that have long worked as partners.

The battle erupted over the endangered whooping crane, which migrates through the state, and the piping plover, a threatened species on the northern plains.

Faced with the risk that wind turbine blades would slash plovers to death and scare whooping cranes off their nests, Xcel has terminated a proposed 100-unit wind farm in North Dakota.

But EnXco, a large renewable energy company that holds a contract to build the $400 million project, objects. The company said Tuesday it is actively working to address the bird concerns and says it will challenge Xcel’s decision to cancel the deal, though no lawsuit has been filed.

Neither company would elaborate Tuesday on the terse statements they have issued about the dispute, which has left North Dakota officials stunned.

“That hurts us,” said Don Flaherty, mayor of Ellendale, population 1,300, near the proposed 9,600-acre wind farm in southeastern North Dakota.

“There was going to be a total of 20 jobs associated with the maintenance of the turbines, and some of those people probably would want to live in Ellendale.”

North Dakota Public Service Commission will review the matter at a meeting Wednesday. A spokesman for the commission said this is the first time it has faced the prospect of a large wind project being dropped under such circumstances.

The 150-megawatt Merricourt Wind Project has been under development since 2008 and was to have been completed this year.

To keep the project alive, EnXco, the U.S. subsidiary of a large energy company based in Paris, recently agreed to recommendations by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to develop a protection plan for the birds and to apply for a federal permit allowing “incidental taking” if one is accidently killed.

Those steps, said Jeffrey Towner, field supervisor for the wildlife service in North Dakota, could take up to a year. If the project went ahead without taking those steps, Xcel faced criminal liability under a federal migratory bird law should a piping plover or whooping crane be killed by flying into a blade, tower or cable, he said.

Towner said about 250 whooping cranes migrate through that part of North Dakota. While one of the giant birds might strike a turbine, the chief concern is that the humming machines will scare cranes from nesting areas. EnXco has proposed to preserve 1,700 acres of wetlands away from turbines for crane habitat.

Fewer than 3,000 piping plovers, a small shore bird, are estimated to be left in the northern Great Plains, Towner said. The birds are threatened in that region, and endangered in the Great Lakes. He said nesting sites, though no plovers, have been spotted in the Merricourt project area.

That bird is believed to be at greater risk than cranes of flying into blades, Towner said. If EnXco obtains an “incidental taking” permit in North Dakota, it could be the first in the state issued for a wind farm, he added.

In February, an EnXco official testified at a regulatory hearing that the company intended to minimize the effects on the birds, but said it would not develop the habitat plan or seek the taking permit. Towner said EnXco changed its position in the past couple of weeks.

Xcel, in a regulatory filing Friday, said it was terminating the project because of the threat to birds and uncertainty about the cost and time needed to reduce the threat. Xcel spokeswoman Patti Nystuen said canceling the project would not cause the company to fall short of renewable-energy mandates.

EnXco, the American subsidiary of EDF Energies Nouvelles, completed another Xcel wind project last year in southwestern Minnesota.

Source:  Article by: DAVID SHAFFER , Star Tribune, www.startribune.com 5 April 2011

This article is the work of the source indicated. Any opinions expressed in it are not necessarily those of National Wind Watch.

The copyright of this article resides with the author or publisher indicated. As part of its noncommercial educational effort to present the environmental, social, scientific, and economic issues of large-scale wind power development to a global audience seeking such information, National Wind Watch endeavors to observe “fair use” as provided for in section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law and similar “fair dealing” provisions of the copyright laws of other nations. Send requests to excerpt, general inquiries, and comments via e-mail.

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