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Wind farm debate split environmentalists 

Long Island’s half-decade tango with offshore wind power tested the definition of the term environmentalist, pitting fervent advocates for green power against potential supporters who wanted stronger assurances about the project’s potential impact on birds, bats and fish.

After the controversial project was terminated last week, the wind farm’s strongest advocates seemed divided on whether the $800 million price tag should have been the deciding factor given the global warming crisis. Meanwhile, those who always questioned whether the proper studies would ever be done to know the project’s environmental impacts pointed to divisions in the community that question the claim the wind-farm was done in by a horde of NIMBYs.

Never was the schism among environmentalists more visible than when Gerard Hannon, the designated representative of the Long Island Audubon Council, representing 5,200 Long Island members, wrote to LIPA Chairman Kevin Law last April.

“Environmentalists are not of one mind regarding this proposed project, and myopia is never helpful,” he wrote at the end of a long letter expressing the group’s 2006 decision to discourage “any support” for the wind farm off Jones Beach until three-year studies of migratory bird patterns at the location was conducted. The developers had proposed a one-year study, and LIPA had hoped to have the project built by 2008.

“… Supporting proposals, such as the Long Island Wind Farm, should not precede the completion of environmental studies, competently and objectively structured and executed,” wrote Hannon, who is chair of the Conservation Committee of the Huntington Audubon Society.

From its earliest days, the wind-farm proposal drew a line in the sand between groups that had urged LIPA to pursue the project and those concerned placement of 40 wind turbines – 450 feet high and some three to five miles from shore – would impact birds, fish and underwater plants common to the area. Others worried about a sea-to-land cable through sensitive areas.

Many of the latter were alarmed to discover that the recommendation for three-year bird studies came from the federal government itself, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, in a series of letters sent early in the process.

Laurie Farber, a one-time conservation chairwoman of the Sierra Club’s Long Island executive committee, understood the fervor that whipped through the environmental community to rally support for the wind farm. Last year, she resigned her post because of concerns about the Sierra Club’s support for the project.

“I found it intensely frustrating that environmental groups refused to even want to consider that there might be any environmental impacts,” Farber, who has a long record of field work studying birds, said in an email exchange last week. “They wanted to just accept the poor substitute for science that FPL Energy and LIPA were offering. They were willing to be blind about this because of a ‘renewable energy at any cost’ attitude.”

LIPA and FPL, the project developer, have long maintained that studies contemplated for the project would be adequate to determine potential impacts. Environmental proponents of the project, while expressing concern about the previously undisclosed $700 million-plus price tag, reject the charge of myopia.

They say they have always called for a full environmental study, but warned that the effects of global warming meant solutions to had to get under way as soon as possible.

One of the more fervent, Adrienne Esposito, executive director of Citizens Campaign for the Environment, last week rejected the idea that the project’s high cost should have led to its undoing. Some critics have questioned her recent tough stance against another three-turbine wind project to be sited in the waters off Plum Island without demanding the same for the LIPA project.

“We would have preferred a more in-depth bird study, and we told them [LIPA] this,” Esposito explained last week. She said the Plum Island project differs in that it’s directly near a bird nesting area while the South Shore project was believed to be less in the path of bird migration, a claim other environmentalists dispute.

In any case, Esposito said LIPA should rebid the project to “see if we can introduce more competition into the marketplace” and get the South Shore project done. “It’s extremely short-sighted just to look cost,” she said.

That would be the nightmare of Bonnie Brady, executive director of the Long Island Commercial Fishermen’s Association, who called Law’s decision “a great day for all of Long Island.”

“What prevailed was best for the fishermen and for the fish, too,” she said, noting the Fish and Wildlife’s concerns and the expected closing off an area to important squid fishing. “No one could hear the fish screaming. Apparently someone did.”

The green power environmentalists, noting that some off-shore wind farms become “sanctuaries” for fish, are taking comfort in Law’s pledge to continue pursuing economical wind-farm initiatives for the region, including land-based projects. Renewable Energy Long Island sent out an “action alert” last week encouraging supporters to “make your voice heard” in online news chats.

Neal Lewis, executive director of the Neighborhood Network, whose group, like RELI, has received funding in the past from LIPA, said it is a mistake to portray support for the project as coming from a small group of environmentalists.

The WindWorks coalition, an alliance of local and regional groups supporting the project, is composed of 25 environmental organizations, he said.

What’s more, “every poll that has been done regarding the wind park has shown very strong support – usually in the 70 percent plus range,” he said.

But Lewis conceded that mistakes were made over the past several years, the most prominent of which was failing to disclose the costs early on, and as they escalated. Legislators and even proponent Gordian Raacke of RELI were aghast to discover the cost had ballooned to $700 million by last December, four years after the project had been announced. Lewis advised LIPA to start the process anew, taking a fresh approach to location, technology and the economics.

Farber said the expanded definition of environmentalist will continue to challenge the process. “I believe that many people who’ve come to the environmental movement in recent years have come in because of the energy issues and don’t have a larger understanding of the earth’s systems and communities of life,” she wrote.

“This is going to continue to be a problem when we have environmentalists who don’t really understand or care about the ramifications to the plants and animals and the natural communities they are part of.”

By Mark Harrington

Newsday

28 August 2007

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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