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Osage County plans advanced for 2nd wind farm 

Credit:  By Mike Erwin | Bartlesville Examiner-Enterprise | July 19, 2015 | examiner-enterprise.com ~~

PAWHUSKA – A Kansas-based energy company has received permission to use rural Osage County roads during construction of a second wind-turbine facility that’s planned west of Pawhuska.

Osage County Commissioners approved the road maintenance proposal last week for Mustang Run Wind Project, a 67-tower wind farm proposed by Tradewind Energy of Lenexa, Kan.

Mustang Run would cover several thousand acres of leased prairie land in west central Osage County. The new project is to be built adjacent to Osage Wind, a recently-completed 150-megawatt facility along U.S. Highway 60 – just east of the Burbank community and south of Shidler.

When Osage Wind was put into operation in June, it culminated nearly four years of controversy fueled by broadly-based opposition from county property owners, nature groups and wildlife organizations, and the Osage Nation.

Osage Wind includes 84 turbines – each measuring 420 feet in height (from the ground to its highest blade) – which are scattered over an 8,400-acre leased tract between 16 and 20 miles west of Pawhuska.

The Mustang Run road-use request was submitted to commissioners on July 6. After the proposal was reviewed by county legal staff, representatives of the energy company attended last Monday’s meeting to formally seek its approval.

Tradewind official Aaron Weigel said the Mustang Run construction is expected to primarily affect a six-mile stretch of Foraker Road – a county thoroughfare running north from a Highway 60 junction approximately 12 miles west of Pawhuska.

Weigel said videos will be made of the county roadways before and after the project is built. Those videos can be used at the conclusion of the construction to help county officials determine if road maintenance is needed as a result of the project, he added.

While all necessary repairs will be paid for by Tradewind, Weigel said he believes damage to the roadways will be minimal.

“I think there will be less impact than there had been with the other project,” said Weigel, who also was involved with the development of Osage Wind.

Kathryn Pakdel, assistant developer for Mustang Run, said Tradewind is committed to completing the project by the end of 2016.

“We intend to begin construction as soon as we possibly can,” Pakdel said.

Weigel said he anticipates the two Osage County wind-energy facilities will be almost indistinguishable when the second project is completed.

“They will overlap, somewhat, so I don’t think you’ll notice where Osage Wind ends or Mustang Run begins,” said Weigel, who also was involved with development of Osage Wind.

Mustang Run was developed by Tradewind Energy shortly after the company purchased Osage Wind from its original developers in 2013.

Later, with legal controversies continuing to surround the Osage County wind projects, Tradewind turned Osage Wind over to Enel Green Power N.A. – a multinational energy corporation with which Tradewind is affiliated.

In March 2014, after opponents of both projects turned out in force for a public hearing on Mustang Run, the second development was denied a conditional-use permit it needed to begin construction.

Tradewind appealed the Osage County Board of Adjustment’s decision denying the permit. Later, a ruling on the appeal – which had been favorable to the wind farm development – was likewise challenged.

Pakdel told commissioners that Tradewind is prepared to proceed with construction of Mustang Run even though an Oklahoma Supreme Court ruling is still pending on the permit issues.

Completion of the project in 2016 would allow it to receive some significant state tax credits that are scheduled to expire at the end of next year.

Source:  By Mike Erwin | Bartlesville Examiner-Enterprise | July 19, 2015 | examiner-enterprise.com

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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