Tories will take the Wind out of the Wind Scam! Fantastic!

Ill wind blows for turbines if Tories win: Wilson 18

By Morgan Ian Adams, Enterprise-Bulletin

Simcoe-Grey Progressive Conservative candidate Jim Wilson (second from right) makes a campaign announcement during a stop at the Collingwood Regional Airport, Friday, May 23, 2014. With Wilson are, from left, pilot Alexander Younger, pilot and airport board chair Charlie Tatham, and pilot Kevin Elwood. Morgan Ian Adams/Collingwood Enterprise-Bulletin/QMI Agency

Simcoe-Grey Progressive Conservative candidate Jim Wilson (second from right) makes a campaign announcement during a stop at the Collingwood Regional Airport, Friday, May 23, 2014. With Wilson are, from left, pilot Alexander Younger, pilot and airport board chair Charlie Tatham, and pilot Kevin Elwood. Morgan Ian Adams/Collingwood Enterprise-Bulletin/QMI AgencCLEARVIEW Twp. —The Progressive Conservative candidate for Simcoe-Grey says he’d put a stop to a company’s plans to erect wind turbines near the local airport should his party form the next government.

By Morgan Ian Adams, Enterprise-Bulletin
CLEARVIEW Twp. —The Progressive Conservative candidate for Simcoe-Grey says he’d put a stop to a company’s plans to erect wind turbines near the local airport should his party form the next government.

In a campaign stop at the Collingwood Regional Airport Friday morning, during which he slammed the existing Green Energy Act and the impact he says it has had on electricity bills, Jim Wilson promised a Progressive Conservative government would do what it could to halt WPD Canada’s plans to erect turbines near the facility should his party win the June 12 provincial election.

WPD’s proposal is to erect eight turbines in the area north of County Road 91; at least two of the proposed 500-foot-tall turbines are within an area the municipal services board that manages the airport say are a potential safety hazard to aircraft, especially in the landing or take-off phase, while another three turbines are considered on the edge of that area.

WPD’s plans are presently under technical review by the Ministry of Environment.

“We’ll do whatever it takes to stop WPD Canada from putting the wind turbines in this vicinity,” said Wilson. “It is in process, and it may end up in a lawsuit, but we just can’t allow it.”

“If you’re going to prevent death, you do everything you can to do that — you have a moral obligation to do that.”

The airport board, and several landowners in the area, have been fighting the proposal for several years; both Collingwood and Clearview Township municipal councils have also voiced their opposition.

One of those landowners, Kevin Ellwood — who has a private aerodrome on his farm on County Road 91, and is faced with the prospect of having a turbine in the path of his landing strip — has filed 39 access-to-information requests of various ministries on WPD’s proposal.

Some of those requests are now before an adjudicator to see if the information will be released.

The turbines, said Ellwood, are “dangerous and significant threats to pilots and their passengers.”

Ellwood and Wilson both point to a crash in South Dakota in April that killed four, after a Piper 32 aircraft collided with a turbine in poor weather conditions. The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating, but authorities have not released any details on the crash.

Regional airport board chair Charlie Tatham, who was on hand for Wilson’s announcement, said he’s tried to point out to provincial officials that the location of the turbines “pose a lethal danger… yet they choose to ignore it.

“To ignore it could lead to someone’s death at some point,” he said.

WPD’s position has been the location of the turbines will have a negligible effect on airport movements.

Wilson, however, remains unconvinced, and says the location of the turbines is just one of the problems with the Green Energy Act, which the Conservatives claim will cost electricity customers $46 billion over the next 20 years, paying out contracts for wind and solar power at rates that far exceed current electricity prices.

“Hopefully we can stop it, that there’s some escape clauses (in the agreements)… but I don’t know the full extent of these (contracts and what’s hidden in them,” said Wilson. “There are thousands, tens of thousands of these contracts that are essentially secret and covered up from the public. This one just keeps on rolling ahead and (government) doesn’t seem to be listening to anybody.”

Wilson said a former provincial Liberal cabinet minister warned the legal costs of putting a halt to some of these contracts would be in the billions of dollars, but that point is irrelevant when considering the long-term cost of paying out energy contracts — or worse, if someone dies because a plane hits a wind turbine located close to the airport.

“It’s a lot cheaper than paying people 20 years of contracts when they get paid whether the wind blows or the sun shines. It’s going to bankrupt the province, so you might as well just cut your losses,” said Wilson.

“It’s a moral choice, it’s an expensive choice, but it’s one we’re going to have to make. Hopefully we can get to the bottom of this on day-one (of a new government)… it may require that we talk to our lawyers, it may require new legislation to undo the Green Energy Act, and if we have to do that… well (the legislature) is supreme.”

Tim Hudak and the Conservatives will End the Money-Grabbing Wind Scam!

wilson
Simcoe-Grey Progressive Conservative candidate Jim Wilson (second from right) makes a campaign announcement during a stop at the Collingwood Regional Airport, Friday, May 23, 2014. With Wilson are, from left, pilot Alexander Younger, pilot and airport board chair Charlie Tatham, and pilot Kevin Elwood. Morgan Ian Adams/Collingwood Enterprise-Bulletin/QMI Agency

CLEARVIEW Twp. —The Progressive Conservative candidate for Simcoe-Grey says he’d put a stop to a company’s plans to erect wind turbines near the local airport should his party form the next government.

In a campaign stop at the Collingwood Regional Airport Friday morning, during which he slammed the existing Green Energy Act and the impact he says it has had on electricity bills, Jim Wilson promised a Progressive Conservative government would do what it could to halt WPD Canada’s plans to erect turbines near the facility should his party win the June 12 provincial election.

WPD’s proposal is to erect eight turbines in the area north of County Road 91; at least two of the proposed 500-foot-tall turbines are within an area the municipal services board that manages the airport say are a potential safety hazard to aircraft, especially in the landing or take-off phase, while another three turbines are considered on the edge of that area.

WPD’s plans are presently under technical review by the Ministry of Environment.

“We’ll do whatever it takes to stop WPD Canada from putting the wind turbines in this vicinity,” said Wilson. “It is in process, and it may end up in a lawsuit, but we just can’t allow it.”

“If you’re going to prevent death, you do everything you can to do that — you have a moral obligation to do that.”

The airport board, and several landowners in the area, have been fighting the proposal for several years; both Collingwood and Clearview Township municipal councils have also voiced their opposition.

One of those landowners, Kevin Ellwood — who has a private aerodrome on his farm on County Road 91, and is faced with the prospect of having a turbine in the path of his landing strip — has filed 39 access-to-information requests of various ministries on WPD’s proposal.

Some of those requests are now before an adjudicator to see if the information will be released.

The turbines, said Ellwood, are “dangerous and significant threats to pilots and their passengers.”

Ellwood and Wilson both point to a crash in South Dakota in April that killed four, after a Piper 32 aircraft collided with a turbine in poor weather conditions. The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating, but authorities have not released any details on the crash.

Regional airport board chair Charlie Tatham, who was on hand for Wilson’s announcement, said he’s tried to point out to provincial officials that the location of the turbines “pose a lethal danger… yet they choose to ignore it.

“To ignore it could lead to someone’s death at some point,” he said.

WPD’s position has been the location of the turbines will have a negligible effect on airport movements.

Wilson, however, remains unconvinced, and says the location of the turbines is just one of the problems with the Green Energy Act, which the Conservatives claim will cost electricity customers $46 billion over the next 20 years, paying out contracts for wind and solar power at rates that far exceed current electricity prices.

“Hopefully we can stop it, that there’s some escape clauses (in the agreements)… but I don’t know the full extent of these (contracts and what’s hidden in them,” said Wilson. “There are thousands, tens of thousands of these contracts that are essentially secret and covered up from the public. This one just keeps on rolling ahead and (government) doesn’t seem to be listening to anybody.”

Wilson said a former provincial Liberal cabinet minister warned the legal costs of putting a halt to some of these contracts would be in the billions of dollars, but that point is irrelevant when considering the long-term cost of paying out energy contracts — or worse, if someone dies because a plane hits a wind turbine located close to the airport.

“It’s a lot cheaper than paying people 20 years of contracts when they get paid whether the wind blows or the sun shines. It’s going to bankrupt the province, so you might as well just cut your losses,” said Wilson.

“It’s a moral choice, it’s an expensive choice, but it’s one we’re going to have to make. Hopefully we can get to the bottom of this on day-one (of a new government)… it may require that we talk to our lawyers, it may require new legislation to undo the Green Energy Act, and if we have to do that… well (the legislature) is supreme.”

By Morgan Ian Adams
Published in the Barrie Examiner, May 23, 2014

Wind Turbine Owner Pays Resident $15,000.00, in “Hush” money.

North Kingstown R.I. Residents Paid 15K To Keep Quiet Over Turbines

North Kingstown, Rhode Island

Court records: Former NK residents paid $15K not to disparage wind turbine
Print

NORTH KINGSTOWN — A couple who previously lived next to the 413-foot wind turbine in a subdivision off Ten Rod Road – and staunchly opposed its construction – were paid $15,000 by the turbine’s owner in 2011 and agreed not to publicly or privately disparage the project.
The couple, Scott and Nicole Newcombe, also agreed not to return any inquiries from the media about the turbine, or provide written or spoken comments about the turbine to any local, state or federal regulatory body, according to a signed copy of the confidential settlement agreement submitted in court documents as part of a civil lawsuit filed by the Newcombes.

The couple, formerly of 52 Thornton Way, filed the lawsuit against North Kingstown Green, Wind Energy Development LLC and Mark DePasquale in Washington County Superior Court on May 10. They now live in North Carolina.
DePasquale is the developer who built the North Kingstown Green subdivision and the owner of Wind Energy Development, which built the controversial turbine. He also is a resident of North Kingstown Green; the turbine is located adjacent to his home at 42 Thornton Way.
Although the turbine was approved by North Kingstown’s Planning Commission in May 2011, residents of North Kingstown Green came out in opposition to the turbine’s construction after the fact – contacting local media and speaking out in opposition to the turbine at Town Council meetings. They said they were not aware of “the particulars” of the turbine proposal and, despite signing a document that said they would support its construction, they opposed it.
In February 2011, the Newcombes and neighbors Colleen Clare, Sean Coen, Kim and Todd Teixeira, Munmun Das, Subhransu Mohanty and Shelley Anderson all signed a letter submitted to the Independent that laid out their concerns with the turbine.
“We at first did not oppose this project, however, with the recent developments surrounding [another proposed turbine at Stamp Farm on South County Trail] and all the new information available to us, we have become more informed of the magnitude and impact this turbine will have on our families’ health and safety, as well as the effect it will have on the perceived value of North Kingstown Green in general and our homes in particular,” the letter noted.
The proposed Stamp Farm turbine was never built.
The North Kingstown Green residents went on to write, “But, our primary concern doesn’t reside with the aesthetic harm to the beauty of our neighborhood and North Kingstown; it is the health and safety issues of our families, especially the children, that most concern us.”
As part of the approved plans, portions of land adjacent to the turbine were to be exchanged between DePasquale and landowners in the development, and property deeds were supposed to be transferred. While all of the North Kingstown Green residents signed letters consenting to the turbine’s construction, the actual paperwork for the deed transfers wasn’t filed with the town.
When some of the neighbors balked at signing the deed transfers, DePasquale filed a $25 million lawsuit against the neighbors in May 2011. A month later, a confidential settlement was reached between DePasquale and the neighbors, but the terms were never disclosed.
The outcry from the neighbors ceased and after the dust settled, the 413-foot Chinese-made Goldwind Global GW87 was erected in October of last year.
Under the terms of the agreement with the Newcombes, DePasquale agreed to pay $15,000 to the couple and would purchase their home for $612,500 if they decided to move. The terms of the confidential settlement agreements with other neighbors was not included in the court record.
When asked if the settlement agreement with the Newcombes was similar to agreements signed with the other neighbors, Brian LaPlante, the couple’s lawyer, said he didn’t know.
DePasquale’s lawyer, Steven Boyajian, declined comment Friday on the case.
According to town property records, the Newcombes bought the house for $575,000 in 2009. The 2013 assessed value is $522,700.
In DePasquale’s deposition, which is included in court documents, he said the agreement to buy the house for more than the selling price was “obscene,” but agreed to the settlement in order to resolve the issue.
The settlement agreement stipulated that if the Newcombes did decide to move, he would buy the house only after receiving federal grant money related to the turbine project, or 180 days after the turbine became operational – which occurred March 1, 2013.
If the Newcombes were able to sell the house on their own for less than the $612,500 figure, DePasquale would pay the difference as long as it was less than $150,000.
That agreement is now at the center of the most recent lawsuit the Newcombes have filed for breach of contract.
According to court documents, a woman who was a friend of the Newcombes contacted Phillips Post Road Realty earlier this year and said her sister was interested in purchasing the Newcombes’ property. She mentioned the Newcombes spoke of their displeasure with the turbine and the legal battle that took place in 2011.
A Realtor contacted the listing agent for the property, who said DePasquale was supposed to be buying the parcel back from the Newcombes, although the listing agent called back the Realtor later and said he wasn’t supposed to have mentioned that fact.
All of the parties involved in those conversations have been issued subpoenas to be deposed.
In the lawsuit, LaPlante argued that the Newcombes “have suffered and will continue to suffer severe and substantial damages” and the settlement agreement was a “valid, binding and enforceable contract.” They asked for the court to issue a declatory judgment and award punitive damages.
Boyajian, however, argued the Newcombes broke the terms of the contract when they discussed the terms of the settlement, the turbine and their displeasure with it with a potential buyer. He said DePasquale has “suffered damages including the loss of a potential purchase of the property,” and asked Superior Court Judge Kristin Rodgers to dismiss the case and order the Newcombes to pay $30,000 in costs associated with defending the lawsuit.
LaPlante asked for Rodgers to issue a summary judgment in the case and argued that the alleged breach – which the Newcombes deny occurred – did not interfere with the construction and operation of the turbine and that the basis of the confidential settlement agreement was to move the project forward to completion. He also argued that DePasquale has not lost any money over the alleged breach.
DePasquale’s lawyers argue it is difficult to quantify any losses associated with “bad publicity” from the dispute with the neighbors. In his deposition, DePasquale said he has been appearing before the Westerly Town Council seeking permission to build two wind turbines in town and that the council continues to make reference to the North Kingstown turbine and the controversy that surrounded it.
Rodgers denied the requests from both lawyers for a ruling and, according to court records, the case was been assigned for trial but no date has been set.
Hundreds of residents attended more than a dozen meetings in 2011 on both the North Kingstown Green turbine proposal and the Stamp Farm proposal. The majority of those residents voiced their staunch opposition to both turbines. Among their fears, opponents said the turbine could fall on a home and kill or injure someone, that their property values would be diminished and the flicker of light off the blades and sound could affect the quality of their lives and their health.
Since that time, the Town Council placed a moratorium on the construction of all wind turbines in town.
church@neindependent.com

church@neindependent.com
http://www.independentri.com/independents/north_east/article_ae66d34a-a3fd-549d-a3a4-04d20788de49.html

Tales of Torture! Living with 3mw Industrial Wind Turbines – Annie Gardner

The Annie Gardner Story

Ep 475 Wind Turbine Wars

Annie Gardner joins us from Victoria to discuss her story regarding the incursion of the Wind Turbine Industry into their family farm. Together we discuss her story and what it is like to live beside 140 wind turbines 90 meters tall, and to feel the health effects from this assault.

We discuss the withholding of Freedom of Information documents pertaining to the comprehensive fraud being conducted against the people of the is country. We discuss the speech by John Madigan in the Senate declaring that Industry is colluding with Doctors and the Medical industry against We the People. Annie has been a tireless worker in the Resistance in an attempt to gain back power for We the People.

14.05.18 Annie Gardner.mp3

 

 http://fairdinkumradio.com/resources/14.05.18%20Annie%20Gardner.mp3

Wind Turbines Sufferer

21.3.13 Also we are joined by Annie Gardner a Farmer from SW Victoria as she shares her story of the effects of the MacArthur Wind Farm bordering her farm.

She discusses the effects on the community, personal health and the animals health. She shares how her business has been destroyed as a result of the Wind Farm operation.

Bird Deaths by Wind Turbines….NOT Sustainable!


Red kite with broken wing awaiting slow death under wind turbine – courtesy of GURELUR

Red kite with broken wing, waiting for a slow death under a wind turbine – courtesy of GURELUR*.


HOW MUCH WILDLIFE CAN USA AFFORD TO KILL?
APRIL 2014



America’s wind farms are actually slaughtering millions of birds and bats annually


By Mark Duchamp


Originally published by The ECO Report


The Obama administration is issuing 30-year permits for “taking” (killing) bald and golden eagles. The great birds will be legally slaughtered “unintentionally” by lethal wind turbines installed in their breeding territories, and in “dispersion areas” where their young congregate (e.g. Altamont Pass).


By chance (if you believe in coincidences), a timely government study claims wind farms will kill “only” 1.4 million birds yearly by 2030 (1). This new report is just one of many, financed with taxpayers’ money, aimed at convincing the public that additional mortality caused by wind plants is sustainable. – It is not.


Dr. Shawn Smallwood’s 2004 study, spanning four years, estimated that California’s Altamont Pass wind “farm” killed an average of 116 Golden Eagles annually (2). This adds up to 2,900 dead “goldies” since it was built 25 years ago. Altamont is the biggest sinkhole for the species, but not the only one, and industry-financed research claiming that California’s GE population is stable is but a white-wash.

6_beheaded_golden_eagle_Altamont_Pass

Golden eagle remains, Altamont Pass windfarm, California – courtesy of Darryl Mueller



Eagles are not the only victims. Smallwood also estimated that Altamont killed an average of 300 red-tailed hawks, 333 American kestrels and 380 burrowing owls annually – plus even more non-raptors, including 2,526 rock doves and 2,557 western meadowlarks.


In 2012, breaking the European omerta on wind farm mortality, the Spanish Ornithological Society (SEO/Birdlife) reviewed actual carcass counts from 136 monitoring studies. They concluded that Spain’s 18,000 wind turbines are killing 6-18 million birds and bats yearly (3).


Extrapolating that and similar (little publicized) German and Swedish studies, 39,000 U.S. wind turbines would not be killing “only” 440,000 birds (USFWS, 2009) or “just” 573,000 birds and 888,000 bats (Smallwood, 2013) (4), but 13-39 million birds and bats every year!


However, this carnage is being covered up by self-serving and/or politically motivated government agencies, wind industry lobbyists, environmental groups and ornithologists, under a pile of misleading studies paid for with more taxpayer money.


Wildlife expert Jim Wiegand has documented how areas searched under wind turbines are still confined to 200-foot radiuses, even though modern monster turbines catapult 90% of bird and bat carcasses much further. Windfarm owners, operating under voluntary(!) USFWS guidelines, commission studies that search much-too-small areas, look only once every 30-90 days, ensuring that scavengers remove most carcasses, and ignore wounded birds that happen to be found within search perimeters (5).


These research protocols are designed to guarantee extremely low mortality statistics, hiding the true death tolls – and the USFWS seems inclined to let the deception continue. In addition, bird mortality data are now considered to be the property of windfarm owners, which means the public no longer has a right to know.


Nevertheless, news has leaked that eagles are being hacked to death all across America. This is hardly surprising, as raptors are attracted to wind turbines. They perch on them to rest or scan for prey. They come because turbines are often built in habitats that have abundant food (live or carrion) and good winds for gliding (6).


Save the Eagles International (STEI) has posted photographs of raptors perched on nacelles or nonmoving blades, and ospreys building a nest on a decommissioned turbine. Moving blades don’t deter them either: videos show a turkey vulture perched on the hub of a spinning turbine, and a griffon vulture being struck (6). Birds perceive areas traveled by spinning blades as open space, unaware that blade tips are moving at up to 180 mph. Many are focused on prey. These factors make wind turbines “ecological death traps,” wherever they are located.

Ospreys_new_home

Courtesy of Jefferson’s Leaning Left blog



By 2030, the United States plans to produce 20% of its electricity from wind. That’s nearly six times as much as today, from three or four times as many turbines, striking more flying creatures due to their bigger size (even the mendacious study predicting 1.4 million bird kills recognizes this). Using the higher but still underestimated level of mortality published by Smallwood in 2013, by 2030 our wind turbines would be killing over 3 million birds and 5 million bats annually.


But this is shy of reality by a factor of ten, because 90% of casualties land outside the search perimeter and are not counted. We are thus really talking about an unsustainable death toll of 30 million birds and 50 million bats a year – and more still if we factor in other hide-the-mortality tricks documented by STEI.


This carnage includes protected species that cars and cats rarely kill: eagles, hawks, falcons, owls, condors, whooping cranes, geese, bats and many others. The raptor slaughter will cause rodent populations to soar. Butchery of bats (7), already being decimated by White Nose Syndrome (8), will hammer agriculture.

BUITRES - 15.2 KB

Griffon vultures killed by wind turbine, Spain – courtesy of GURELUR*



The U.S. Geological Survey says the value of pest-control services to US agriculture provided by bats ranges from $3.7 billion to as much as $53 billion yearly (9). These chiropters alsocontrol forest pests and serve as pollinators. Swedish studies have documented theirattraction from nine miles away to insects that swarm around wind turbines (10). Hence the slaughter.


Wind lobbyists claim they need “regulatory certainty.” However, eagle “take” permits will also ensure extinction certainty – and ecological, agricultural, economic and social disasters that America cannot afford.




* GURELUR is an association of ecologists based in Pamplona, Navarre, Spain.


____________
Mark Duchamp is President of Save the Eagles International, and Chairman of the World Council for Nature

Kathleen Wynne Tries to Woo Rural Ontarians….Too Little, Too Late!

KATHLEEN WYNNE HOPES HER “FARMS FOREVER”

MESSAGE WILL BRIDGE RURAL/URBAN DIVIDE *GAG*

Richard J. Brennan — Toronto Star — May 19, 2014

BRANTFORD, ONT.—Liberal Leader Kathleen Wynne is hoping that red rubber boots, a few kind words and lots of money will bridge the gap between urban and rural Ontario.
Wynne, who is agriculture minister as well as premier, visited a cattle ‎farm just outside of Brantford Tuesday where she recommitted the $400 million over 10 years contained in the budget to help farmer and the agri-food industry.
Wooing Tory blue areas outside theGTA is a major focus for the mostly urban supported Liberals‎.

“I am here because it is so critical that we understand the importance of the agri-food industry in Ontario,” she told reporters, who had successfully dodged cow patties.
“This is a $34 billion industry. There are thousands of farmers in Ontario . . . every one of them is important to the economy of the province,” she said.
Farmers have been suspicious of Wynne, a Toronto MPP‎, taking on the role of agriculture minister.
Wynne said she has heard time and again in her travels that farmers are concerned “about farmland staying farmland.”
“So another part of our plan is a farms forever plan that would facilitate agriculture easements so farmland can stay as farmland.”  Continue reading and LEAVE A COMMENT here….
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piggy-wellies

Community Members Prepare to Defend Themselves Against Industrial Wind Turbines!

These wind turbines are threatening watersheds & economy

Where’s the story?PointsMentioned Map1 Points Mentioned

To The Daily Sun,

It’s unusual that a $500 million investment in the Newfound Lake community is being greeted with such community concern. After all, when was the last time anyone invested that much money here?

Make no mistake about it, Newfound Lake is under attack, and it’s coming in the form of 500-foot industrial wind turbines on our ridge lines with all electricity being routed to southern states.

Newfound Lake and Cardigan residents are overwhelmingly united in their opposition to newly proposed industrial wind plants. And Concord is very well aware of our community stance against additional wind development through our direct testimonies and detailed objections. Residents have officially voted twice against additional development and have also voted-in a new “Rights Based Ordinances” laws. And yes, for much of this past winter our voices have been raised and our tempers have flared at these town hall meetings.

Remember there is no shortage of electricity in N.H. N.H. has been exporting excess electricity to southern states for decades. It’s a very successful model — and many residents are questioning why we would consider hurting that model. But the million dollar question that remains is: “Why are we paying for any of this?”

Our story is very different. These turbines are threatening our watersheds, threatening our tourism, threatening our local economy and is threatening our “Natural Rights” and our “Quality of Place”.

We are not going down without a fight and we want your support. Summer residents and visitors alike should voice their concerns. Educate yourself this Sunday, May 25th at The Inn on Newfound Lake from 4:00 PM to 6:00 PM. It’s a critical information update meeting. Everyone is welcome. There is no charge to attend this event.

I hope to see you all there! Bring a friend…

Ray Cunningham
Bridgewater

The “Gang-green”, would like to eradicate the Humans on this earth!

Marita on the Well Being of Humans

Some people are convinced that we have no business on this earth, and we have no right to use the resources–the planet should be some kind of park.

 I would disagree, at least until I am dead or demented. Marita explains how modern exploration and production processes are enviro- friendly. But these greenies are really people haters, no question. If somebody needs electricity in the 3rd world, better not violate some green idea of what’s right for mother Gaia. Guess what, Mother Gaia doesn’t exist, except in their true believer heads.

Marita’s essay for this week.

For immediate release: May 19, 2014

Commentary by Marita Noon

Executive Director, Energy Makes America Great Inc.

Contact: 505.239.8998, marita@responsiblenergy.org

Words: 1606

The liberty and energy connection

Following my appearance on the Daily Show, I’ve received emails and phone calls from people who don’t agree with my views about energy and the advantages America’s energy abundance provides—benefits that drive both progress and prosperity.

Some of the emails can’t be read in polite company, but one that can asked: “Please explain how energy from mountain top removal, fracking, and tar sands makes America great.” The word choices Greg selected tell me that he isn’t truly seeking enlightenment and is instead aiming to antagonize me. The next day, he sent another: “I have yet to hear back on this simple question. Please respond.”

It does seem like a simple question. One I should be able to answer in an instant. But I didn’t want to offer platitudes. I felt the question deserved a thoughtful answer. So, Greg, here you are.

I’ve spent the past couple of days at a conference on “Energy, Economics and Liberty.” There discussions took place on the energy debate, government’s role, market solutions, and the geo-politics of energy. About twenty men—all experts in various aspects of energy—attended. I wasn’t just the only female I was the only energy advocate. The topics brought Greg’s request to mind and the conversations helped form the answers.

One of the participants, Jim Clarkson, wrote an article titled: “The Shale Gas Paradigm,” in which he states: “Increased access to energy is a key to economic progress in the undeveloped world.” Similarly, in my book, Energy Freedom, I quote Robert Bryce, author of Power Hungry, who says: “Electricity is the energy commodity that separates the developed countries from the rest. Countries that can provide cheap and reliable electric power to their citizens can grow their economies and create wealth. Those who can’t, can’t.”

Senate Major Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) once said: “Oil and gas are making us sick.” But I contend that they—along with coal—are the very things keeping us well. In Energy Freedom’s introduction, I point out: “Energy saves lives. When fire strikes or hurricanes are bearing down upon a city, it is energy—in this case in the form of gasoline—that allows people to drive away and escape death. … When weather is extreme, it is energy—usually in the form of electricity (most frequently from coal or natural gas)—that keeps people alive. Air conditioning allows people to live in comfort in Arizona in the summer. Heating keeps people from freezing to death in Alaska in the winter. Energy keeps us well. Energy makes us comfortable.”

The Energy, Economics and Liberty conference was hosted by the Liberty Fund. On its website, it offers this definition of liberty: “the beginning and the source of happiness from which all beneficial things flow in return.” Much like liberty, energy is the source from which many beneficial things flow. Energy has been a source of America’s freedom, a big part of what has made America great.

The conflicts in Ukraine have made the importance of energy freedom clear. Because of being on the Daily Show talking about fracking, I’ve been given other opportunities to address the topic. One was with former Minnesota Governor Jesse Ventura for his show Off the Grid. At the end of the twenty-minute interview, he asked me for closing comments. I said something like: “Because of fracking, OPEC would never be able to use energy as a weapon as it did to America in 1973 and as we see Russia doing to Ukraine today.”

Greg’s email to me used terms that lead to three different energy sources: coal, natural gas, and oil—and each have been big contributors to America’s progress and prosperity. Each has made the personal lives of Americans more pleasant and less painful. Together these energy sources have made America energy secure.

The email used the term “mountain top removal,” which is a method by which coal can be mined. It is safer than underground mines because it removes the risk of mine accidents, the horror of which we’ve recently witnessed in Turkey. (Note: America has far more stringent mining regulations today than does most of the world.) Greg likely selected the term “mountain top removal” because it sounds harsh. In fact, in the mountainous regions of Eastern Kentucky and West Virginia, this surface mining process allows for hospitals, housing developments, shopping centers to be built—all which bring more economic development and much needed jobs.

I’ve toured regions where “mountain top removal” is being done and stood on top of the massive coal seam. The procedure is amazing. Picture the region like lots of upside down ice cream cones next to each other. Hills and valleys—but no place to create a community. In that mountain is a thick layer of coal that goes all the way through the mountain, north to south, east to west. To access it, the dirt, the tip of the ice cream cone, is taken off and the coal is removed.

In the past, when the coal had been extracted, a private landowner could ask the mining company to level out the land—making it economically productive. However, today’s regulations take away that property owner’s rights and require that the mountain be rebuilt and put back to its original condition. If the landowner wants to turn his land into a housing development, he then has to incur the expense of, once again, removing the peak and leveling the land.

The coal provides, and has provided, America with low-cost, base-load electricity—which, as we’ve already addressed, has given us a competitive advantage in the global marketplace and unmatched personal progress. And, therefore, energy from mountain top removal makes America Great.

Fracking—short for hydraulic fracturing—combined with the amazing technology of horizontal drilling, has brought America into a new era of energy abundance. Clarkson states: “Gas using industries are expanding while we enjoy a distinct advantage over the rest of the world.” He explains: “Shale gas lay worthless beneath the earth’s surface for the whole of man’s previous existence until human intelligence made it valuable”—and that was done with fracking.

One of the definitions of liberty found at Dictionary.com is: “freedom from arbitrary or despotic government or control.” Clarkson points out: “There were no federal programs with subsidies, tax breaks, and mandated markets to favor the shale industry. …The new shale order of things is a triumph of free enterprise over government planning. The shale revolution shows that the good old American know-how and individual initiative that made this country great have survived the burden of big government and can still create economic miracles.” Clarkson closes with: “Some observers are already calling this the century of natural gas. This could also be the century of prosperity, free markets, and optimism as America regains its energy mojo.”

Unlike the pariah Greg presumes fracking to be, it is responsible for the shale gas phenomenon.

Last, Greg asked about tar sands and how they make America great. Tar sands, or oil sands, allow America to get oil from our friendly Canadian neighbor and reduce our need to import OPEC’s oil. We then refine that oil into gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel that fuels our transportation fleet—something that wind and solar power cannot do.

I have been to the oil sands of Canada and what they are doing there is, like fracking and horizontal drilling, a technological miracle.

If you have ever walked on a California beach and stepped on a tar ball (created when the oil seeps out of the ground and is washed ashore mixed with sand), you have a clue what the tar sands are like. The naturally occurring tar sands are a layer in the earth (much like coal). This layer has raw crude oil mixed with the dirt/sands. I recall driving to the tar sands from the town where we stayed. As the elevation increased, I noticed that trees reached a certain height and then died. It was explained that as soon as the roots hit the bitumen (or tar) it kills the tree.

At the extraction site, the tar sands are bulldozed and dumped into giant trucks (much like surface coal mining). The tar and sand mixture is processed to separate the oil and the sand. (Think of taking that tar ball from the beach and boiling it. The oil melts and floats while the sand drops to the bottom.) The oil is now available for use and the clean sand is put back into the earth—only now the trees can actually grow. The reclaimed land is teaming with wildlife that lives in the healthy forest the extraction process provides. As a result, when the Keystone pipeline is approved, America would be far less dependent on people who aim to do us harm and OPEC couldn’t cause an instant recession as it did in 1973. Plus, Keystone will be safer and cheaper—not to mention creating more jobs—than shipping the oil via rail as we are currently doing.

And that, Greg, is how tar sands can make America greater.

Yes, mountain top removal—or coal; fracking—or natural gas; and tar sands—or oil, make America great. The use of natural resources are a part of liberty: “freedom from control, interference, obligation, restriction, hampering conditions, etc.; power or right of doing, thinking, speaking, etc., according to choice.”

People like Greg want to interfere, restrict, and hamper North America’s energy abundance—which will take away America’s ability to provide cheap and reliable power to her citizens and take away the ability to grow the economy and create wealth. Why would anyone want to do that?

The author of Energy Freedom, Marita Noon serves as the executive director for Energy Makes America Great Inc. and the companion educational organization, the Citizens’ Alliance for Responsible Energy (CARE)

Faux-green wind turbine pushers not helping our environment!

Alan Moran: time to Terminate the Great RET Scam

Arnold-Schwarzenegger-look-hd-wallpapers

Alan Moran took on the role of RET “Terminator” some time back (see our post here).

For Alan the driving question is not: “are you John Connor?” – it’s more like “are you Miles George?” – or any other wind industry rent-seeker hoping to continue stealing from Australian power punters, for that matter.

But there’s nothing to fear from this particular Terminator, as Alan has had the protection of Australia’s future economic prosperity hard-wired into his program.

Here’s Alan “The Terminator” Moran setting out just why the mandatory Renewable Energy Target simply has to go now.

Subsidy scam hurt the energy sector
The Australian
Alan Moran
19 May 2014

IN addressing climate change spending and regulatory costs, the government has made some impressive first steps. Few of these are in the wrong direction.

Labor went to last year’s election with more than $5 billion a year in budget outlays for its climate change programs. This included more than $2bn a year to be spent by the Clean Energy Finance Corporation.

In addition, Labor’s carbon tax would be raising $13bn by next year (though Kevin Rudd had foreshadowed reducing this) and its renewable energy target would be raising electricity bills — by $5bn a year by 2020.

In all, Labor’s planned spending on reducing greenhouse gas emissions was ramping up to $23bn a year, similar to the entire defence budget or twice the annual spending planned by the present government on transport and communications, which house its signature infrastructure areas.

In its first move to cut back the climate change impositions, the Coalition put beyond doubt any question of keeping the carbon tax.

The budget reinforces this by curtailing many other programs, though painfully slowly in some cases.

There have been backward steps. Among these is the creation of the Green Army, a sort of “young pioneer” corps of the unemployed doing landcare repair to prepare themselves for future taxpayer-funded environmental jobs. The program’s objectives avoid mentioning climate change but, starting at $48 million this year, spending is ostensibly hurtling towards $230m annually. This is an expensive attempt to deflect green dudgeon.

We have also seen the first spending step of the Direct Action program. Limited to $75m in the current year, this is planned to increase but remains a far cry from the $1bn-a-year spending the Coalition once proposed. “One million roofs”, once flaunted as a $100m program, has been dropped.

Outweighing these new spending measures are many program cuts within the environment and industry departments.

These include savage cuts to the adaptation and international negotiation spend — no more of those 114-delegation team visits such as the one that accompanied Rudd to Copenhagen in 2009.

The budget abolishes the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA), saving $1.3bn. However, ARENA’s chairman, the World Wildlife Fund’s Greg Bourne, like his counterpart at the Clean Energy Finance Corp, said he would continue “delivering funding to worthy projects” until the agency’s bank account was closed.

Also to be terminated, with a saving of $460m, is the scandalously wasteful carbon capture and storage program, though its commitments might mean it soldiers on to 2017.

Similarly, the government has closed the $17m “clean coal” initiative and axed the $20m a year Clean Technology Innovation program. Also gone is the Green Car Innovation Fund, which became redundant as a result of labour laws and regulatory-induced increases in energy prices that made motor vehicle manufacturing unprofitable in Australia.

Ever so gingerly, Joe Hockey has begun paring back the profligate scam that is ethanol subsidies, grabbing back $120m a year.

The government’s own published estimate of aggregate climate change expenditure is that it falls from $5.75bn this year to $500m two years hence. This includes spending by the Clean Energy Finance Corp.

But it excludes some spending, such as that of the CSIRO, which, when it saw its interest was in being active on climate matters, claimed that about 50 per cent of its budget was being spent in these directions. CSIRO can count itself lucky to have escaped with a mere $33m haircut, less than 5 per cent of its direct budget.

Outside the budget is the renewable energy target, presently under review by a panel headed by Dick Warburton.

Renewable energy from wind and solar, the two major subsidised supply types, remains non-commercial. It is three times the cost of electricity sourced from coal.

Renewable energy lobbyists have done wonders in getting governments to force consumers and other producers to pay $18.5bn on worthless assets.

Even with the carbon tax repealed, according to the electricity market regulator, next year will have renewable subsidies and associated schemes bringing about a 75 per cent increase in the wholesale electricity price.

Those arguing for the retention of the subsidies on renewables nonsensically claim that they reduce overall electricity prices.

In fact, the privileged position of renewables, if left untouched, would entail bankrupting the commercial providers, leaving a legacy of much higher prices and less reliable supply.

It is also claimed that early termination of the renewables program would introduce an element of sovereign risk into Australia’s investment environment.

This is untrue. The withdrawal of a privilege does not constitute a government seizure of property which would undermine investor confidence.

Nobody suggested compensating the motor-vehicle assemblers for the billion or so dollars they have written down as a result of losing government supports.

Nor has Spain suffered from reputational loss since it wound down its previously agreed wind and solar subsidies.

Wind and other renewables should be left to stand on their own feet commercially. Their ongoing subsidisation severely weakens the national economy and should be terminated immediately.

The cuts to Australia’s energy subsidies will force the entrepreneurs who have been so successful in grabbing government favours to make their fortunes elsewhere.

This is a gain to Australia and ways should be explored to allow earlier terminations of wasteful schemes that have been put in place.

Alan Moran is director, deregulation, at the Institute of Public Affairs.
The Australian

As you’d expect from Alan, all pretty sound stuff there.

The idea that the world’s climate could (somehow?) be controlled from a building in Canberra was always hard to fathom. That we’re paying $billions of “bucks” for no proven “bang” is nothing short of an outrage.

With the Coalition government chopping into welfare entitlements (and future health and education spending) in its very first budget – resulting in hysterical, self-interested moaning from the left – it’s pretty hard to justify the $billions being wasted on thousands of Canberra-based pen pushers – who claim to be able to reverse “climate change” (formerly known as “global warming”) with the stroke of a well-aimed biro.

The Clean Energy Finance Corporation and the ARENA Fund are being used as nothing more than wind industry slush funds: propping up totally un-commercial ventures that reputable banks wouldn’t touch with a barge pole – all of which are doomed to end in corporate collapses of monumental proportions – as the RET gets wound back or scrapped.

The loans being doled out by the CEFC are not accompanied with any valuable security, as the borrowers have no valuable security to offer.

Ordinarily, a wind power company looking to finance construction of a wind farm already has a Power Purchase Agreement which it offers to its banker as security for its loan. The bank takes security in the form of a charge over the future income stream guaranteed for 15 years under the PPA, thus protecting itself in the event that the wind power company goes bust.

But none of the wind power companies taking loans from the CEFC have PPAs – if they did they would be borrowing from commercial lenders.

As a result, Australian taxpayers are underwriting $billions in highly-risky, unsecured CEFC loans to wind power companies. When these outfits inevitably go bust, Australian taxpayers will end up carrying the can for $billions. The sooner the CEFC gets the axe, the better.

STT hears that the Coalition is also looking at ways of unwinding existing CEFC lending agreements; the great majority of which fail to meet the CEFC’s own lending criteria. In that event, the Coalition will be able to set aside existing loan agreements and claw back the 100s of $millions already received by wind power companies under those agreements; and prevent them taking any further advances available under those agreements.

While a CEFC loan facility might be for $100 million, say, the wind power company will only draw-down on that facility as the need arises (for example, $3 million for costs associated with getting planning approval) – leaving the balance in the hands of the CEFC. By setting aside CEFC loan agreements now the Coalition will prevent the wind power company from being able to draw-down on the balance of the facility and can then set about recovering amounts already received by the wind power company in question.

Even harder to justify than the CEFC is a retention of the mandatory Renewable Energy Target which – if left in its current form – will lead to a doubling of retail power prices within the next 3 to 4 years – on top of the 110% increase caused by the RET over the last 5 years.

Across Australia, there are tens of thousands of homes that have been disconnected from the grid, simply because they can no longer afford to pay their crippling power bills. If the Coalition is looking to win Brownie points with the poorest in our community – and the welfare groups that purport to represent them – then scrapping the mandatory RET is a surefire winner.

Now, we can’t fault Alan’s reasoning when it comes to scrapping the mandatory RET and axeing the CEFC and ARENA Fund.

But we do take issue with his heartless attack on the creation of the “Green Army” – which Alan describes as: “a sort of “young pioneer” corps of the unemployed doing landcare repair to prepare themselves for future taxpayer-funded environmental jobs.”

You see, in a few short months, there’ll be hundreds of so-called “environmentalists” without any gainful employment. There’ll be a veritable “green” sea of economic refugees flooding out of the Climate Change Authority, the ARENA Fund and the CEFC, just to name a few.

This band of erstwhile eco-warriors will be joined by dozens from wind power outfits like Infigen, RATCH and Pac Hydro – as they inevitably collapse – who’ll obviously be looking to take up the cudgels in defence of the planet.

Remember how Nick Valentine spruiked to packed town halls all over New South Wales about how RATCH’s giant fans were going to save the planet by literally sucking CO2 out of the atmosphere? Surely, Nick and his doppelgänger, Frank Bestic, will want to continue their “wonderful” work in the future? (see our posts here and here and here).

Of course, there’ll be that loyal squad of eco-fascist bloggers who – up till now – have been receiving a fat pile wind industry cash to bleat about the “wonders” of wind power – on sites like The Climate Speculator, ruin-economy and yes2ruining-us – all looking for something to fill in their days and pay the rent. And let’s not forget the champion team of “spinners” from the Clean Energy Council – who’ll have no means of support, once their wind industry clients are all wound-up.

It must be frustrating for all these bright young things to be cooped up in five-star offices in Canberra – or driving around in brand new 4WDs lying to rural communities about your bosses’ “brilliant” giant fans – when they could actually be out doing something positive to improve the health of the environment?

So, instead of throwing this passionate young band on the economic scrapheap, why not make use of their burning desire to “save the planet” and put them to work actually doing something practical to that end?

Now, some might consider that being press-ganged into the “Green Army” is a kind of state sanctioned punishment – akin to the Gulags and “education through labour” camps run by Generalissimo Stalin and Chairman Mao (although we note that these characters are held up as “Poster-Boys” by many of these same political neophytes).

But no, these starry-eyed, underemployed (and soon to be unemployed) ideologues should consider being recruited into the new “Green Army” as a golden opportunity for them to finally put their “green” credentials to the test.

Sure, they’ll experience backaches and blisters for the very first time in their lives – but, as another first – their daily labours will actually result in CO2 abatement.

You see, if they plant just 6 trees they’ll be able to tweet their excitement to all their eco-followers about the fact that they’ve just abated the equivalent of 1 tonne of “dreadful” CO2 gas from the atmosphere.

Once upon a time to be called a “tree hugger” was seen by greenies as a badge of honour. Well, here’s a chance for young-modern environmentalists to truly earn that tag.

When their trees grow up – in a nod to their environmental warrior ancestors – they’ll be able to give them all an almighty hug – clearly a much more “natural” experience than hugging a Vestas V112, which seems to be the fashion amongst their kind today (see our post here).

But wait, there’s more – instead of farmers forming lynch mobs to greet them when they lob into town – as they do now – the locals will welcome them with open arms and set them to work planting trees – as shelter-belts to protect livestock – and to restore eroded creek-lines and gullies – REAL environmental work.

And the billions of trees they’ll get to plant as Green Army Regulars will provide shelter and habitat for millions of native birds and animals – instead of slicing and dicing them – like the giant fans that they’ve all died in a ditch to promote over the last few years.

Truly a “win, win, win” situation.

So Alan – if you want to do something for the environment – then get behind the Green Army now – it really could save the planet – one tree at a time.

treeplanting005f

 

 

First Nations Stops Approval from the M.O.E. for Wind Turbine Project!!!

Horizon Wind Farm Court Decision

Posted 16 May 2014 by  in Business
Great news for Thunder Bay!
The Fort William First Nation have stopped the Horizon Wind project on the grounds that the Province failed in its duty to consult.
This is the first time a First Nation has succeeded based on these grounds.
Amazing how an election gets their attention…
Maybe the Michipicoten FN and Curve Lake claims that they were not properly consulted will get some traction now, at least we can hope.



Horizon Wind has lost in their application to have the Ministry of the Environment give them approval for the wind farm... appears that Fort William First Nation wins this one...

Developing Story…Nor’Wester Old Growth Maple Forest

THUNDER BAY – BREAKING NEWS – Horizon Wind has lost in their application to have the Ministry of the Environment give them approval for the Big Thunder Wind Farm… appears that Fort William First Nation wins this one…

The original application was submitted in September 2012. In a news release the company states, “In 2007, Horizon Wind Inc. entered into an agreement with the City of Thunder Bay for the potential development of the Big Thunder Wind Park.

Horizon Director of Community Affairs Kathleen MacKenzie stated at the time, “Community members from Thunder Bay, the Municipality of Neebing and surrounding First Nation communities have been engaged in this process with us for several years now. We are hopeful that residents will be pleased with the REA submission and how it directly responds to their feedback. We have listened and consulted extensively and are now looking to move this project to the next step, working together with the community”.

FWFN Chief Explains Norwester Issue

 

 

Fort William First Nation repeatedly explained that their community had not been consulted.

Developing….

Sugar Maples

– See more at: http://www.netnewsledger.com/2014/05/16/horizon-wind-farm-court-decision/#sthash.mpBLdI4d.dpuf