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Obama Administration Hosts Great Lakes Offshore Wind Workshop in Chicago with Great Lakes Wind CollaborativeSubmitted by Norm Roulet on Thu, 10/28/2010 - 10:55.
I just received an after-the-fact announcement from President Obama's U.S. Department of Energy that Obama Administration Hosts Great Lakes Offshore Wind Workshop in Chicago with Great Lakes Wind Collaborative, reporting on "a workshop with the Great Lakes Wind Collaborative in Chicago on October 26 – 27, 2010, focused on the siting of offshore wind power in the Great Lakes. The two day workshop brought together wind developers, Federal and state regulators, environmental advocates, and other regional stakeholders to discuss methods for ensuring greater clarity, certainty and coordination of Federal and state decision-making for offshore wind development in the Great Lakes." Yet, on September 14, 2010, the Cleveland Plain Dealer reported Bechtel among developers selected for building a Lake Erie wind farm off Cleveland's coast, stating:
Anyone who has bothered to venture outside Ohio knows there are 1,000s of wind turbines now in America - this is a mature industry - wind on water is common in the Atlantic - and you see turbine parts being trucked down every major highway to new sites. "Ohio becoming the major hub for this industry" would seem to be wishful thinking - wind turbines are not new to offshore development, and not new to America as of the Obama administration. America burning more coal now - and building more coal burning capacity, now - than under President Bush... that is new. Clevelanders all know we are at the center of Obama's expanding coal polluting, as we live with the cancer, asthma and death as a result. So what gives with bringing Cleveland some relief with wind power... do we get to be #1 Mr. President, or has that economic development prize been promised to a more important state for you? From earlier PD coverage of the Cleveland wind development efforts - 5 turbines in the works for wind power project in Lake Erie:
So what gives with Strickland and Mason's plans for a big offshore wind farm project on Lake Erie, versus the statement by the U.S. Department of Energy that "We must improve and increase the lines of communication to bring wind development in the Great Lakes closer to fruition"? To me, an article in the PD announcing a $100 million wind project for Cleveland is supposed to be real fruit. Is it not real?!?! The Plain Dealer, Cleveland industrialists and County Prosecutor Bill Mason have led Cleveland citizens to believe Cleveland has already moved to the center of the Great Lakes wind industry, having dedicated $millions of taxpayer funds and years of community attention to planning a breakthrough industrial development for here, and contracting Bechtel to build (5) 4MW wind turbines north of Cleveland, on Lake Erie... that being the outcome of five years of positioning by the powers who be here in NEO and Ohio. Now we learn Obama may have a different mission for wind on the great lakes, with a group called the Great Lakes Wind Collaborative, in Ann Arbor, Michigan - again quoting Nancy Sutley, Chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality: "We must improve and increase the lines of communication to bring wind development in the Great Lakes closer to fruition." If Ohio is spending $100 million on wind in Lake Erie RIGHT NOW, I would expect that to be acknowledged by Obama in this media release about Federal Great Lakes wind strategy, NOW. What gives? The U.S. Department of Energy reports:
So, Obama, what is the "path for moving forward that brings clarity and certainty to the process and that will benefit states, developers and the public", including in Ohio? If you now have clarity on that, you should make it public... tell us the truth, when you are here in Cleveland this weekend. In Cleveland, citizens expect the Great Lakes wind industry to be based HERE, built HERE, and rooted HERE. Is it actually based in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and meeting in Chicago, Illinois... and how were Cleveland citizens led so far astray? Is all this just politics, and Ohio will lose with Strickland? Is all this just political gamesmanship for chosen audiences - as trite and unreal as the statement "President Obama has made an unprecedented commitment to renewable energy development in the United States" when the president seems most committed to burning coal? Hard to hide a $100 million wind turbine development, or lack thereof, so I guess citizens will learn the truth eventually. I'd prefer to know before casting my ballot November 2nd, 2010.
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Windy Shores
Wind power should be welcomed all across the north shore. The additional power will be a good supliment to the likely increase in electrical demand. Of course the demand increase in Power will arrive as soon as the group of idiots running the county shove-off. Wind capacity factors haver increased since the Late 90's. Todays turbine have about a 30% capacity factor (measure of generated power vs. potential power). See American Wind Energy Assoc.: http://www.awea.org/faq/wwt_basics.html for more statistic on Wind power. Wind turbines also have about a 98% availability, which means they are extremely reliable when called upon to generate electricity. As long as there's enough wind to turn the rotor, these things will generate small amounts of power which can be loaded into the massive electrical grid.
(I did it right the second time)
Nice table - so PA wind is largely (all?) pre-Obama
Nice table - so PA wind was largely (all?) planned pre-Obama
Any data on cost per MW for construction and percentage operations and maintenance cost per MWh?
What about for Ohio? How much wind do we have today - when was it planned and built - what is planned statewide?
And the big question is whether Cleveland's Lake Erie plans are real or not, and who has got the money?
Disrupt IT
Man I screwed that post up.
OOPS. Pasted to many times. The charts show the amount of wind generation projects in PA and Utilities that utilize that power for their customers.
Table format issue
No big deal - I took out the table format - it is still readable.
Sometimes the HTML code for the posting takes over the css for the page
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Thanks
Thanks Norm
The only editing I do is fix HTML that blows up our CSS
The only editing I do is fix HTML that blows up our CSS.
Tables are always tough - I usually take a screenshot of them and make a .jpg rather than try to insert them as HTML.
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Did Obama bring $100 million to Cleveland for our turbines?
Did Obama bring $100 million to Cleveland for our turbines?
Did he explain what clarity came from Chicago on Great Lakes Wind and how that will effect our economy?
Did he get rid of Mason? DiMora?
Did he explain what he will do about our pollution and high mortality rates from that, as Illinois and Arkansas (how profitable for corrupt industrialists in Obama and Clinton's home states) add DIRTY coal-burning capacity upwind from Cleveland?
Did he explain how he shall undo the harm caused by our collupt local democratic leadership?
Or did he just say "trust me some more"?
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