Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Wind Energy News .




WIND DAILY
Britain wind farm proposal scaled back in face of opposition
by Staff Writers
Bournemouth, England (UPI) Feb 7, 2013


disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

The developer of a controversial offshore wind farm in the English Channel announced this week it has reduced its size and moved it farther from shore.

Eneco Wind U.K. Ltd. and EDF Energy Renewables, developers of the Navitus Bay wind farm, are seeking planning permission to begin construction by 2017 in hopes of generating energy by 2019.

Following complaints it would despoil the natural beauty of the England's Hampshire coast, the companies said Thursday they have instituted changes that would reduce its generating capacity from 1.1 gigawatts to 970 megawatts with 23 fewer turbines, while cutting the area of the farm from 67.5 to 60 square miles.

Its revised boundaries would put the farm up to 2 miles further away from Christchurch, England, and 1 mile further from Bournemouth.

However, critics noted the new boundaries wouldn't alter its proximity to Swanage, England, or the popular Jurassic Coast World Heritage Site, a 95-mile stretch of coastline made of rocks from the Mesozoic Era.

Navitus Bay Project Director Mike Unsworth said the changes were after listening to complaints from local residents.

"The boundary change is significant, and balances the need to reduce visual impact while ensuring that the project continues to make an important contribution to sustainable energy generation in the U.K. and to the local economy in the shape of jobs and investment," he said.

"As we move towards submitting our final application for planning permission, we believe that this latest boundary change is a positive step, ensuring that the project reflects local views whilst bringing considerable benefits to the region."

Opponents, though, were unimpressed. Andrew Findlay of the Challenge Navitas citizen's group called the updates mere "tweaks" which didn't truly address the environmental dangers posed by the wind farm.

"We are still awaiting full details, but the changes to the plan appear to be marginal and go nowhere near far enough to convince people that this disastrous proposal won't have the damaging impacts that so many fear," he wrote in a blog post on the group's website.

"The threats to the environment, tourism, birds and navigation remain almost unchanged, and the onshore disruption will be the same," Findlay declared, adding, "The proposal would need a far more radical rethink to address the issues raised in consultation, and it remains a bad plan in completely the wrong area."

The alterations were also met with skepticism from the Poole and Christchurch Bays Association. Group spokesman Philip Dewhurst told the (Bournemouth) Daily Echo the new plans were "like rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic.

"Even with these tweaks, Navitus will still be too big, too visible from our shores and too damaging to our tourism and boating economies. We will carry on the fight in the hope that sanity prevails and this hugely expensive white elephant is scrapped."

The group asserted the new plans reduced the wind farm's size by just 10 percent, calling it "totally insignificant when compared to the need for an 85 percent reduction just to meet the government's Offshore Energy Strategic Environmental Assessment."

.


Related Links
Wind Energy News at Wind Daily






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








WIND DAILY
Moventas CMaS gaining a strong foothold in Australia
Jyvaskyla, Finland (SPX) Feb 05, 2014
Moventas Australia is about to enter their first major CMaS agreements with local wind farms. Tried and tested, CMaS was found the best value for money, says the customer who operates the Starfish Hill and Toora wind farms. Moventas Australia in Somersby, NSW, has won significant new deals on Moventas' groundbreaking condition management system CMaS. Moventas will install several CMaS syst ... read more


WIND DAILY
Tokyo election win a victory for nuclear power?

Govt-backed pro-nuclear candidate wins Tokyo governor vote

Abe hails election of pro-nuclear Tokyo governor

New Czech PM won't back price supports for nuke expansion

WIND DAILY
Sunpreme Double Glass demonstrate extreme ruggedness in Antarctica tests

SunEdison Team Advances Solar Energy Industry In Saudi Arabia

Flat-pack lens boosts solar power

St. Thomas University celebrates completion of major solar energy project in Haiti

WIND DAILY
Ceresana expects the market for bioplastics to grow

Approach helps identify new biofuel sources that don't require farmland

PROINSO shows PV-DIESEL hybrid systems at Genset Meeting 2014

Agricultural and Industrial Biogas Plants Go Online

WIND DAILY
Britain wind farm proposal scaled back in face of opposition

Climate risk from wind farms is minimal: study

Moventas CMaS gaining a strong foothold in Australia

Residents oppose new grid link needed for German energy transition

WIND DAILY
Oil composition boost makes hemp a cooking contender

Household explosion replaces population explosion as world concern

Research reveals the give and take of urban temperature mitigation

AREVA TN Confirms its Leadership in Used Fuel Storage Market

WIND DAILY
LockMart and Victorian Wave Partners Sign World's Largest Wave Energy Deal

Kuwait awards $12 bn clean fuel project

How to make the wonder material graphene superconducting

Vernier and KidWind Bring Sensor Technology to Turbines and Panel Kits

WIND DAILY
LockMart and Victorian Wave Partners Sign World's Largest Wave Energy Deal

Kuwait awards $12 bn clean fuel project

How to make the wonder material graphene superconducting

Vernier and KidWind Bring Sensor Technology to Turbines and Panel Kits

WIND DAILY
Nissan profit jumps as North America, China sales rise

Nissan caps buoyant earnings for Japanese auto giants

Bicycle manufacturing increases in Indian state of Punjab

Peugeot presses on with tie-up despite family split




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement