 |
The Compleat Advocate A place for public policy research
|
| View previous topic :: View next topic |
| Author |
Message |
Arin_Gencer
Joined: 25 May 2008 Posts: 1
|
Posted: Sun May 25, 2008 11:24 am Post subject: Wind energy - Carroll leads Maryland counties |
|
|
May 25, 2008
Wind energy - Carroll leads Maryland counties in accomodating homeowners' small systems; state grants available
This is from the front page of today's Baltimore Sun
The full text of the article is available at
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/carroll/bal-te.ca.wind25may25,0,6598695.story
Highlights:
The expense to install a windmill can range from $12,000 to $55,000... Tim Fluharty, who owns the Tilghman-based Fluharty's Electric, has put up eight windmills - including Abey's [Green Point crabber Paul Abey] - on the Eastern Shore, and has several dozen more proposals out from interested individuals, he said. Fluharty installed his first about a year ago at the company vice president's house, to pique curiosity... The Abeys estimate that their electricity bill has gone down by one-third... Paul Abey ... expects the turbine will pay for itself in four or five years. "I can't see how we can lose on it."
Most counties in the region don't address wind turbines, but Carroll County tweaked its zoning ordinance earlier this month to allow residents to install the systems [small wind energy systems]... Earlier this month, the Carroll County commissioners approved a zoning ordinance amendment that allows property owners to install up to two "small wind energy systems," each consisting of one tower not to exceed 150 feet in height. The amendment was the culmination of a process that began with several residents' inquiries at the end of last year, county officials said... And the state has begun offering grants to help people pay for them... Last fall, the Maryland Energy Administration launched a Windswept Grant Program for small wind energy projects. The pilot was spurred by the rising number of requests for assessments, said Crissy Godfrey, wind program manager for the administration. "It's been very popular," Godfrey said of the grant. As of December, she said, there were about two dozen wind projects in Maryland, most on residential properties, the majority on the Eastern Shore... Unlike Carroll's modified ordinance, zoning regulations in most area counties don't address wind turbines. In Anne Arundel, Baltimore and Howard counties, a windmill is considered an accessory structure, subject to the same restrictions as objects such as sheds. Property owners usually have to get a variance if the turbine surpasses regulation height - 15 feet in Baltimore County, 25 feet in Anne Arundel. In Frederick County, the planning division is expected to present a proposed amendment on wind energy systems in about six months, officials said.
... Wind users connected to the power grid can benefit by building up credits for surplus energy they produce, a supply they can fall back on when needed, Godfrey said. They can also sell power back to utilities, Godfrey and Baring-Gould said, although they don't necessarily get the same value... Mary Bowman is one of several people in [Carroll] county ready to forge ahead with wind power. The Eldersburg resident has seen her monthly electric bill soar to about $425, almost three times the amount she used to pay - even while attempting to cut back on energy use by flipping on ceiling fans and reminding her children to turn off lights. "They have a chokehold on us," Bowman said. "There's got to be an alternative so we're not working to pay BGE. … We have to start looking to the future. We have to start looking at alternatives."
Source: Arin Gencer (Baltimore Sun reporter), "Electricity coming out of the air | Power costs have people looking into individual wind energy systems", The Sun, May 25, 2008, p. 1 |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
Elizabeth_Piazza
Joined: 22 Nov 2008 Posts: 1
|
Posted: Sat Nov 22, 2008 8:51 am Post subject: Red tape belies green talk in many MD counties |
|
|
Capital News Service, November 21, 2008
Marylanders Negotiate Government Rules to Install Windmills
by Elizabeth M. Piazza, Capital News Service
ANNAPOLIS - In response to rising utility costs and encouraged by the state's desire to lower its carbon footprint, Jeane and Joseph Flesch thought it would be ideal to install a small wind turbine next to their remodeled farmhouse on two-and-a half acres in Clarksburg.
"There is a lot of active farmland around us and we are zoned as a cow pasture," Jeane Flesch said. "We have land, live on a hill and have tons of winds coming from the north and northwest."
The Flesches are among a growing number of Marylanders who are working to install small wind turbines on their properties in order to lower utility bills and reduce their dependence on power plants. Despite living in a state that hopes to become a leader in energy efficiency, people like the Flesches are discovering that obtaining approval to install turbines is difficult.
The struggle is not with the state or even the power companies. The struggle is with county and local governments - many of which do not have laws in effect to deal with wind turbines.
"Montgomery County has no written regulations on wind energy and you can't get a permit for the turbine," Jeane Flesch said. "You have to get an accessory structure permit and that's part of the problem - they haven't dealt with it."
The county initially gave verbal approval for a 60-foot turbine pole, but after filing the paperwork, the Flesches were told the maximum height was 50 feet. An appeal could take several years.
The 10-foot difference would mean generating approximately 100 fewer kilowatt-hours per month.
After agreeing to use a 50-foot pole, the Flesches were told they needed to get a Maryland contractor to approve the 8-square-foot cement base. Then, there was an issue over the depth of the trenches for the electrical lines.
An accessory structure is the only thing that windmills can fall under, said Delvin Daniels, permitting services specialist for the Montgomery County Department of Permitting. This means they would be subject to the developmental standards in regards to height, setback and lot coverage.
"When these codes were written, people weren't talking about windmills," Daniels said.
The owner of Potomac Wind Energy, Carlos Fernandez, who has been helping the Flesches gain the necessary approval, said that even though there has been steady progress in the wind turbine market, many local governments are unprepared.
The Flesches are not alone in their struggle.
Ocean City resident Jim Motsko is trying to install a wind turbine on his waterfront lot. Motsko doesn't require a lot of energy, but after paying $3,500 in oil bills so far this year, and another $500 by year's end, Motsko is fed up.
He and another Ocean City resident, Larry Layton, submitted proposals to the city's Planning and Zoning Commission to approve wind turbines on their properties.
A small wind energy system draft ordinance passed the Ocean City Planning and Zoning Commission on Nov. 18, but still needs approval from the mayor and city council.
Joseph Ianni, president of ReDriven Power, Inc., an Ontario-based manufacturer and distributor of wind turbines, is finding growth in the market as prices for turbines drop and states and the federal government implement tax credits and other incentives.
"What we're getting from people is a desire of wanting to be independent of price increases of power plants," Ianni said.
The small wind market grew 14 percent in 2007, according to the American Wind Energy Association. Growth is concentrated in states that have the best policies in place, said Ron Stimmel, small wind advocate for the American Wind Energy Association.
Oregon, California, Michigan, Nevada, Wisconsin, New York, New Jersey, New Hampshire, Vermont and Arizona already have small turbine laws. Many of those states have a model zoning law on which each county or jurisdiction can base their laws.
There are a lot of communities that don't know what to do with this and a lot of communities have come to us looking for guidance, said Brandon Farris, the Maryland Energy Administration's director of policy and legislative affairs. We have worked with the industry to put a model wind ordinance on our website, based upon best practices compiled from other states, he said.
"Somebody honestly has to go first," said Ken Robinson, who is in the process of obtaining permits to install a 33-foot turbine on his Swan Point property in Charles County.
The Charles County Board of Zoning Appeals recently granted Robinson a variance to apply for the building permits to begin construction.
Some counties have already dealt with the issue. Carroll and Kent Counties have small wind turbine ordinances. Frederick County is in the process of conducting public hearings.
Commissioner David Gray of Frederick has seen no resistance to passing necessary zoning laws.
"I'm all for doing everything we can to enhance sustainability and they're (wind turbines) an asset on the landscape rather than a detriment, so why not?" Gray said. "You know, I'm excited about it. I'm a tree-hugger anyway, a Republican tree-hugger."
For the Flesches, the end is in sight. After a minor misunderstanding about whether their home was located in a historic district, their permit was approved last week.
"Everybody's talking green, but there's a lot of red tape in the government," said Fernandez, the owner of Potomac Wind Energy. "We need to put some green tape on the government." |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
|
|
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum
|
Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group
|