Just When The Planning Board Thought It Was Safe...

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Posted by Dennis Herrick on August 21, 2008 at 08:56:42:

If you're fortunate enought to live in a sub-division with underground utilities then good for you. Your property is probably worth a little more then the rest of ours. However there is a new threat you'll have to face soon, residential windmills. It seems the NH legislature has passed a bill that would permits windmills in residential areas. And as long as they pass all noise restrictions, they can be installed over the objections of your local Planning Board. How do you spell, Whoosh, Whoosh, Whoosh?

"New Hampshire recently passed legislation to support residential turbines. The law sets a noise limit for the systems and prevents towns and municipalities from holding turbines to the same height standards as other buildings."

The Local Government Center fought hard for local control, but lobbyist for the New Hampshire Business And Industry Council And Unitil probably had their way with legislators. Earlier this year, Unitil started installing turbines at several test locat1ons in Hampton. It wouldn't surprise me, if you could sign up for one of these Unitil windmills at your local 7-11 soon. How did Unitil CEO Schoenberger put it, our turbines are just about as unobtrusive as a utility poles. Guess they blend in. Ya, right. What world are these people living in? We need Home Rule not more edicts from Concord. I believe that back in 2000 or 2001 the NH House and Senate approved adding a Home Rule question on the ballot and the dumb bunny residents voted it down.

I think the following article came from the Union Leader Online. I've been sitting on it for a few weeks, so I don't remember


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Article published on August 02, 2008

The mighty wind

Lawmakers back residential turbines


By CLARE TRAPASSO
The Associated Press
August 02, 2008


Seventeen years ago, Tim Meeh bought a used residential wind turbine to power his Canterbury farm with renewable energy.

"On a windy day it makes more power than we need and it turns our electric meter backward," said Meeh, 56, who earns credit with his power company for the excess energy generated by his 160-foot turbine, commonly called a windmill. "On days it's not windy, we use up our credit."

New Hampshire recently passed legislation to support residential turbines. The law sets a noise limit for the systems and prevents towns and municipalities from holding turbines to the same height standards as other buildings.

There are only about 14 residential turbines in the state, according to Tom Frantz, at the state Public Utilities Commission.

This is because turbines work best in windy locat1ons, which not every potential customer has. Customers can also be deterred by the cost of the systems, ranging from $12,000 to more than $70,000.

However, demand for renewable energy systems, like wind turbines, is rising, said Mark Weissflog, president of kW Management, an energy services company in Nashua.
"Last year we were probably getting a call a week or every two weeks," said Weissflog of renewable energy systems. "Now we're getting one every day."

Still, Weissflog's company only installs about four wind energy systems a year.

"When you're buying a renewable energy system, you're hedging future cost increases," said "At the same time you're pre-buying renewable energy for 30-40 years."

Nationwide there are believed to be about 4,000 residential wind turbines, according Ron Stimmel, a small wind advocate with the American Wind Energy Association in Washington.

Wind energy only generates about 1 percent of the country's electricity, said Stimmel. And residential wind turbines account for 1 to 2 percent of that.

"It's like a drop of water in the ocean," said state Rep. William Chase, a Westmoreland Democrat. "But if we create the situation where individuals can do this and make it easier for them ... then this will ultimately reduce our dependency on power produced by fossil fuel."

Chase sponsored the bill after receiving an e-mail from a student at the University of New Hampshire in 2006.

Laura Carpenter took on the issue as part of a group research project for a political science class. She was inspired by her family's struggle to erect a wind turbine on their Winthrop, Maine, property.

Carpenter said the local zoning board had little experience regulating the turbines, often held to the same height standards as buildings because of fire safety concerns that don't necessarily apply. The systems can be higher than the ladders of many small town fire departments, therefore violating existing safety codes designed for occupied buildings.

"I think there's still a lot of misconceptions around wind turbines and a fair amount of public resistance to them," Carpenter said. "A lot of people think of solar energy when they think of producing energy at home, but this is just another alternative."

Opposing the bill was The New Hampshire Municipal Association, which lobbies on behalf of state communities.

"We don't have anything against windmills certainly," said association government affairs attorney Cordell Johnston. "We had some concerns about it, because there's an effort by the state to limit towns' ability to exercise their zoning power."

Johnston said there also were aesthetic concerns and fears the bill would allow turbines to go up anywhere - including in historic districts.

Wind power is nothing new to New Hampshire.

One of the first commercial wind farms in the nation was built at Crotched Mountain, in southern New Hampshire, about 30 years ago, said Jon McGowan, a University of Massachusetts professor of mechanical engineering.

Soon after, the turbines were moved to California.

Today, a wind farm is being constructed in Lempster. Twelve 400-foot turbines are expected to generate enough electricity to power more than 10,000 homes.

Residential turbines typically only generate enough electricity to power a home, at the rate of two to 10 kilowatts, according to Stimmel.

"It's kind of like a reverse ceiling fan," Stimmel said. "The wind makes the blades spin around and makes the generator rotate inside a bunch of copper wire. That makes electrons move and creates electricity."

Some states, including New Hampshire, offer additional incentives.

In July, Gov. John Lynch offered homeowners up to $6,000 for building certain renewable energy projects.

Meeh said his windmill, which he bought used for $8,000, has almost paid itself off.

"I don't know of anyone else making maple syrup with wind and solar power," he said.

This article is: 1 days old.

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