Everest district gets into biomass plant feud

From an article by Kevin Murphy in the Wausau Daily Herald:

MADISON — D.C. Everest Area School District wants to be more involved in decision-making on a proposed $250 million biomass power plant planned in Rothschild.

In a letter to the Wisconsin Public Service Commission dated Monday, Milwaukee attorney William Mulligan asked that the district be granted “intervenor” status, which would allow district representatives to see all communications in the case.

In her affidavit filed with the PSC, Superintendent Kristine Gilmore said the district should be involved in the case because it is obligated to protect the health and safety of its 5,702 students, 720 teachers and staff in 11 schools.

“Rothschild Elementary School is within one half mile and D.C. Everest Junior High School is within one mile of the site of the biomass-fired cogeneration plant Wisconsin Electric Power Company proposes to build in Rothschild,” she wrote in the affidavit.

Village of Cascade installs two wind turbines at wastewater plant

From a news release issued by RENEW Wisconsin:

With the start-up of two 100-kilowatt (kW) wind turbines, the Village of Cascade became the first Wisconsin community to power its municipal wastewater treatment plant with 100 percent locally produced wind energy.

The impetus behind Cascade’s embrace of wind power was the avoided utility expenditures associated with operating a wastewater treatment plant. In the first year of operation, Cascade stands to save $30,000. With anticipated increases in electric rates, the Village of Cascade should save more than one million dollars over the thirty-year life of the turbines.

Additional revenue will come from the sale of excess power to We Energies.

“With these two turbines, the Village of Cascade has taken a giant step toward energy independence,” said Michael Vickerman. “Its prudent investment in wind energy will enable the community to control its energy budget, saving money for current and future residents.”

Kettle View Renewable Energy, LLC, a wind system installer located in nearby Random Lake, installed and commissioned Cascade’s turbines.
“We are proud that our local efforts on this project made this the first net-zero wastewater treatment plant in Wisconsin,” said project manager Randy Faller. “It speaks volumes to the commitment by the Village of Cascade to generate clean, domestic energy while saving their community money.”

These two turbines double the number of Northwind 100s operating in Wisconsin to four, all installed in the last 12 months. The first two installed turbines serve schools in Wausau and Fort Atkinson.

Northern Power Systems, the Vermont turbine manufacturer, “couldn’t be more pleased that our technologically advanced, American-made Northwind 100 turbines are delivering real energy solutions for municipalities, schools, businesses and farms across Wisconsin,” said Mr. Brett Pingree, Vice President of Americas at Northern Power Systems.

Grants from Milwaukee-based We Energies and Focus on Energy were instrumental in supplementing Cascade’s investment in the project.

Village of Cascade Installs Two Wind Turbines at Wastewater Plant

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 9, 2010

MORE INFORMATION
Michael Vickerman
RENEW Wisconsin
Executive Director
608.255.4044

Randy Faller
Project Manager
Kettle View Renewable Energy
920.994.9433

Eve Frankel
Northern Power Systems
Marketing Communications Manager
802.461.2935

Village of Cascade Installs Two Wind Turbines at Wastewater Plant

With the start-up of two 100-kilowatt (kW) wind turbines, the Village of Cascade became the first Wisconsin community to power its municipal wastewater treatment plant with 100 percent locally produced wind energy.

The impetus behind Cascade’s embrace of wind power was the avoided utility expenditures associated with operating a wastewater treatment plant. In the first year of operation, Cascade stands to save $30,000. With anticipated increases in electric rates, the Village of Cascade should save more than one million dollars over the thirty-year life of the turbines.

Additional revenue will come from the sale of excess power to We Energies.

“With these two turbines, the Village of Cascade has taken a giant step toward energy independence,” said Michael Vickerman. “Its prudent investment in wind energy will enable the community to control its energy budget, saving money for current and future residents.”

Kettle View Renewable Energy, LLC, a wind system installer located in nearby Random Lake, installed and commissioned Cascade’s turbines.

“We are proud that our local efforts on this project made this the first net-zero wastewater treatment plant in Wisconsin,” said project manager Randy Faller. “It speaks volumes to the commitment by the Village of Cascade to generate clean, domestic energy while saving their community money.”

These two turbines double the number of Northwind 100s operating in Wisconsin to four, all installed in the last 12 months. The first two installed turbines serve schools in Wausau and Fort Atkinson.

Northern Power Systems, the Vermont turbine manufacturer, “couldn’t be more pleased that our technologically advanced, American-made Northwind 100 turbines are delivering real energy solutions for municipalities, schools, businesses and farms across Wisconsin,” said Mr. Brett Pingree, Vice President of Americas at Northern Power Systems.

Grants from Milwaukee-based We Energies and Focus on Energy were instrumental in supplementing Cascade’s investment in the project.

END

RENEW Wisconsin: (http://www.renewwisconsin.org/) is an independent, nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization that acts as a catalyst to advance a sustainable energy future through public policy and private sector initiatives.

Northern Power Systems: (http://www.northernpower.com/) Northern Power has over 30 years of experience in developing advanced, innovative wind turbines. The company’s next generation wind turbine technology is based on a vastly simplified architecture that utilizes a unique combination of permanent magnet generators and direct-drive design. This revolutionary new approach delivers higher energy capture, eliminates drive-train noise, and significantly reduces maintenance and downtime costs. Northern Power systems is a fully integrated company that designs, manufactures and sells wind turbines into the global marketplace from its headquarters in Vermont, USA.

Kettle View Renewable Energy LLC (http://www.kettleviewre.com/) provides consulting, site assessments, and installation services for wind energy systems.

Volunteers rock! Ed Lemar at the MREA

From an article in the Stevens Point Journal:

Volunteer program: Midwest Renewable Energy Association’s 21st annual Energy Fair

Volunteer spotlight: The qualities that define a strong community are different to everyone. For some, a strong community means healthy, happy children. For others, it means a population of people who can read and write well. And for others, it means nurturing the environment that provides a home for us all. There are kind and dedicated volunteers throughout our county who work to build up all of these strengths and more. Ed Lemar is one of these volunteers.

Lemar has created a life in Portage County with his wife and 2-year-old daughter. Lemar is a local artist, musician and playwright who also sells artisan cheese at Wisconsin farmers markets. When Lemar is not busy with one of these endeavors, he volunteers his time to the Midwest Renewable Energy Association, especially for its annual Energy Fair.

Each year, the MREA Energy Fair transforms rural central Wisconsin into the global hot spot for renewable energy education. The nation’s longest running energy education event brings people from nearly every state in the United States and several countries around the world to learn, connect with others and ready them for action at home. With more than 23,000 attendees, the Energy Fair relies on a team of 400 dedicated volunteers throughout the week to make it possible.

From June 14 through the 21, the MREA needs volunteers to help with set up before the fair, and take down after the fair, as well as help with hospitality, sales, grounds crew, traffic control and other tasks. Volunteers are welcome each day to help at the Midwest Renewable Energy Association’s ReNew the Earth Institute in Custer.

Green teams work at work

AC_FL_RunContent( ‘codebase’, ‘http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=8,0,0,0’, ‘width’, ‘405’, ‘height’, ‘191’ , ‘src’, ‘http://storybridge.tv/sites/all/themes/storybridge/swfs/sbplay_seg02c’, ‘quality’, ‘high’, ‘pluginspage’, ‘http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer’, ‘align’, ‘middle’, ‘play’, ‘true’, ‘loop’, ‘true’, ‘scale’, ‘showall’, ‘wmode’, ‘transparent’, ‘devicefont’, ‘false’, ‘id’, ‘sbplay_seg02c’, ‘bgcolor’, ‘#000000’, ‘name’, ‘sbplay_seg02c’, ‘menu’, ‘true’, ‘allowFullScreen’, ‘true’, ‘allowScriptAccess’, ‘always’, ‘movie’, ‘http://storybridge.tv/sites/all/themes/storybridge/swfs/sbplay_seg02c’, ‘salign’, ‘tl’, ‘FlashVars’, ‘pathPrefix=http://storybridge.tv&segList=%2Ffiles%2FMakingTheTeamOpen_main.jpg%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fmakingtheteam_0.swf%2C8%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fep132main_1.swf%2C33%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fep132main_2.swf%2C44%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fep132main_3.swf%2C111%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fep132main_4.swf%2C66%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fep132main_5.swf%2C9%2Chttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.mge.com%2Fbusiness%2Fsaving&lc0=Z&lc1=X&lc2=X&lc3=X&lc4=X&autoplay=false&pingPath=http://storybridge.tv/files/ping.txt&myTitleIn=MAKING+THE+TEAM&mp4_path=/files/MakingTheTeam.mp4&selfURL=http://storybridge.tv/greenview/makingtheteam&nextNode=http://storybridge.tv/greenview/solarsystems&nextNodeTitle=SOLAR+SYSTEMS&nextNodeTease=Solar+is+hot+right+now%21++There%27s+a+lot+of+curiousity+and+for+years%2C+MGE+engineers+have+been+preparing+themselves+to+answer+those+questions.%0D%0A%0D%0AIn+an+attempt+to+learn+all+about+solar%2C+MGE+has+spent+the+last+10+years+building+solar+demonstrations+projects+in+all+shapes+and+sizes.++%0D%0A%0D%0AIn+this+story%2C+get+up+close+to+some+unique+solar+systems+and+find+out+what+engineers+have+learned+by+testing+ideas+in+the+real+world.%0D%0A%0D%0Awindow.onload%3Dfunction+%28%29+%7B+document.getElementById%28%22liHome%22%29.className+%3D+%22off%22%3B+document.getElementById%28%22liAskBob%22%29.className+%3D+%22off%22%3B+document.getElementById%28%22liGenerationGreen%22%29.className+%3D+%22off%22%3B+document.getElementById%28%22liWindEnergy%22%29.className+%3D+%22off%22%3B+document.getElementById%28%22liSolarEnergy%22%29.className+%3D+%22on%22%3B+document.getElementById%28%22liArchive%22%29.className+%3D+%22off%22%3B%7D+&nextNodeImg=http://storybridge.tv/files/ep83thumb_poster.jpg’);

Green teams work at work

AC_FL_RunContent( ‘codebase’, ‘http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=8,0,0,0’, ‘width’, ‘405’, ‘height’, ‘191’ , ‘src’, ‘http://storybridge.tv/sites/all/themes/storybridge/swfs/sbplay_seg02c’, ‘quality’, ‘high’, ‘pluginspage’, ‘http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer’, ‘align’, ‘middle’, ‘play’, ‘true’, ‘loop’, ‘true’, ‘scale’, ‘showall’, ‘wmode’, ‘transparent’, ‘devicefont’, ‘false’, ‘id’, ‘sbplay_seg02c’, ‘bgcolor’, ‘#000000’, ‘name’, ‘sbplay_seg02c’, ‘menu’, ‘true’, ‘allowFullScreen’, ‘true’, ‘allowScriptAccess’, ‘always’, ‘movie’, ‘http://storybridge.tv/sites/all/themes/storybridge/swfs/sbplay_seg02c’, ‘salign’, ‘tl’, ‘FlashVars’, ‘pathPrefix=http://storybridge.tv&segList=%2Ffiles%2FMakingTheTeamOpen_main.jpg%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fmakingtheteam_0.swf%2C8%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fep132main_1.swf%2C33%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fep132main_2.swf%2C44%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fep132main_3.swf%2C111%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fep132main_4.swf%2C66%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fep132main_5.swf%2C9%2Chttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.mge.com%2Fbusiness%2Fsaving&lc0=Z&lc1=X&lc2=X&lc3=X&lc4=X&autoplay=false&pingPath=http://storybridge.tv/files/ping.txt&myTitleIn=MAKING+THE+TEAM&mp4_path=/files/MakingTheTeam.mp4&selfURL=http://storybridge.tv/greenview/makingtheteam&nextNode=http://storybridge.tv/greenview/solarsystems&nextNodeTitle=SOLAR+SYSTEMS&nextNodeTease=Solar+is+hot+right+now%21++There%27s+a+lot+of+curiousity+and+for+years%2C+MGE+engineers+have+been+preparing+themselves+to+answer+those+questions.%0D%0A%0D%0AIn+an+attempt+to+learn+all+about+solar%2C+MGE+has+spent+the+last+10+years+building+solar+demonstrations+projects+in+all+shapes+and+sizes.++%0D%0A%0D%0AIn+this+story%2C+get+up+close+to+some+unique+solar+systems+and+find+out+what+engineers+have+learned+by+testing+ideas+in+the+real+world.%0D%0A%0D%0Awindow.onload%3Dfunction+%28%29+%7B+document.getElementById%28%22liHome%22%29.className+%3D+%22off%22%3B+document.getElementById%28%22liAskBob%22%29.className+%3D+%22off%22%3B+document.getElementById%28%22liGenerationGreen%22%29.className+%3D+%22off%22%3B+document.getElementById%28%22liWindEnergy%22%29.className+%3D+%22off%22%3B+document.getElementById%28%22liSolarEnergy%22%29.className+%3D+%22on%22%3B+document.getElementById%28%22liArchive%22%29.className+%3D+%22off%22%3B%7D+&nextNodeImg=http://storybridge.tv/files/ep83thumb_poster.jpg’);

Green teams work at work

AC_FL_RunContent( ‘codebase’, ‘http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=8,0,0,0’, ‘width’, ‘607’, ‘height’, ‘286’ , ‘src’, ‘http://storybridge.tv/sites/all/themes/storybridge/swfs/sbplay_seg02c’, ‘quality’, ‘high’, ‘pluginspage’, ‘http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer’, ‘align’, ‘middle’, ‘play’, ‘true’, ‘loop’, ‘true’, ‘scale’, ‘showall’, ‘wmode’, ‘transparent’, ‘devicefont’, ‘false’, ‘id’, ‘sbplay_seg02c’, ‘bgcolor’, ‘#000000’, ‘name’, ‘sbplay_seg02c’, ‘menu’, ‘true’, ‘allowFullScreen’, ‘true’, ‘allowScriptAccess’, ‘always’, ‘movie’, ‘http://storybridge.tv/sites/all/themes/storybridge/swfs/sbplay_seg02c’, ‘salign’, ‘tl’, ‘FlashVars’, ‘pathPrefix=http://storybridge.tv&segList=%2Ffiles%2FMakingTheTeamOpen_main.jpg%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fmakingtheteam_0.swf%2C8%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fep132main_1.swf%2C33%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fep132main_2.swf%2C44%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fep132main_3.swf%2C111%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fep132main_4.swf%2C66%0D%0A%2Ffiles%2Fep132main_5.swf%2C9%2Chttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.mge.com%2Fbusiness%2Fsaving&lc0=Z&lc1=X&lc2=X&lc3=X&lc4=X&autoplay=false&pingPath=http://storybridge.tv/files/ping.txt&myTitleIn=MAKING+THE+TEAM&mp4_path=/files/MakingTheTeam.mp4&selfURL=http://storybridge.tv/greenview/makingtheteam&nextNode=http://storybridge.tv/greenview/solarsystems&nextNodeTitle=SOLAR+SYSTEMS&nextNodeTease=Solar+is+hot+right+now%21++There%27s+a+lot+of+curiousity+and+for+years%2C+MGE+engineers+have+been+preparing+themselves+to+answer+those+questions.%0D%0A%0D%0AIn+an+attempt+to+learn+all+about+solar%2C+MGE+has+spent+the+last+10+years+building+solar+demonstrations+projects+in+all+shapes+and+sizes.++%0D%0A%0D%0AIn+this+story%2C+get+up+close+to+some+unique+solar+systems+and+find+out+what+engineers+have+learned+by+testing+ideas+in+the+real+world.%0D%0A%0D%0Awindow.onload%3Dfunction+%28%29+%7B+document.getElementById%28%22liHome%22%29.className+%3D+%22off%22%3B+document.getElementById%28%22liAskBob%22%29.className+%3D+%22off%22%3B+document.getElementById%28%22liGenerationGreen%22%29.className+%3D+%22off%22%3B+document.getElementById%28%22liWindEnergy%22%29.className+%3D+%22off%22%3B+document.getElementById%28%22liSolarEnergy%22%29.className+%3D+%22on%22%3B+document.getElementById%28%22liArchive%22%29.className+%3D+%22off%22%3B%7D+&nextNodeImg=http://storybridge.tv/files/ep83thumb_poster.jpg’);

Project under way to propose development of 12.5 MW of solar power generation

An announcement by We Energies:

We Energies has a commitment to propose the development of approximately 12.5 MW of solar power generation. This solar commitment entails 5 MW by Jan. 1, 2013, and the remaining 7.5 MW by Jan. 1, 2015. With the development and permitting phase of the Glacier Hills Wind Park completed, Andy Hesselbach, wind farm project manager, will be taking on the added responsibility of developing a plan to comply with this commitment.

To assist in these planning and development efforts, Carl Siegrist, senior project strategist – Regulatory Affairs and Policy, has been assigned to work under Hesselbach’s direction. Siegrist serves on the board of directors of two national solar organizations, has been involved with the Public Service Commission of Wisconsin solar task force, and has a network of contacts in all aspects of the solar business and Wisconsin’s clean energy advocacy community.

Hesselbach and Siegrist will collaborate with a broad range of regulatory, legal, finance, business planning, engineering and operations personnel during 2010 to develop a plan for compliance with this commitment.

Tips to manage costs, stay cool, and enjoy summer

From a news release issued by the Public Service Commission:

MADISON – – Utility bills can soar with rising temperatures. To stay cool this summer while conserving energy and keeping costs down, the Public Service Commission of Wisconsin (PSC) offers these easy, low-cost steps:

 Use cold water for doing laundry and air dry your clothes on clotheslines.
 Wash dishes with cold water and air dry.
 Turn off lights when leaving a room.
 Check the weather-stripping and caulking for leaks around doors and windows.
 Use a microwave oven or cook outside instead of using the stove or oven.
 Minimize the amount of time your refrigerator and freezer doors are open.
 Use natural lighting and compact fluorescent light bulbs. Ninety percent of the energy used by an incandescent bulb makes heat.

DOE program recognizes Vickerman for wind advocacy

IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 4, 2010

MORE INFORMATION
Michael Vickerman
RENEW Wisconsin
608.255.4044
mvickerman@renewwisconsin.org

Wind Energy Advocacy Award Presented to RENEW Wisconsin Director

RENEW Wisconsin Executive Director Michael Vickerman was presented with an award by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Wind Powering America program. Vickerman received the Midwest Regional Wind Advocacy Award at the program’s annual state summit following the WINDPOWER 2010 Conference & Exhibition in Dallas, Texas. At this event, Wind Powering America recognized wind energy advocates in three regions across the country: East, West and Midwest.

The award cites Vickerman’s “vision and creative leadership in RENEW and his leadership of the Wisconsin Wind Working Group.” Under the auspices of Wind Powering America, RENEW Wisconsin has been facilitating the Wisconsin Wind Working Group since 2007.

“Recognition by one’s peers is a tremendous honor,” Vickerman said, “and it’s especially sweet coming from a national program that serves wind energy advocacy and education networks in 38 states.

“I am particularly pleased that the award specifically recognizes RENEW Wisconsin, which has been the state’s leading voice for strong renewable energy policies since 1991,” Vickerman said. “Wisconsin is a regional leader in many aspects involving renewable energy, and RENEW Wisconsin has been instrumental in making that happen.”

Wind Powering America is a national initiative to dramatically increase the use of wind energy in the United States. Through various partnerships and programs, it aspires to enhance power generation options as well as protect the local environment and increase our energy and national security.

“We in Wisconsin are indebted to Wind Powering America for providing us with the tools to put wind energy development in our state on a sustainable growth trajectory,” Vickerman said.

END

RENEW Wisconsin (www.renewwisconsin.org) is an independent, nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization that acts as a catalyst to advance a sustainable energy future through public policy and private sector initiatives.