Comments - Mainers dig in for a big fight over CMP’s hydro project - Citizens' Task Force on Wind Power - Maine2024-03-29T12:03:31Zhttps://www.windtaskforce.org/profiles/comment/feed?attachedTo=4401701%3ABlogPost%3A148628&xn_auth=noLike it or not, Maine is a st…tag:www.windtaskforce.org,2018-10-20:4401701:Comment:1486482018-10-20T13:06:26.901ZDan McKayhttps://www.windtaskforce.org/profile/DanMcKay
<p><span>Like it or not, Maine is a stakeholder in a regional electric network that includes all six New England States. By consumption, Maine represents 8% of total New England electrical usage.</span></p>
<div>This regional network ( ISO-NE ) is tasked with the responsibility of assuring generation is available to keep the lights on at every household, business and structure at every moment of time,</div>
<div>The regional network sets market rules to maintain reliability at the least…</div>
<p><span>Like it or not, Maine is a stakeholder in a regional electric network that includes all six New England States. By consumption, Maine represents 8% of total New England electrical usage.</span></p>
<div>This regional network ( ISO-NE ) is tasked with the responsibility of assuring generation is available to keep the lights on at every household, business and structure at every moment of time,</div>
<div>The regional network sets market rules to maintain reliability at the least expensive cost to customers. </div>
<div>In the ideal scenario, the regional market does not favor any type of generation over any other type of generation. </div>
<div>But. recently, certain groups have influenced the selection of generation sources by lobbying state legislators, regulators,courts and dark money.</div>
<div>These groups overwhelmingly favor the so-called clean generation sources, notably wind and solar. </div>
<div>These groups notoriously detest natural gas, coal and oil, nuclear and, now, with the NECEC project before the PUC and the DEP, they oppose hydro.</div>
<div>The regional network has no choice but to act upon the reality that intermittent generation without the proper amount of active, dispatchable generation available, creates an electricity shortage. So, against it's own principle of being generation source neutral, it selects a source that can be stored and used during periods of shortage. This is oil and it will be used this winter to cover for wind, solar and the regulated constraints on natural gas. </div>
<div>These acts by certain groups are socially irresponsible and will have dire consequences on the way the regional network operates and whether the lights will light at all,</div>
<div>The regional network is non-partisan , mercifully trying to accommodate political whims influenced by groups bent to change the energy regime at any cost or suffering it may incur.</div>
<div>Your lawmakers are complicit in this disaster by neglecting the people's will and needs by embracing these groups and their lack of forward thinking.</div>
<div>Maine is in the center of the cross-hairs. Maine, has, by far the most wind energy generation source, the major culprit to the regional network's mission. If the regional network has to respond by making rules recognizing the true unmarketable value of wind, will Maine be at the end of the line when electricity is rationed out by value of generation supplied ? As I recall from the days of pick up baseball games, the poorer players were always the last selected.</div> What comes next
PUC commissio…tag:www.windtaskforce.org,2018-10-20:4401701:Comment:1487302018-10-20T04:25:25.415ZLong Islanderhttps://www.windtaskforce.org/profile/LongIslander
<h4>What comes next</h4>
<p>PUC commissioners attended Wednesday's hearing along with PUC staff and a transcriptionist. The public witness hearing transcript will be publicly available in the case file (Docket No. 2017-00232), which may be accessed via the PUC's <a href="https://mpuc-cms.maine.gov/CQM.Public.WebUI/Common/CaseMaster.aspx?CaseNumber=2017-00232">online website</a> here.</p>
<p>The PUC process now moves on to hearings limited to testimony by parties and individuals who've…</p>
<h4>What comes next</h4>
<p>PUC commissioners attended Wednesday's hearing along with PUC staff and a transcriptionist. The public witness hearing transcript will be publicly available in the case file (Docket No. 2017-00232), which may be accessed via the PUC's <a href="https://mpuc-cms.maine.gov/CQM.Public.WebUI/Common/CaseMaster.aspx?CaseNumber=2017-00232">online website</a> here.</p>
<p>The PUC process now moves on to hearings limited to testimony by parties and individuals who've petitioned for formal intervenor status.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.mainebiz.biz/article/20181018/NEWS01/181019946/opponents-and-advocates-make-their-final-arguments-on-cmp%27s-new-england-clean-energy-connect" target="_blank">http://www.mainebiz.biz/article/20181018/NEWS01/181019946/opponents-and-advocates-make-their-final-arguments-on-cmp%27s-new-england-clean-energy-connect</a></p> The three groups that issued…tag:www.windtaskforce.org,2018-10-19:4401701:Comment:1488242018-10-19T14:20:31.364ZArt Brigadeshttps://www.windtaskforce.org/profile/ArtBrigades
<p>The three groups that issued this report are all wet, and apparently wishing to return us to the Stone Age.</p>
<p>OK, so let's allow that NRCM, The Wind Lobby, and Sierra actually might be accurate in saying that the power line will NOT reduce emissions. So what????</p>
<p>Massachusetts (and the New England Grid of which Maine is a part) needs this 1200 MW of firm dispatchable electricity at a reasonable price. And New England, which over a decade, is losing at least 5000 MW of retiring…</p>
<p>The three groups that issued this report are all wet, and apparently wishing to return us to the Stone Age.</p>
<p>OK, so let's allow that NRCM, The Wind Lobby, and Sierra actually might be accurate in saying that the power line will NOT reduce emissions. So what????</p>
<p>Massachusetts (and the New England Grid of which Maine is a part) needs this 1200 MW of firm dispatchable electricity at a reasonable price. And New England, which over a decade, is losing at least 5000 MW of retiring power plants needs even more than this one project. That it's 1200 MW of clean - or even somewhat clean - electricity is a bonus.</p>
<p>These three lobbying groups know that the only choices for New England to procure this kind of scalable high-quality electricity would be:</p>
<p>1. Build & continuously run a coal or oil plant bigger than the old oil plant now on Cousins Island. <br/>2. Build a nuke plant bigger than Maine Yankee<br/>3. Build two natural gas plants bigger than the ones in Westbrook and Veazie<br/>4. Build 50 biomass plants like the one in Stratton<br/>5. Build 175 dams like Wyman Dam (on the Kennebec) in Moscow<br/>6. Import the electricity by building an extension cord to someplace where the power is, like Canada</p>
<p>Would these three lobbying groups rather see us lighting our caves by rubbing sticks together? Surely not, but they would welcome 100 wind "farms" the size of the one in Aroostook...that's 2800 thumping blinking skyscrapers (costing many billions before the necessary power lines are built) plastered across hundreds of Maine ridge lines...2800 wind turbines that run effectively just 2 days out of 7, hence requiring one of the six options above as backup to procure 1200 MW of reliable electricity.</p>
<p>Lock the door to The Way Life Should Be on your way out -- no need to turn out the lights, which won't be working anyway.</p> If wind developers and pro -…tag:www.windtaskforce.org,2018-10-19:4401701:Comment:1487172018-10-19T13:54:36.239Zarthur qwenkhttps://www.windtaskforce.org/profile/arthurqwenk
<p>If wind developers and pro - corporate wind enviro-groups like NRCM oppose it, should anti-wind groups support it?</p>
<p>We know their AC wind generators would need to invert at high cost to utilize it, so the question:</p>
<p><span>A potential new corridor for wind expansion in western Maine, or a mechanism to potentially slow down wind development based on the reality of pricing?</span></p>
<p></p>
<p>If wind developers and pro - corporate wind enviro-groups like NRCM oppose it, should anti-wind groups support it?</p>
<p>We know their AC wind generators would need to invert at high cost to utilize it, so the question:</p>
<p><span>A potential new corridor for wind expansion in western Maine, or a mechanism to potentially slow down wind development based on the reality of pricing?</span></p>
<p></p> Mills has released a climate…tag:www.windtaskforce.org,2018-10-19:4401701:Comment:1487072018-10-19T00:00:05.353ZThinklike A. Mountainhttps://www.windtaskforce.org/profile/ThinklikeAMountain
<p>Mills has <a class="c0" href="https://www.janetmills.com/issues/environment">released a climate plan</a> that includes setting a goal of reducing pollution by 80 percent by 2030, and said she would focus on “prevention and mitigation. Hayes said Maine must use “tax policy to herd behavior in the direction” of mitigating climate change. Caron, who wants to <a class="c0" href="http://caronforgovernor.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/economic-plan-for-web.pdf">make Maine energy independent within…</a></p>
<p>Mills has <a class="c0" href="https://www.janetmills.com/issues/environment">released a climate plan</a> that includes setting a goal of reducing pollution by 80 percent by 2030, and said she would focus on “prevention and mitigation. Hayes said Maine must use “tax policy to herd behavior in the direction” of mitigating climate change. Caron, who wants to <a class="c0" href="http://caronforgovernor.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/economic-plan-for-web.pdf">make Maine energy independent within 30 years</a>, said he would “pull people together” on the issue.</p>
<p><a href="https://bangordailynews.com/2018/10/17/politics/mills-moody-jab-each-other-over-tax-returns-in-another-largely-cordial-debate/" target="_blank">https://bangordailynews.com/2018/10/17/politics/mills-moody-jab-each-other-over-tax-returns-in-another-largely-cordial-debate/</a></p>