Islanders celebrate wind power

Islanders celebrate wind power


Vinalhaven turbines to provide enough electricity for 1,500
By Abigail Curtis
BDN Staff
BANGOR DAILY NEWS PHOTO BY JOHN CLARKE RUSS
Cianbro Chairman Peter Vigue (from left), Rep. Chellie Pingree and Island Institute President Philip Conkling gathered with others for Fox Islands Wind’s groundbreaking event at Swenson’s Quarry in Vinalhaven on Monday. Buy Photo

VINALHAVEN, Maine — Hundreds of islanders gathered Monday morning at a 75-acre construction site in a misty spruce forest to celebrate the groundbreaking of the Fox Islands Wind project.

By next Thanksgiving, developers said, three turbines here will take advantage of the high offshore winds to produce enough electricity to provide power to the 1,500 year-round residents of Vinalhaven and North Haven islands. And many think that when the windmills are whirring on Vinalhaven, other island communities will want turbines of their own.

“I think it’s a wonderful project,” said Hazel Smith, whose property lies close to the construction site. “I’ve always loved the windmills. It’s cheaper power; and to me, they’re peaceful. Everybody came together for this. Everyone is looking forward to it.”

Unusually for a planned wind-power facility in Maine, Smith’s enthusiasm seems the rule and not the exception here. When members of the Fox Islands Electric Cooperative voted last summer on whether to go ahead with the $14 million project, the result was an astounding 383 people in favor to just five against.

“That could be one for the record books,” said Addison Ames of Vinalhaven, a board member of the electricity co-op. He said that with construction beginning and the turbines scheduled to arrive on the island in August, he’s feeling “exhilarated and nervous, all at the same time.”

“There’s still a lot to do,” Ames said. “But we’ve overcome a major hurdle at this point.”

Islanders have been talking about putting up wind turbines for at least six years, he said, although the first attempt to start a big wind project failed because of a lack of community interest. But that changed after Hurricane Katrina tore up infrastructure on the Gulf of Mexico in 2005, which caused natural gas prices to go through the roof, Ames said. One island pizzeria saw its monthly electric bill shoot to $1,200 a month.

“That made this place unlivable,” Ames said.

Major changes had to be made on the islands, and quickly, he said. That is where George Baker, CEO of Fox Islands Wind and summer resident of Frenchboro, came in. Baker, a Harvard professor, has been a driving force in getting the windmill project off the ground so quickly. Officials from the Island Institute, Cianbro Corp. and other companies also pulled together to make the islands’ windmill dreams less quixotic.

U.S. Rep. Chellie Pingree, who is from neighboring North Haven, said the rest of the country could take a lesson from Maine’s island communities when it comes to renewable energy. Pingree, wearing a green hard hat, spoke about the energy bill the House of Representatives just passed — and said she was “very proud” to tell the U.S. secretary of energy and others about what is happening on Vinalhaven.

“I tell them the story of how hard this community worked,” she said. “We can produce our own power. We can be energy self-sufficient. We are starting a little revolution in energy right here.”

acurtis@bangordailynews.net

338-3034

Not registered? Click here
E-mail this
Print this
Guidelines for posting on bangordailynews.com

Bangordailynews.com is pleased to offer a forum for readers to react to our stories, discuss them and provide additional information. We are reluctant to delete comments, but do reserve that right for those who abuse our forum. For more on using this site, please see our terms of service.

The primary rule here is pretty simple: Treat others with the same respect you'd want for yourself. What does that mean specifically? Here are some guidelines (see more):

Comments
5 comments on this item

What a great project & thing happening on Viinalhaven and what a benefit to the residents of both Vinalhaven and North Haven Islands....I was not aware that these people were paying 2 to 3 times the national average or more for their respective electricity and am anticipating with & for them a tremendous financial savings with the completion of the work....

When we lived there the electricity costs were insane. Glad to see the island moving toward its own "energy independence"!

Good News !!! Almost 99 % of the residents favored the windmills... Maine is blessed with many offshore islands... Many of them are uninhabited... The state should allow many more of those islands to become wind farms... Everyone in the state would be winners... We MUST use this FREE energy, and stop waging wars for OIL and rich Politicians... Clean COAL ?? There is no such thing, and the coal companies know it... Yes, wind farms are not the prettiest things, but we will get used to them, onshore, and especially offshore...

14 million divided by 500 homes is about 9300 per home. How long do they have to pay it off and at what interest rate. Once they are paid off what is the cost for electricity going to be. I think I would be interested in investing 9300 if I could get cheap power. Of course the “ delivery cost” would still be high. Another story telling the pay off date, rates, etc would be great.

@lawdisorder: for more information about the financing of this project, you can go to the fox Island Wind's website. There's an article discussing the costs at this link: http://www.foxislandswind.com/pdf/NovemberUpdate.pdf According to the article, the savings in electricity costs plus the income from selling electricity back to the grid will result in a net surplus for the islanders, even after paying back the loan. Seems like their rates will still be high compared to the mainland, but this is basically an inflation-protected rate, so over time their savings will grow.

It's a great project on many fronts. Congrats to the Fox Islanders for being forward-thinking. I would much rather see these turbines poking up along the coast than the Cousins Island smokestack. There was a windfarm built on the Big Island of Hawaii some years ago and I thought they were awesome, although some people found them ugly.

You must be logged in to post a comment. click here to log in.

Powered by: Creative Circle Advertising Solutions, Inc.