Mpls 9th Ward Award to Stop Midtown Burner
February 2nd, 2009
It’s dark and hard to see… but the good news is clear — The Minneapolis 9th Ward Award for Neighborhood Project of the year went to all of us who worked against Kandiyohi’s Midtown Eco-Energy incinerator, or as I call it, the Midtown Eco-Crapper.
DRUM ROLL, PLEASE…. the 2009 9th Ward Neighborhood Project of the Years is:
Stop the Midtown Burner
Each year, there are awards for Project of the Year, Leader of the Year, Youth Leader of the Year, Block Club of the Year:
This year’s Award for Neighborhood Project went to “Stop the Midtown Burner” which was a project involving several groups and hundreds of individuals who all got together and made sure this project went down in flames 9as all burner projects should!).
Hearing of the Award, one instrumental fighter said:
After that meeting in the library [August, 2007], I thought it was late in the game, maybe too late, but people stepped up to the plate, worked through personal differences, and made it happen.
That’s something to celebrate…..
And another instrumental fighter said:
They did not know who they were messin’ with — HAH! SO THERE!
TAKE THAT! AND THAT AND THAT! YOU BIG BULLIES!!!
Here’s the Stop the Midtown Burner award:
GO TEAM GO!!!
Transmission – Mid-Atlantic Power Pathway
February 2nd, 2009
Delmarva Power has been hosting meetings about its proposed Mid-Atlantic Power Pathway. The next meeting is:
Wednesday, February 4 @ 6 p.m.
Millsboro Civic Center
322 Wilson Highway
This is an electrical superhighway through Delaware, the map makes that much clear.
What’s interesting is that Rep. Tom Carper seems to be taking an enlightened and informed position on this:
Today, there’s a long piece in the News Journal about it, with the above quote from Carper:
Power-line plan stirs environment fears
Bluewater Wind hails pathway for clean energy
Xcel transmission — Opposition anyone???
January 27th, 2009
Poor Xcel, getting picked on… a City of Minneapolis resolution to delay the route application for the Hiawatha Project transmission line, and a unanimous preference for undergrounding if it should be built. SNORT!
LET’S SEE THE SOUTH MINNEAPOLIS LOAD SERVING STUDY (which the Hiawatha Project is supposedly based on) and the SOUTH MINNEAPOLIS ELECTRIC RELIABILITY PROJECT STUDY which is shooting in a 345kV line from Hwy. 280 to the new Hiawatha substation… “100 MW need” my ass…
Here are 16 questions posed by Midtown Greenway to Xcel and 9 answers:
Piecing together studies found on line, here’s what I think Xcel is up to:
Take your transmission line and go home, Xcel…
EPA objects to Big Stone II air permit
January 23rd, 2009
EEEEEEE-HAAAAAAAA! A big stake in its slimy little heart…
Hot off the press from Sierra Club and Clean Water Action, who have been working tirelessly against Otter Tail Power’s Big Stone II coal plant, the Big Stone II air permit is upende
Here’s their press release in toto:
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
CONTACT:
Virginia Cramer, Sierra Club 804-519-8449
Darrell Gerber, Clean Water Action 612-802-5372Date: January 23, 2009
Big Stone II Sent Back to the Drawing Board
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Concerned About Pollution, Global WarmingWashington, DC – Less than three days after the Bush Administration left office, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has overturned the State of South Dakota’s approval of the massive Big Stone II coal-fired power plant. The EPA’s decision comes after the state failed to require state-of-the-art pollution controls for the coal plant that would address concerns about harmful soot, smog and global warming pollution.
“This is a great day not only for clean energy and people’s health, it’s a victory for the rule of law,” said Bruce Nilles, Director of the Sierra Club’s Move Beyond Coal Campaign. “EPA is signaling that it is back to enforcing longstanding legal requirements fairly and consistently nationwide,” added Nilles.
As the first major coal plant decision by the EPA since President Obama took office, this decision signals that the dozens of other coal plant proposals currently in permitting processes nationwide will face a new level of federal scrutiny. Sierra Club and Clean Water Action have been working to stop the Big Stone II project and ramp up clean energy investments in for more than three years.
“Today EPA took the first step toward restoring science and integrity to its work and recognizing the very real need to reduce air pollution from coal-fired power plants,” said Darrell Gerber, Clean Water Action Program Coordinator. “Downwind residents and the region’s natural resources will be better protected.”
This decision likely spells the end of Otter Tail Power’s Big Stone II coal plant. While for the past eight years the Bush Administration has refused to regulate global warming pollution, even after being ordered to do so by the US Supreme Court, President Obama has pledged that the US will cut global warming pollution and do its part to avoid the worst consequences of climate change. With coal-fired power plants accounting for almost 30% of our nation’s carbon dioxide emissions, burning less coal and investing in clean energy such as wind and solar instead is a common sense approach to helping meet global warming pollution reduction goals. The proposed Big Stone II 500-megawatt coal plant would have emitted more than 4 million tons of global pollution annually.
At a minimum, Otter Tail Power will have to go back to the drawing board and redesign the project to incorporate the best and maximum available control technology for pollution like soot and smog. Sierra Club and Clean Water Action will be pushing for EPA to set limits also for carbon dioxide, the main contributor to global warming.
“Otter Tail Power will now have to be responsible for the cost of its pollution,” said Nilles. “We hope that this increasing cost of coal will encourage Otter Tail Power, along with Governors Pawlenty and Rounds, to harness the clean and affordable wind resources available in the region. Minnesota and South Dakota should be leaders on the path to renewable energy independence, not laggards proposing 19th century coal plants.”
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Now, can we get them to end Excelsior Energy’s Mesaba Project?
Gas in wells in Dimock Twp. PA
January 22nd, 2009
A while back, in Dimock, PA, a woman’s well blew up just a little down the road from where they were doing gas drilling… funny how that works. Now it seems they’re admitting a relationship between the two, and are giving people water, those who took their water, shook it up, and LIT IT! They “just felt unsafe,” yeah, I guess… It seems it’s taking a LONG time for anything to happen here.
From: Wells tested, cause of explosion sought in gas exploration in Susquehanna County
Yeah, just a bit of an understatement…
Breaking news: Gas mining company provides water after methane found in private wells
Published: Thursday, January 22, 2009 12:47 PM EST
“We felt it best to take a step back and take a comprehensive look,” he said.







