From an article by Dan Haugen on Midwest Energy News:
Wisconsin’s
politically contested wind-turbine siting rules would quietly go back
on the books if the state’s legislature doesn’t take up the issue this
session.
While it’s premature for wind energy supporters to
declare victory, the rules’ opponents appear to have little appetite for
reopening the controversy, according to observers.
“This is an
issue they don’t want to have anything to do with right now,” says
Michael Vickerman, director of Renew Wisconsin, a renewable energy
advocacy group. “It’s kind of reached the radioactive phase.”
The first-in-the-nation rules
were aimed at streamlining the messy, often shifting patchwork of local
setback rules, which govern the distance wind developers need to leave
between turbines and adjacent homes. A 2009 law instructed regulators to
comes up with a statewide setback policy. After two years of hearings
and debate, they issued rules restricting turbines from within 1,250
feet of neighboring residences.
On the day the rules were to take
effect last March, however, a Republican-controlled legislative
committee voted along party lines to suspend the statewide rules.
Gov. Scott Walker instead proposed an 1,800-foot setback from the
nearest property line, which the American Wind Energy Association said
would essentially shut down the state’s wind industry.
Since then, wind developers have cited regulatory uncertainty in suspending or canceling five major developments totaling $1.6 billion in economic investment.
Vickerman says wind energy supporters have successfully highlighted the
economic consequences of Walker’s action, which is why party leadership
seems to have lost interest in the fight.
“These guys are afraid
because the issue has boomeranged on them,” says Vickerman. “Scott
Walker does not really want to be known as someone who has killed jobs
by basically shutting down the commercial wind industry in Wisconsin,
and neither do the legislative leaders.”
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