Alexander praises TN moratorium on wind power generation

U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander, a longtime critic of wind-powered electricity generation, is praising a state House vote to place a partial moratorium on such developments in Tennessee while a special committee of state lawmakers drafts rules for regulating them, reports the News Sentinel.

“This will give Tennesseans the opportunity to evaluate whether we want our landscape littered with wind turbines that are over two times as tall as the skyboxes at the University of Tennessee football stadium and produce only a small amount of unreliable electricity,” Alexander said in an emailed statement.

The bill approved by the House 85-3 on Thursday (HB1021) amounts to a compromise that sponsor Rep. Cameron Sexton, R-Crossville, said had been agreed upon by “all stakeholders.” That includes Apex Energy Solutions, which has stirred considerable controversy in Cumberland County with plans to spend $130 million erecting at least 20 electricity-generating turbines on a mountain near Crab Orchard.

As approved by the House, after a somewhat convoluted history in committees, the bill creates a task force of six legislators – three from the House, three from the Senate with speakers of the two chambers appointing the members later – to draft legislation that would establish regulations for state oversight of wind-powered facilities in Tennessee, completing its work by Jan. 1, 2018.

Tennessee is now one of just four states in the nation with no state regulation of wind power generation, leaving the matter solely to federal regulations. Sexton at one point proposed putting state oversight into place immediately, but that idea was killed in committee.

The compromise plan — approved unanimously in a committee of the Senate and awaiting a floor vote in that chamber with virtually certain approval — imposes a general moratorium on construction publof wind-powered facilities until July 1, 2018. But the moratorium doesn’t cover preliminary work, such as preparing environmental impact statements required by federal law. Apex hopes to have its Cumberland County facility operational in 2019.

The deal also exempts counties that have approved local regulations authorizing a project prior to July 1, 2017. The Cumberland County Commission has twice rejected proposals to impose local regulations – pushed in a petition signed by more than 2,000 county residents – while approving a resolution calling on the Legislature to establish state regulations.

4 Responses to Alexander praises TN moratorium on wind power generation

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

ABOUT THIS BLOG

Posts and Opinions about Tennessee politics, government, and legislative news.