The Telegram (St. John's)

Who has heard the wind?

No one satisfied with new Vermont wind power sound rules

- BY WILSON RING

An effort by Vermont utility regulators to settle the longstandi­ng, contentiou­s issue of how much noise neighbours of industrial wind projects should be subject to ended up upsetting both proponents of wind power and those who say the noise poses a health risk to people who live near turbines.

Proponents of using industrial wind projects as part of Vermont’s long-term goal of getting 90 per cent of its power from renewable sources by 2050 say the new wind rules will make achieving that goal more difficult, if not impossible.

“These rules will certainly have a chilling effect on wind energy in Vermont,” said Austin Davis, a spokesman for the renewable energy trade group Renewable Energy Vermont. “However, that doesn’t do away with the fact that wind energy currently is the cheapest renewable energy available to New England.”

Opponents counter noise levels are still too high and even at a level that is among the lowest in the country would create an unreasonab­le burden for people who live near the turbines.

“The wind noise rule as ... approved is not going to protect Vermonters from the harm that we have already experience­d from industrial wind turbines,” said Annette Smith, the head of the group Vermonters for a Clean Environmen­t and a long-time critic of industrial wind projects. “It is a step in the right direction.”

Last week, Vermont’s Public Utilities Commission gave final approval to the rules that set a daytime limit of 42 decibels of sound from turbines near a home and 39 decibels at night. The rules grew out of a 2016 law that directed the commission to set sound standards. The new rules only apply to new projects.

The decibel level measures sound intensity. Experts say 40 decibels is the rough equivalent of a library while a rural area is about 30 decibels.

The noise debate is something that has followed industrial wind power as it has spread throughout, Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine. Although scientific studies have shown no link between wind turbine noise and human health, it can be annoying, especially to people who were accustomed to living in quiet areas.

Lisa Linowes, of Lyman, New Hampshire, executive director of the Windaction Group says people in urban areas might not even notice wind turbine noise.

“If you take that same project and put it in a rural area, the area has been permanentl­y altered, for the wildlife, for the birds, for the people,” she said.

The wind power industry says that nationally, developers work hard to ensure projects are sited so the sound doesn’t bother neighbours and thousands of people across the country live near wind farms without any issues, said Mike Speerschne­ider, the senior director of permitting for the American Wind Energy Associatio­n.

“Individual­s have a wide range of reactions to sound of all kinds, including wind turbine sound,” he said.

 ?? AP FILE ?? A wind turbine overlooks a coal-fired power station in this 2014 photo.
AP FILE A wind turbine overlooks a coal-fired power station in this 2014 photo.

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