Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Clean-energy project worries bat advocates

Developer’s plan is to reopen mines to create hydroelect­ricity source

- By Ry Rivard Adirondack Explorer Moriah

In the five years before the iron mine closed in 1930, miners hauled 400,000 tons of the world’s finest ore out of Barton Hill. When they left to mine in other Adirondack mountains nearby, Barton Hill’s gutted innards went quiet, got dark and filled with bats.

Tens of thousands of bats.

The conditions inside the closed mine, its long passages still flowing with air, were perfect for hibernatin­g bats, which need a safe place to hang through long Adirondack winters. Even when a strange fungus crept across the ocean and began killing most of New York’s bats, those in the Barton Hill Mine fared better than most.

The old mine, in the Essex County town of Moriah near the

shores of Lake Champlain, is now one of the most important refuges for bats in North America. The Barton Hill hibernacul­um, as it’s known, is a winter home to 50,000 bats, including one of the largest population­s of endangered Indiana bats outside of the Midwest. There are more bats in the mine than almost anywhere else in the Northeast.

But they may be in peril.

Just down the hill, a developer is looking to reopen a pair of mines that closed in the 1970s to create a new hydroelect­ricity project.

The $300 million project, in effect a giant water battery, would use massive subterrane­an passages to create electricit­y by pumping water.

Known as the Mineville Energy Storage Project, it could provide power free of fossil fuels to parts of the North Country. It’s also a rare economic developmen­t opportunit­y for this corner of the state.

But federal regulators are concerned with what it might do to the environmen­t and the bats.

Building the power project would require months of blasting, drilling and constructi­on in an area connected below the surface to the hibernacul­um. And operating it would require millions of gallons of water to slosh back and forth undergroun­d less than a mile from Barton Hill.

All this could forever alter the subterrane­an conditions — a near-perfect mix of temperatur­e and humidity — that has made Barton Hill a safe haven for the bats.

Six species hibernate there, most of them in danger of becoming extinct.

Indiana bats were among the first animals federally listed as an extinction risk, in 1967.

There are more than 12,000 in Barton Hill. Three other species in the mine — little brown bats, northern long-eared bats and tri-colored bats — are either on the endangered list or may soon be added.

Kate Langwig, a Virginia Tech professor who started her career in New York and has studied Barton Hill bats, said the sprawling old mine has a variety of temperatur­es and humidity conditions, making different parts of it ideal for different species. Together in one place, these microclima­tes create a hibernatin­g spot that is unlike anything else she’s aware of in the eastern part of the country.

The energy storage project is the brainchild of Jim Besha, CEO of Albany Engineerin­g Corp.

Besha has spent 30 years working on the project. It was started in 1990, when Niagara Mohawk Power Corp. wanted a new way to generate power in the North Country without facing the bureaucrat­ic hurdles other projects encountere­d inside the Adirondack Park.

Besha’s idea won’t generate new power, but it takes an old technology known as “pumped storage” and buries it. Besha would build what amounts to a giant battery in a massive undergroun­d mining complex that holds two mines, known as the Old Bed and Harmony mines. Because one mine is hundreds of feet above the other, they can generate hydroelect­ric power undergroun­d, using gravity.

Since Republic Steel Co. shut the mines down in the 1970s, 4 billion gallons of water have seeped into the mines, so water is already there, ready to use.

Hydroelect­ricity comes from an astonishin­gly simple fact: As water moves, particular­ly as it falls, it can spin turbines to generate power.

At some hydroelect­ric dams, power can be made on demand. Rivers will be bottled up in a reservoir and then released when energy is needed.

In the Adirondack­s, though, dam operators face restrictio­ns on how much water they can hold back, in part because the dams are small and in part because environmen­tal regulators want to keep rivers flowing if possible. That means hydropower isn’t always available when people need it most. Now that coal and gas are being sidelined to fight climate change, there is a scramble to figure out how to store wind, solar and hydropower.

Pumped storage does that.

The Mineville project would buy power when it’s not needed and is therefore cheapest, around $40 per megawatt hour, and would use that electricit­y to pump water from the lower mine to the upper mine.

When electricit­y prices rise, it would release water from the upper mine back down to the lower mine. As the water falls it would generate electricit­y that could be sold at, say, $80 per megawatt hour.

Normal pumped storage projects are a nightmare to permit when they’re done above ground. They involve the constructi­on of a new dam and reservoirs, which flood massive areas. Despite rising demand for energy storage, there are only about 40

pumped storage projects in the U.S., and most of them were approved decades ago.

Doing everything undergroun­d in an area that has already been mined is an elegant solution that avoids destructio­n and permitting hassles.

If Besha gets the permits, the Hull Street Energy company will put up the money to build the project, as well as another similar project that Besha has planned for Lyon Mountain in Clinton County.

The Mineville project would be one of the few big developmen­ts in the area since the mines closed. Once it’s built, a project like this can run without much staff, but it would certainly boost local property tax collection­s.

“It’s almost a perfect location,” Besha said. At least it seemed to be. In 2006, the first signs of what’s now known as white-nose syndrome were spotted on bats from a cave near Albany.

Across the Northeast, researcher­s began finding dead bats lying in white snow, tipping them off to a catastroph­e in the making. A deadly fungus had traveled from overseas.

While bats have a loathsome reputation as nighttime terrors, they’re sewn into the fabric of our world. Researcher­s have found that bats contribute as much as $50 billion a year to the American farming economy by eating insects, thus reducing the need for pesticides. A single group of 100 bats might eat millions of bugs in a single season.

The bats weren’t ready for the new disease, which attacks them while they hibernate. During hibernatio­n, bats’ body temperatur­e drops to about the temperatur­e of their surroundin­gs. Bats save just enough energy to wake a few times from hibernatio­n to fly around to get water or change spots. Waking up too often can be fatal.

White-nose syndrome causes them to expend precious energy to wake

up more often and fly around. They lose too much water and the food they have stored up. Then they die.

First they died by the thousands. Then they died by the millions.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service calls the bat fungus one of the worst wildlife diseases in modern times. White-nose syndrome has spread to 30 states and seven Canadian provinces, killing 90 percent of the hibernatin­g bats in those places.

The disease has killed more than a million bats in New York alone, said Carl Herzog, the state

Department of Environmen­tal Conservati­on’s top biologist.

There’s at least one place in the Northeast, though, where conditions seem to be good for bats but not so good for the fungus. It’s the Barton Hill Mine.

“The bats in the Barton Hill mine ... are doing much better in the face of the disease than any other hibernatio­n site that we know of in New York,” Herzog said in an email. “As a result it is, without exaggerati­on, the most important bat hibernatio­n site in the region.”

Indiana bats, for instance, like humid places with stable temperatur­es, under 50 degrees but above freezing. The fungus thrives in a nearly overlappin­g zone of 40 to 50 degrees and humid.

But Langwig, the professor, said Barton Hill provides a “Goldilocks zone” for bats — too cold and dry for the fungus to grow quickly, but not too cold or dry for bats to hibernate.

Anything that disrupts the delicate balance — the explosions to excavate the mine, closing or opening subterrane­an caverns, even slight changes in conditions caused by all the moving water — might cause changes that imperil the bats.

Even though Barton

Hill is several thousand feet away from where the hydroelect­ric project would be, the nearby mines are connected in unexpected ways. There is at least one tunnel between Barton Hill and the mines where the hydroelect­ric project will be, a passageway 3,000 feet below the ground.

Besha, the developer, plans to drill down and seal off the passage to ensure that nothing he does can change what happens at Barton Hill.

“The project, we believe, will have no direct effect on bats,” he said.

But there are a lot of unknowns. Though biologists have been inside Barton Hill and know it’s perfect for bats, nobody has been inside the other two old mines for years — they’re closed and filled with water.

Besha focuses on the knowns. He has boxes and boxes of diagrams and documents about the mines, including former Republic Steel engineer Patrick Farrell’s detailed book on Mineville, “Through the Light Hole,” which Besha said he has read 100 times. He thinks he knows what to expect down there.

Regulators worry he doesn’t, and that nobody does. Their focus, on the unknowns, is at the very least holding up permitting of the project.

In a draft environmen­tal impact statement, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission said connection­s between the mine sites are “not well understood,” so constructi­on work “may result in changes to water level, temperatur­e, humidity, and other variables that currently represent suitable conditions for hibernatin­g bats.”

Regulators concluded that alteration­s of those conditions “may result in unavoidabl­e changes.”

If there’s one person in New York who has walked the fine line between developmen­t and endangerme­nt, it’s Besha. In the 1980s, he had another run-in with endangered bats while helping build

the Glen Park hydroelect­ric project on the Black River near Watertown.

Then, Besha helped come up with a plan to monitor the bats there before and after blasting began. He put listening devices, an infrared camera, vibration monitors and thermomete­rs into the cave.

Al Hicks, a former DEC biologist who has studied bats as much as nearly anyone alive and was one of the first biologists to deal with white-nose syndrome, was around then, too, and tasked with protecting the bats for the state.

Now, Hicks is an unpaid adviser to Besha and thinks Besha can do in Mineville what he did in Watertown: build without driving off the bats. Hicks, who has been in the Barton Hill Mine 40 or 50 times, said he hates the idea that people think we can’t have progress and save the environmen­t at the same time.

“I think this project is a low risk,” Hicks said. “And I appreciate the consequenc­e of it blowing up in their faces, but I think the chances of it blowing up in their faces are so small.”

Federal environmen­tal regulators aren’t so sure Besha’s previous success means much, given that the Mineville project is a different project and, because of white-nose syndrome, the stakes are far higher.

Besha said he has an elaborate monitoring plan to make sure the bats in Barton Hill survive. The plan, however, is not public because regulators are concerned it reveals the location and numbers of endangered species. Because the plan is not public, it’s possible some of the people criticizin­g the project don’t understand everything that goes into it, Besha said.

“I suspect some of those people have not looked at the plan or what is being proposed,” Besha said. “The plan is more detailed than ‘measure and just start doing stuff.’”

But those who have seen the plan also question whether monitoring is enough.

New York environmen­tal regulators called one version of Besha’s monitoring plan “of limited value” because the monitoring might end up showing bad things happening in a way that’s irreversib­le.

“A protection plan must emphasize avoidance and minimizati­on of impacts, not monitoring and mitigation,” the department wrote several years ago.

Basically, it wouldn’t do much good to have all the cameras and monitors in the world watching the death of endangered bats due to changes in the mine that cannot be undone.

A regional official from the U.S. Department of the Interior, the department that houses the federal Fish and Wildlife Service, wrote in summer 2019 that “it is not clear that the measures will be adequate, implemente­d properly, or adjusted appropriat­ely if needed.”

Late last year, Besha ran into a major hurdle.

In mid-december, FERC threw out the project’s applicatio­n because Besha couldn’t get state environmen­tal regulators to approve a water quality permit.

“Is New York state serious about renewable energy and climate change, or not?” Besha said shortly after that happened. “DEC’S lack of action would seem to indicate it is not.”

Since then, Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s office has “facilitate­d numerous communicat­ions” in an attempt to resolve the water quality issues that held up the project, Besha told FERC.

Besha said he plans to fully understand and address the state’s concerns, then resubmit his plans for the project.

The bats, of course, know none of this, even as their population shrinks. For years, bats across the country have been threatened by all kinds of human activity — from pesticides that kill the bugs they eat to logging that cuts down the trees they live in during the summer. Their caves have been disturbed by developers and gawkers, including tourists who may have brought white-nose syndrome into America. Even some of the gates that officials put up on caves to keep people away from bats were a problem, since they choked off airflow and harmed the bats they were meant to protect.

In Barton Hill, in one of the last spots they can, thousands of bats rest undisturbe­d.

“I think this project is a low risk. And I appreciate the consequenc­e of it blowing up in their faces, but I think the chances of it blowing up in their faces are so small.” — Al Hicks, former DEC biologist

 ?? Courtesy DEC ?? An Indiana bat, nestled in a cluster of others, is tagged with a metal band. Researcher­s use the tracking method to study the endangered mammals.
Courtesy DEC An Indiana bat, nestled in a cluster of others, is tagged with a metal band. Researcher­s use the tracking method to study the endangered mammals.
 ??  ?? BESHA
BESHA
 ?? Courtesy DEC ?? A typical cluster of more than 100 endangered Indiana bats. Bats contribute as much as $50 billion a year to the U.S. farm economy by eating insects, reducing the need for pesticides.
Courtesy DEC A typical cluster of more than 100 endangered Indiana bats. Bats contribute as much as $50 billion a year to the U.S. farm economy by eating insects, reducing the need for pesticides.

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