Whanganui Chronicle

Farmers who got wind of turbines are reaping the rewards

- Laurel Stowell

Cousins Warwick Lupton and David Alexander farm together near Waverley and it took them 12 years and three electricit­y generators to get Waipipi Wind Farm establishe­d.

“A lot of people said it would never happen, and that makes you drive quite hard,” Lupton said.

He and Alexander own most of the 980ha that the windfarm’s turbines spread across. They have been heavily involved in it for two years, both as landowners and contractor­s.

It’s a project that has been “pretty challengin­g” but well worth doing, Lupton said.

The two signed a contract with the builder, Tilt Renewables. They get a percentage of the electricit­y generated.

“The more they blow, the better we do. They’re actually performing really, really well at the moment. It doesn’t take a lot of wind to drive them.”

Lupton and Alexander have 110 staff and some heavy machinery. The staff do freight deliveries and contractin­g and have had about two years’ work from the windfarm build.

They carted the metal and topsoil, and are still rehabilita­ting the land after blowouts. They also managed to carry on farming amid the constructi­on.

“It’s quite an interrupti­on to farming, but you can still farm. It wouldn’t suit some people,” Lupton said.

They carried on grazing cattle and growing crops of oats and grass as 21km of road was put in and 31 turbines erected. They get to use the roads in future, but there has been a lot of fence-shifting.

“It’s all right, but you have got to fence it all, and there’s easements.”

There are 1,200 cattle across the land now, and being among the turbines doesn’t bother them. The blades turn but are very quiet, even when you are standing right under them, Lupton said.

The people counting birds before constructi­on began had no concerns about how the turbine would affect birds.

Other landowners, the Parininihi ki Waitotara Incorporat­ion and Nga¯ Rauru Kiitahi iwi, have both been “more than helpful” in the project, Lupton said.

Local people got first pick of the jobs, and Waverley’s Four Square benefited by feeding the 150-200 people who came and went from the building site.

“There’s a lot of people that did very, very well out of the rental side of it too. The town seemed pretty happy,” Lupton said.

Some people opposed the build but most were reasonably happy now.

Lupton and Alexander enjoyed the project, despite the challenges of communicat­ion with corporates and their “new level of health and safety and a lot of rules you have to abide by”.

“We have met a lot of good people, clever people who are very interestin­g to talk to,” Lupton said.

 ?? PHOTO / FILE ?? Waverley farmer and contractor Warwick Lupton is perhaps best known for being world a hydroplane champion.
PHOTO / FILE Waverley farmer and contractor Warwick Lupton is perhaps best known for being world a hydroplane champion.

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