NewEnergyNews More: COURT OKS CAPE WIND

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  • Wednesday, September 1, 2010

    COURT OKS CAPE WIND

    SJC gives Cape Wind go-ahead to start construction
    Beth Daley, August 31, 2010 (Boston Globe)

    "A divided [Massachusetts] Supreme Judicial Court ruled 4-2…that the state has the power to overrule community opposition and grant the controversial Cape Wind project a suite of local permits it needs to start construction.

    "The long-awaited decision comes as the project developers enter the homestretch to build 130 turbines in Nantucket Sound within the year. If the court had sided with opponents of the project, it could have held up the project indefinitely or killed it outright because many permits have to come from communities or agencies that oppose the project…Chief Justice Margaret H. Marshall and Justice Francis X. Spina voted against approving the permitting process…[but] concurred with other parts of the ruling."


    click to enlarge

    "While the wind farm will be built in federal waters, beyond the reach of most state and local agency decisions, a transmission line will cross state waters and interconnect on land, giving various governments [including the Cape Cod Commission] authority to review pieces of the project…"

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    "The commission denied the project a permit in 2007, saying it did not have enough information to make a decision. Cape Wind immediately appealed to the state Energy Facilities Siting Board, created more than 35 years ago in part to evaluate energy projects that may be unreasonably held up or burdened by local permitting processes.

    "Raising the temperature of the already heated debate, Cape Wind asked not only for the board to overrule the Cape Cod Commission but for all nine local approvals to be evaluated as one by the board…The board, headed by Ian Bowles, the state secretary for Energy and Environmental Affairs, agreed and issued one "superpermit.'' The main opposition group, the Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound, [and] the Cape Cod Commission [file the now-decided appeal]…"

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