Green Projects Generate
Splits in Activist Groups


By GREG HITT


On Capitol Hill, the Audubon Society is leading the fight to increase production of climate-friendly power.
So why are Audubon enthusiasts battling a wind farm that could help meet that goal?

For one thing, there are trout in nearby streams, which activists say are at risk from chemical and sediment runoff from
construction of 30 turbines, each soaring about 400 feet -- taller than the Statue of Liberty. Then there are the bats and hawks,
 which might be puréed by the giant blades that would catch the wind gusting along the Allegheny Mountains of Western Pennsylvania.

"They're enormous," says Tom Dick, a retired veterinarian who founded the local Audubon chapter.
"When you start looking at this, it's like, "hell, this is not right.'"

Even as Americans become convinced they need to change the way they power their lives, the environmental community is
splintering over how to do that. Does ethanol promote clean fuel or destroy the rural landscape? Is emission-free electricity
worth turning mountains into wind farms?

Thomas Kuhn, president of the Edison Electric Institute, which represents investor-owned utilities, says he sees
"a disturbing disconnect on this issue." EEI is quarreling with Audubon, the Sierra Club and other groups over a proposal
requiring utilities to use more renewable energy. The concept, which appeared to wither during negotiations over a big energy
bill, is currently being pushed by House Democrats in an end-of-year challenge to President Bush, who has threatened to veto
the legislation.

Dan Becker, a former top lobbyist at the Sierra Club, one of the leading U.S. environmental groups, concedes that local fights
can undercut the group's national goals. "It doesn't help," he says. Mr. Becker says local activism is a source of the movement's
strength. "I'd rather have the debate...than to have a Stalinist approach and say you cannot speak," he says.

In Southern California, a project to expand solar-power is imperiled because activists don't trust San Diego Gas & Electric Co.,
the local utility, which has proposed building a 150-mile transmission line.

Chief Operating Officer Michael Niggli says the line, which will help his company meet California's own environmental and
energy mandates, will connect to a substation near the Arizona border. Mr. Niggli said it will also draw and transmit power
from a solar field in the desert.

Windmills like these drew howls from Pennsylvania environmentalists.

San Diego Gas & Electric is a subsidiary of California-based Sempra Energy, which actually supported the renewable-fuels
mandate approved by the House. The bill is now pending in the Senate.

Micah Mitrosky, a Sierra Club community organizer, complains the line would run through the Anza-Borrego Desert State Park.
She also isn't comfortable with the idea that it would be used to transmit power generated by fossil fuels, and questions whether
the line will ever be used to carry alternative energy. Local Sierra Club officials enlisted opponents at concerts, farmer's markets
and street fairs and in late October escorted a delegation of community leaders to Sacramento.

Mr. Niggli says the Sierra Club is missing the point. "We don't understand their opposition," he says.
"This is a transmission line that will clearly help meet the goals they have," because the line will carry solar power.

David Hamilton, head of the Sierra Club's effort in Washington to curb global warming, says he's not aware of the fight
or the project in San Diego. He says his group wants to cooperate with companies when it has "some confidence" projects
will boost green energy. "We've realized...you have to give a little," he says.

In Maine, the Audubon Society, founded more than a century ago to protect birds, has worked with developers to draw up
guidelines for wind projects. But even this cooperation has limits.

A proposed site near Sugarloaf ski resort has been a potential location for wind-power generation for years.
The project gained momentum in 2006 when Maine Mountain Power LLC -- a partnership between Maine's Endless Energy Co.
and a California-based subsidiary of Edison International -- proposed a 30-turbine project on Redington and Black Nubble
mountains.

The Audubon Society worried about the impact to Bicknell's Thrush, a bird that lives at high elevations in northeastern U.S.,
and old growth fir trees. Jody Jones, an ecologist for Maine Audubon, says the group has supported wind projects elsewhere
but adds "not every location is appropriate." Over the summer, Maine Mountain offered a scaled-back project with 18 turbines;
now the same fight is unfolding. Some environmental groups have decided to support the revised project.
Audubon remains opposed.

Charley Parnell, spokesman for the Edison unit backing the plant, says the company is "disappointed" given the "clamor for
this type of technology, from a whole host of folks." Edison International backed the House mandate on renewable fuels.

Betsy Loyless, Audubon's senior vice president for policy in Washington, says she isn't aware of details of the Maine and
Pennsylvania fights. She says local offices "are largely supportive of renewable energy," but she stresses the importance of
responding to local concerns. "It's a tough situation," she says.

In Pennsylvania, Democratic governor Ed Rendell has made wind power a priority. In 2004, he persuaded Gamesa SA,
a Spanish energy company, to establish its U.S. headquarters in his state. Gamesa's Shaffer Mountain project in Somerset
County was proposed last year.

Among those leading the opposition is Mr. Dick, who worries about the hawks and eagles. The mountain's ridges form a
sort of highway for migrating birds, says Mr. Dick, who founded a "hawk watch" staffed by Audubon volunteers.
Along with Audubon Society allies and others, he has put out signs, circulated petitions, lobbied state officials and set
about fighting a water-drainage permit.

Gamesa says the project will have "minimal or no impact" on birds and bats. The company says it will use tubular towers
on which birds can't perch, and will set turbines to the less-trafficked west and no closer than 400 feet to the mountain top.

"The birds are not actually flying directly above" the ridge top, says Tim Vought, Gamesa's manager for the project.

Mr. Dick says he understands the pressure to shift electricity production from fossil fuels to renewable sources,
but wants to use care in placing projects. "The problem, to me, is worse than urban sprawl," he says.