Via Dan Nagengast – the Kansas Rural Center is kicking off one of many upcoming forums on developing the wind resources of Kansas. FYI, a very interesting article (I think maybe inspired by this press release?) on the wind boom appeared in the Hutch News.

Stop before you sign. Look both ways. Proceed with caution! There are easier ways to go about this process, and then there are harder ways. Educate yourself, and learn more. Attending one of Dan’s forums is a great place to start.

Release reprinted in its entirety:

For Immediate Release–

South Central Kansas Regional Wind Energy Event Planned for March 26

With talk of wind as an alternative energy source for south-central Kansas, a wind energy summit is being planned for area producers, wind energy enthusiasts, landowners, county commissioners, city commissioners and other interested parties.

The South Central Kansas Regional Wind Energy Summit will be held on March 26, 2008 at Kingman High School, Kingman, KS. This educational event will be from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. Please register by March 24, 2008 for an accurate lunch count. A variety of presenters and topics of discussion will be featured at this meeting.

Steve Errebo, Lincoln County Commissioner, will give an overview of an entire completed wind farm project. He is a member of the Kansas Wind Working Group formed by Governor Kathleen Sebelius and led by Lt. Governor, Mark Parkinson. His experience will be a valuable resource for the purpose of the summit.

Several individuals, businesses and communities have looked at or questioned the ability to produce wind energy from their own generators. Tom Wind (yes his real name) will be presenting a webinar. He is a co-developer of the Hardin Hilltop Wind Farm, which is the first community-owned wind farm to take advantage of the Iowa tax credit incentives passed in 2005. As a consulting engineer, he specializes in wind generation projects and in the integration of large wind turbines into the utility grid system. Tom is a member of the American Wind Energy Association as well as several other related organizations and will provide insight into developing community wind energy.

Once generators are in place, how will the energy be transmitted to the end user? Kimberly Gencur Svaty will discuss transmission lines presently in south-central Kansas and also statewide. Having worked in the energy and transmission industries for several years, she is familiar with the transmission picture in Kansas. Her presentation will help the audience understand this issue.

The summit will include two breakout sessions. One session will focus on landowner leasing issues. Mike Irvin, an attorney with the Kansas Farm Bureau Legal Foundation will share the leasing picture from the landowner and legal perspective. Mike also serves on the Kansas Wind Working Group.

Another breakout session features Steve Errebo sharing from an elected official perspective. This session is open to any interested persons. His background with the Lincoln County Wind Energy project will help educate attendees about issues facing the development of wind energy in their counties and communities.

Across the state and nation, wind energy groups are creating coalitions to assure that best practices are utilized in new projects. Roger Masenthin, coordinator for Sunflower RC&D Area, Inc. will facilitate as the audience explores opportunities for building local coalitions that will provide leadership now and in the future for south-central Kansas wind development.

PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED BY MARCH 24 TO ATTEND AND FOR AN ACCURATE LUNCH COUNT. REGISTRATION FORMS ARE AVAILABLE ON THE FOLLOWING WEBSITES OR BY CONTACTING ANY OF THE SPONSORS LISTED BELOW:

If you have questions, you may contact any one of the sponsoring agencies which include Sumner County Economic Development Commission 620-326-8779; Kansas Rural Center 785-748-0959; Sunflower RC& D 620-896-7378; Kingman County Farm Bureau 620-532-6721; and the Kingman County Economic Development Council 620-532-3694.

— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org

Everywhere we go, CEP finds that Kansans want to share their stories. Kansans’ firsthand accounts of climate change in their lives and landscapes – from earlier planting seasons to more unpredictable rains to new and different crop pests – have had a real impact on our program.

CEP would like to collect and share these stories. After all, the stories we tell do more than just recall the past climate of Kansas. They give us ideas and inspiration – and most importantly hope – as we learn to adapt to our changing environment.

Have you observed changes in your climate? Have you changed your habits? Created solutions? We’d love to hear about them.

Please email your story to: info@climateandenergy.org, and put “Climate Stories” in the subject line.

— Eileen Horn, www.climateandenergy.org

I have been receiving a fair amount of curious emails on this topic lately, so I thought I would address this question. I am far, far from a Capitol insider, and I tend to dislike depending on rumor as a reliable information source – but in this case, that is all we have. So take all this with a grain of salt.

The House (March 5) and the Senate (March 6) voted to send SB 327 to Governor Sebelius. The paperwork was held up, however, and she did not receive it on her desk until after Clean Energy Day at the Capitol (March 11). Come on, no one be cynical, I am sure that was entirely a coincidence :). I believe the actual day she received it was March 13. She has ten days to hand down a veto, which means her deadline is Saturday, March 22.

Why no veto yet? The word is that out of respect for Senate President Steve Morris – his father just passed away and the funeral is this Friday, and I believe the Governor plans to attend – the Governor has been waiting on the veto.

After the veto hits, what happens then? Here is where we get into the educated guesses (and thank you to those whose brains I picked for this info, although I know you all certainly prefer to go unnamed). The procedure is that the leader of either chamber can call for an override vote.  When will they call? The Senate could conceivably call for an override anytime, because their vote  on SB 327 was veto-proof.

It is the House vote that is in question. It could go a couple of ways (at least). First, Speaker Melvin Neufeld could call for a vote ASAP, or he could wait for the veto session. The regular legislative session supposedly will adjourn around April 4. The veto session convenes on April 30. If the House holds a veto override vote immediately and the measure is not overridden – the counts vary, but supporters of the bill lack anywhere from 5-8 necessary votes (and really, who knows) – then conceivably they could quickly push a new Holcomb measure thru by the end of the regular session.

Second, the House could hold on and wait to vote on the measure until the veto session. In this case, that would leave lots of time for supporters of the measure to hit the ground in vulnerable districts during the April 4-30 break. If this is the case, there will probably be enormous resources devoted to this effort to switch votes. A vulnerable district is one where a legislator really needs some other measure passed, and they might be willing to trade their vote on Holcomb to get that done.

Of course, with the eyes of the public upon them, that puts these legislators in a really hard place. If I represented a district in northeastern KS, for example, come November I wouldn’t want to have to explain why I switched to a pro-Holcomb vote on this particular proposal – especially with the Governor still willing to consider a more reasonable compromise.

(Disclaimer): There could also be other options or scenarios that none of us have yet considered.

So now you know what I know (which, let’s be honest, isn’t much). CEP may or may not be able to cover the veto override votes live. MH does that coverage, and she has to drive in from McLouth to Topeka. These votes are unscheduled, which complicates the timing even further.

So, keep an eye on your papers. As always, the KS media is right on top of this issue, breathing down the legislators’ necks.

As always, feel free to do that yourself, of course.  Share your support and/or your constructive comments with your elected officials. The easiest way to do that is (1) locate them through www.congress.org and write down their contact information (2) figure out how they voted on the most recent incarnation of the Holcomb bill by checking the CEP records for the House and the Senate, and (3) then contact them according to the CEP guidelines for how to work with your legislator.

— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org

Morning! A little news. Reminder: Today is the official fifth anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Iraq.

International wind scene. China boosts its wind production goal to 10% by 2010 (WSJournal). Ouch! My ears are now ringing from the screams of U.S. wind developers, who are in competition for these same precious turbines. China still relies mostly on imported turbines and components, as does the U.S. (That strikes me as a hole in the market. Holes in markets need to be filled. Right? RIGHT?) Quotable:

More worrying, even its booming domestic industry still completely relies on imports of key wind-turbine components, especially ball bearings. That means China’s appetite will just add pressure to already-stretched global supply chains, likely increasing turbine prices and thus capital costs for new wind farms everywhere.

Kansas and coal. Double whammy from the WSJ this a.m. They have joined the interested circles of out-of-state Kansas watchers. Sadly… you can’t read the article unless you have an online Wall Street Journal subscription! I hate hate hate that. Bless their hearts. I’m not even sure how long that link will be live, but the title of the article is “Kansan Stokes Energy Squabble With Coal Ruling,” and it is written by Stephen Power.

Scientific uncertainty and carbon. A word, here, before the news. An editorial word. Some folks seem to expect science to have all the answers. This drives me a little nuts. Whatever out there might have all the answers, I truly doubt that source is human in nature. Instead, I expect science to ask questions. And keep asking questions. And to be skeptical. If science didn’t leave room for debate, if it turned everything into fixed and certain dogma, I wouldn’t trust it. All I want is enough reliably gathered information for the rest of us to get a better understanding of potential risks that our actions (or inactions) might pose to the environment, and ultimately also our own survival.

So the following is cause for more questions, not panic or dismissal – two new studies suggest that the world might need to cut its emissions much further and faster than previously expected, in order to avert precipitous impact from climate change (Washington Post).

What’s a helpful way to sort out that information? On one hand, these studies involve very long time frames. That’s a lot of variables, and a lot of uncertainty. On the other hand, previous climate modeling has proven to be too conservative – actual observed climate variations (average temperature, sea ice melt, etc.) during the past few years have proven to be far more dramatic than the models projected back in 1996.

So. It’s all about risk assessment, management, and prevention. Which ultimately places the burden on you to decide. Not scientists. It’s about you – and your relationship with your policymakers.

Speaking of politicians and scientists – what the…? The EPA is already embroiled in a staff v. leadership controversy over regulating carbon dioxide emissions from transportation sources. Now Rep. Waxman – remember him? After he questioned RUS funding for coal-fired power plants in rural areas with taxpayer money, the program was suspended for 2008 and 2009 – he is now investigating White House involvement in scuttling CAFE standards two years ago (Detroit News). CAFE standards (short for Corporate Average Fuel Economy) measure fuel economy, or miles per gallon, for automobiles and light trucks. They were originally implemented during the oil embargo crises of the 1970s. The measurement represents the average fuel economy of a manufacturers’ entire fleet of vehicles, although many large vehicles such as SUVs are exempt.

Also, US Fish and Wildlife is catching major flak for delaying – for whatever reasons – the listing of the polar bear as an endangered species (Blomberg).

Wolf Creek. The Wolf Creek nuclear power plant (1,166 megawatts generating capacity) is currently shut down for about a month, apparently for a routine refueling (Reuters). According to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the refueling process is a procedure where the plant removes “uranium-bearing fuel elements that have been used at commercial nuclear reactors and that are no longer producing enough energy to sustain a nuclear reaction. Once the spent fuel is removed from the reactor the fission process has stopped, but the spent fuel assemblies still generate significant amounts of radiation and heat.” The NRC notes that “periodically, about one-third of the nuclear fuel in an operating reactor needs to be unloaded and replaced with fresh fuel.”

I think something like only 5% of the uranium is used, 95% is still left, just not in a state that the plants can use to generate electricity. The remaining fuel is then stored in cooling pools of water on site, although some sites do use a new form of dry storage.

Believe it or not. Last – and I can’t believe I am actually going to say this – here is a really fascinating article about the carbon footprint of cement (CSMonitor). Quotable: “Roughly 5 to 10 percent of global CO2 emissions are related to the manufacture and transportation of cement, a major ingredient of concrete.”

(Glad I didn’t know that, before my husband redid the pad in front of the garage…)

— Maril Hazlett, www.climateandenergy.org