By
Kenneth Hess, Chief of Naval Operations Energy and Environmental Readiness
Division Public Affairs
KINGSVILLE,
Texas (NNS) -- Officials from the Department of Defense (DoD), the Department
of the Navy (Navy), E.ON Climate & Renewables North America, LLC (ECRNA),
and Petronila Wind Farm, LLC, owned by ECRNA (Petronila Wind), announced a
memorandum of agreement (MOA) Nov. 27 to allow the developer to build and
operate new wind turbines in Nueces County, Texas, while working to protect the
Navy's ability to continue its training mission at NAS Kingsville and NAS
Corpus Christi.
Representatives
from each organization participated in a ceremony and base tour to commemorate
the agreement.
Signatories
to the agreement include Acting Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for
Installations and Environment, John Conger; Principal Deputy (Acting) Assistant
Secretary of the Navy for Energy, Installations and Environment, Joseph
Ludovici; Deputy Director, Chief of Naval Operations Energy and Environmental
Readiness Division, John Quinn; Commander, Navy Installations Command, Vice
Adm. William French; Commander, Navy Region Southeast, Rear Adm. Jack Scorby;
Commanding Officer, NAS Corpus Christi, Capt. David Edgecomb; Commanding
Officer, NAS Kingsville, Capt. Mark McLaughlin; Vice President of Petronila
Wind, Paul Bowman; and Chief Executive Officer, ECRNA, Steve Trenholm.
Under
the MOA, ECRNA will install and operate up to 100 wind turbines at the
Petronila Wind Farm site.
"The
Navy is at the forefront of alternative energy use and production, and the Navy
supports such projects when they are compatible with our mission," said
Rear Adm. Scorby. "The agreement will enable this wind turbine project to
move forward while putting measures in place that work to preserve vital pilot
training capability at NAS Kingsville and NAS Corpus Christi."
Under
the agreement, ECRNA will provide $750,000 in funding to DoD for researching,
testing and implementing solutions to mitigate potential impacts. Mitigation
efforts could include upgrades that allow the Navy radars to more accurately
detect aircraft; optimizing radars to "ignore" signals received from
wind turbines, incorporating new systems that fill in radar gaps, and other
technical modifications. To reduce the potential of radar interference, the new
turbines will be limited to 500 feet in height and will be confined to one 5 by
7 mile site within the existing Petronila Wind Farm project boundary.
The
agreement establishes a specific set of procedures the Navy and ECRNA will use
to safely curtail wind turbines when and if needed, and to document and address
emerging concerns. In addition, Navy, DoD, and Petronilla Wind will form a
joint working group to study the effectiveness of the mitigation measures
implemented
"This
agreement is a collaborative effort that proves the military and the wind
industry can find solutions that protect bases and still allow responsible development,"
said Steve Trenholm, CEO, ECRNA.
The
Navy and the Department of Defense will continue working closely with renewable
energy developers and local communities in South Texas to ensure local wind
turbine projects can coexist with the Navy mission.
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