Central Wisconsin puts focus on 'green' energy

From an article by Nathaniel Shuda in the Wisconsin Rapids Tribune:

With renewable energy becoming an increasingly popular topic across the country, central Wisconsin leaders hope to be on the cutting edge as demand grows.

Mid-State Technical College classes have begun for two new renewable energy programs, and three others already were in place. Demand is fueling the need for a sustainable/renewable energy training center at the school’s Wisconsin Rapids campus, officials said.

“This is a really solid start,” Mid-State President John Clark said Monday during a meeting with U.S. Rep. Dave Obey, D-Wausau. “We’re hoping (others) will be using this as a pattern for future projects.”

Leaders hope to use a $428,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Labor, which Obey earmarked within President Barack Obama’s $410 billion budget bill earlier this year, to purchase solar panels, wind turbines and other lab equipment.

Mid-State also is working with leaders at Energy Composites Corp. in Wisconsin Rapids and the North Central Wisconsin Workforce Development Board to develop a first-of-its-kind curriculum for wind-energy and composites training, an endeavor for which the board recently garnered a $100,000 grant from the state Department of Workforce Development.

Energy Composites continues its efforts to obtain LEED Platinum certification for its planned 350,000-square-foot manufacturing plant that will produce blades for industrial wind turbines in Wisconsin Rapids, President Jamie Mancl said.

“We’re trying to put everything together,” Mancl said Tuesday, after a closed session meeting with the Wisconsin Rapids Common Council to discuss the company developer’s agreement with the city. “It’s going to take some time, but we’re still on schedule.”

Energy Composites isn’t the only company that has been working on such a certification.

The Mead Wildlife Area Education & Visitor Center, near Milladore, announced Wednesday it received LEED Platinum Green Building Certification status, the highest level of sustainable design.

Power plant would pump millions into economy

From an article by Nick Halter in the Wausau Daily Herald:

A biomass power plant in Rothschild will give a much-needed shot in the arm to a Wisconsin pulpwood industry that has suffered a 20 percent reduction in demand for wood over recent years.

The plant, proposed for the grounds of the Domtar paper mill, would create more than 100 logging jobs and 20 to 30 power plant jobs, according to studies of a proposed biomass plant in Ashland, said Terry Mace, forest product specialist for the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.

The average salary for both loggers and power plant employees is about $32,000, Mace said. Although the plant’s construction still must be approved by the state Public Service Commission, forestry industry workers already are anticipating fresh demand for their products.

Based on the amount of wood sold to the plant and the jobs it would create, $22.7 million would be injected to the local economy each year if the plant were completed on time in 2013, said Roger Nacker, a natural resource economist for the Wisconsin Economic Development Institute.

The closures of three Wisconsin paper mills in the past few years –including the Wausau paper pulp mill in Brokaw and the Domtar mill in Port Edwards — have reduced the state’s demand for pulpwood from around 3.2 million cords per year in the mid-2000s to 2.5 million in 2007 and 2008, Mace said.

The closures, combined with the downturn in home construction, have been hurting many local loggers.

Harness the wind: Turbines grow in popularity

From an article by Judy Newman in the Wisconsin State Journal:

Art and Mindy Shrader have a new conversation piece in the back yard of their log home near Reedsburg: a wind energy turbine, designed to help power their house.

“We live up on a ridge and the wind is always blowing there,” Shrader said. “We thought it would be nice to do something about that.”

Gene Frakes has had a wind turbine on his property in the town of Perry, in the southwestern corner of Dane County, for two and a half years. The 10-kilowatt turbine produces an average of 1,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity — or about $110 worth — a month, enough to power his home and send some extra electricity out to the grid for his utility company to use. “There’s five months a year when they owe us money,” said Frakes, who also installs wind power equipment.

In the past several months, interest in individual wind turbines has revved up in Wisconsin and beyond. Residents are signing up to buy them, and companies are springing up to sell and install them. Part of the popularity stems from new federal tax credits.

Nationwide, the number of small wind generators installed for home or commercial use grew 78 percent in 2008 over the previous year, and residential sales in early 2009 were 15 to 20 percent higher than a year ago, according to a study by the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA), in Washington, D.C.

In Wisconsin, about 65 small wind turbines have been installed over the past six years with commitments for 25 or 30 more, according to Focus on Energy, a public-private partnership, funded by utility ratepayers, that facilitates renewable energy and energy efficiency.

New biomass plant will build green economy

From an editorial in the Wausau Daily Herald:

The news that Milwaukee’s We Energies is planning to build a massive 50-megawatt power plant at the Domtar paper mill in Rothschild is an almost immediate boon to the local economy. Beyond that, it could be a promising sign for future economic development in central Wisconsin.

. . . .the new plant will burn waste generated by Domtar — sawmill waste and other recycled mill waste, as well as waste wood — to produce steam that will fuel turbines that generate electricity. That electricity will make the Domtar mill virtually self-sufficient, and the rest of the power will be sent to We Energy’s grid.

It’s estimated that the new, $250 million biomass plant will create 150 permanent jobs throughout the supply chain. And locally it will create 400 temporary construction jobs between now and 2013.

That alone promises to hold create economic benefits for local workers and construction companies.

Beyond economics, the expansion of biomass power is a part of a broad movement toward renewable energies and away from fossil fuels, which are polluting and increasingly expensive. Since 2002, Domtar has increased its use of renewable fuels by 12.5 percent.

This move comes with a series of benefits to the environment and to the economy. To the extent that cleaner, renewable and local resources can be used, it makes sense that all sorts of manufacturing companies would want to move in this direction.

Early energy assistance applications start Sept. 1

From an article

Wood County Energy Assistance Office will begin taking early-season applications at various locations throughout Wood County starting [September 1].

The Wisconsin Home Energy Assistance Program is available to qualifying households to help maintain utility and heating services.

To qualify for the Energy Assistance Program, household income must be below 60 percent of the Wisconsin State Median Income. Gross income for the prior three months is used to determine eligibility, and there is no asset limit. Eligible households will receive a one-time heating season payment to help pay heat and/or electric costs.

Wood County will be accepting Energy Assistance applications at Outreach Sites only. Applicants will be seen on a first-come, first-serve basis. No appointments will be scheduled for the regular-season applications during this time.

Click for outreach sites for September and October.