Wind turbines proposed for Carroll area
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A major wind-turbine project has been proposed for the Carroll area south of Brandon.
Innergex Renewable Energy has made preliminary agreements with landowners representing roughly 12,000 acres and is looking to install between 30 and 35 turbines.
The company is competing for the chance to supply Manitoba Hydro with 200 megawatts of Indigenous majority-owned wind energy. Hydro aims to add 600 megawatts before 2035 and issued a call for proposals in March for the first phase, leading to several wind-energy bids in southern Manitoba.
A copy of the handout given to rural residents at a recent town hall in Carroll about a proposed wind-turbine project south of Brandon. (Supplied)
Innergex hosted a meeting at the Carroll Memorial Hall last week to inform residents about its proposal, and the event was well attended, said Adeline Thames, the company’s senior development associate.
“The open house had good turnout, and many attendees expressed appreciation for the opportunity to provide feedback, as well as interest in continuing to learn about the project,” Thames wrote in an email to the Sun on Friday.
“The project team looks forward to continuing to engage with the local community should the initial proposal be successful in the procurement with Manitoba Hydro.”
The turbines would be situated roughly 25 kilometres south of Brandon, on the west side of the John Bracken Highway and north of the Red Coat Trail. Innergex has been testing the area since last year.
The Carroll location was chosen for its strong wind resource, its ability to connect to one of the best 14 substations identified by Manitoba Hydro and the compatibility to use agricultural land around the turbines, among other things, Innergex wrote in a presentation to the RM of Oakland-Wawanesa council in April.
The turbines would be up to 125 metres high, with blades up to 80 metres long. Each turbine would use less than three acres of land.
Over its 30-year lifetime, the project is estimated to pay more than $20 million to landowners and more than $20 million in taxes to the municipalities of Oakland-Wawanesa and Souris-Glenwood.
If Manitoba Hydro chooses the proposal, the turbines would come online between 2030 and 2032, according to Innergex. They would produce up to 200 megawatts of energy.
Innergex is partnering with Dakota Tipi First Nation and Fisher River Cree Nation on the proposal, which is called the Nohtin Kistikewin Wind Project.
Dakota Tipi First Nation Chief Dennis Pashe said the community would use the project to support education and other priorities.
“It would be an important source of revenue for our community,” said Pashe. “We are pretty well underfunded for most everything, specifically for kids going to school and university.”
Pashe said the First Nation would also be looking to secure employment opportunities.
Souris-Glenwood Mayor Duane Davison said there is a balance to work out in deciding whether or not the project makes sense. Early estimates show a sizable income, but there are also downsides to consider, he said.
“It’s a huge, huge, huge decision, and its going to impact generations of people,” Davison told the Sun on Friday. “Three hundred thousand (dollars) a year for a municipality our size is significant, but there is a cost to that in terms of aesthetic and visual appeal. There’s a lot that goes into that.”
So far, the municipality hasn’t made a commitment, he said, adding that the real decision-making will only come if Manitoba Hydro chooses the project from its list of proposals.
“If they pick ours, then that’s when the tough decisions and the tough conversations have to happen, right?” Davison said. “We’d have to have some serious ratepayer consultation and we’d have to get down to what is everybody’s real opinion, and are you prepared to live with a trade-off?”
Aging infrastructure, like sewer and water pipes, would likely be replaced or repaired using the tax revenue if the community did go forward with the project, he said — but it would be difficult to justify transforming the “beautiful country” for money.
Like Davison, Dave Kreklewich, head of council for Oakland-Wawanesa, said responses have been mixed in his community.
“A lot of people like them, a lot of people don’t like them,” Kreklewich said. “We are hearing all kinds of things.”
The turbines’ noise, the roads that would be created to service them and the impacts to wildlife have been raised as concerns, he said. On the other hand, the project would pay landowners, and could alleviate taxation and pay for special projects in the community, he added.
“This is going to come down to a choice by the citizens more than anything else” through public hearings and consultation, he said. “We have to wait and see whether, number one it gets approved, number two, that the citizens want to approve it.
“There’s a lot of steps to go through yet.”
Oakland-Wawanesa resident Patricia Warburton said she doesn’t want to have a turbine anywhere near her, citing a number of concerns, including the ecosystem.
“I think environmentally speaking, we do everything we can to preserve the Brandon Hills area … and this will be detrimental,” Warburton said. “I think as stewards of the land, we have a responsibility. I want my grandchildren to be able to enjoy this one day.”
Warburton attended last week’s community information meeting and said the event was civil, with some opposition to the plan.
“There was some pushback, but very quiet, you know. We’re not a rowdy crew.”
The proposal will compete with other bids, such as the wind-turbine project proposed for the Polonia area in April by Renewable Energy Systems and the Manitoba Métis Federation.
Manitoba Hydro is expected to announce the winning bid from its request for proposals next year. Innergex has also submitted another proposal for a project near Swan Lake in partnership with Swan Lake First Nation in the RM of Lorne.
» cmcdowell@brandonsun.com