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Ag News  

Farmers reap stability from wind


Friday, November 28, 2008 3:27 PM CST

  
  

The Oregonian

WASCO, Ore. - Hilderbrand Lane slices through acres of wheat fields as it heads east out of Wasco, a tiny town burrowed into Oregon’s poorest county. Stubble from summer’s harvest bristles in every direction. Nothing interrupts the tawny expanse until the road rises to expose hundreds of wind turbines. Tall and shimmery in the midday haze, they overpower the landscape, striking, unsettling.

“I like em,” says John Hilderbrand, 81, a straight-talking but jocular wheat farmer who lives along his namesake road in the two-story house his grandfather built in 1900. “They’re grinding out dollars.”

Hilderbrand, the first in Sherman County to allow turbines on his land, reaps about $30,000 a year in lease payments. And the checks come without fail, he says, unlike the income from his wheat operation, which is squirrelly as the weather.

“Fact is, I don’t see any disadvantages,” says Hilderbrand, who likes talking about the wind almost as much as spinning yarns about rogue bears, stuffed rats and clueless urban slickers who insist on calling the county’s rich glacial silt “dirt” not “soil.”

In 2000, Sherman County had no turbines. Now it’s home to one of the highest concentrations in the Columbia River Gorge, where a wind-energy boom is under way.
  

The projects in the ground so far represent an investment of close to $1 billion, and they’ve begun to pump millions of dollars into this county of 1,700 residents, with jobs and tax and lease payments.

The fees alone - paid in lieu of property taxes - will double the county’s tax base this year and may, in part, be used to write $500 to $800 checks to every resident.

Most directly, the turbines have affected the lives of farmers such as Hilderbrand, who had the good luck to own land in the wind’s fierce path and the good sense to turn an industry juggernaut to personal advantage.

Wind energy brings its own set of concerns: higher electricity costs for consumers, environmental impacts, scenic intrusions and an inconsistency that can confound power planners.

But a look at Sherman County through Hilderbrand’s eyes hints at the benefits. Farmers are weaving a new industry into the deep traditions of the fields, stabilizing their livelihoods and connecting their farms to their children and communities in ways they never imagined.

“I used to cuss the wind all the time,” says Hilderbrand, who begins to grin in anticipation of his own punch line. “These days, that’s sacrilege.”

The Hilderbrands’ turbines are part of the Klondike wind power projects, owned and operated by Iberdrola Renewables, a Spanish company and one of the largest wind energy developers in the United States. Klondike has been going up in phases - the first in 2001 - and now involves 242 turbines and generating capacity of 400 megawatts. Accounting for the wind’s variability, that’s enough power to consistently light up more than 115,000 homes.

To the north, Portland General Electric has completed the first phase of its 217-turbine, 450-megawatt Biglow Canyon project.

All told, the companies lease land from 55 landowners, most of them wheat farmers in a county that has no industry and a larger percentage of its 831 square miles under cultivation than any other Oregon county.

Sherman County’s per-capita income, at $19,550, is the lowest of any county in the state, according to 2006 data, and well below the $33,299 county average for the state.

More wind projects are in the works, including a 400-megawatt project (which could double to 800 megawatts) by BP Alternative Energy, a subsidiary of BP, and two more projects by Iberdrola totaling 700 megawatts.

The Goose Pit, a nondescript building at the south end of town, is in a midafternoon lull. A few regulars drink beer at a roomy bar in the back.

The Goose Pit serves as the town’s public square near the end of Wasco’s short main street. Despite the wind energy boom, the street holds more boarded-up storefronts and peeling paint than viable businesses. But for the locals, the changes are profound.

Kathy Neihart and Mike Gutfleisch have owned the restaurant for 25 years. Only in the past several has the investment begun to pay off.

“It’s been a slow uphill climb ever since we started,” says Neihart, who moved to Wasco from Portland to escape the big city clamor. About 10 years ago, major renovations put them in debt, and Wasco’s dropping population darkened the outlook.

“We were getting behind, and there was no way we could have caught up. Those wind towers saved us.”

Between 2000 and 2006, Sherman County’s population fell by 12 percent.

“They were leaving, and no one was coming back to run the farm,” Neihart says.

Business has doubled in recent years, she says, and each Saturday night she and Gutfleisch cook as many as three prime rib roasts for a steady stream of customers.

Much of the work associated with the wind farms is in construction - temporary employment - economists note. But a lineup of projects in Sherman and surrounding counties, new mobile home parks to house workers and a 14-lot subdivision on the outskirts of town signal some stability for a population that has fallen to 320 from the 2000 level of 380.

John and Wanda Hilderbrand tried to retire in the 1980s after their two sons and a daughter left town for lives of their own. The couple moved to Black Butte Ranch near Sisters, then to Bend. But they soon returned.

“We met a lot of nice people,” Wanda says. “But I said to John, ’It’s just not my life.’“

She missed her connections to the land, to the plantings and the harvests and to the deer that showed up in her yard almost every morning to eat her roses and peer in the living room window. She even missed the wind.

Now, with the money the turbines provide, the Hilderbrands say they’re more relaxed about their finances and more optimistic about their legacy to their children. They can more easily absorb the rising costs of farming and can travel more.

They’ve been on a cruise through the Panama Canal, vacationed in Costa Rica and purchased a better timeshare in Mexico. And, says John, “I buy a lot of things on eBay - the wife says too much.”

 

  

Comments »

Green Power Lover wrote on Dec 3, 2008 7:36 AM:

" This is big crock. So many folks have been fooled by this industry. They never seem to mention the fact that these generators are as big as a bus and crank out several megawatts of electromagnetic radiation.....thats right, radiation. By the way this IS harmful to human health. Just because you cant' see it doesn't mean it won't cause you serious long term health problems, like CANCER. I'm all for green power but not when the tradeoff is adverse health impacts to out children. There may be a place for these but not near the communities where folks live. "

Gordon Smith wrote on Nov 29, 2008 7:38 PM:

" My Parents live on a ranch 10 miles east of Grass Valley, Oregon. That is about 20 miles straight south of the farmer from Wasco. They have just leased their whole farm to wind generation.The Century farm was close to being sold as my parents have retired long ago and my brother wants to retire. This has saved the family farm and keeps the land in the family. "


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