By the end of this year, an energy developer plans to build 29 wind turbines up to roughly 500 feet tall in a largely undeveloped area about 5 miles south of Lompoc.

The Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors unanimously voted to move the Strauss Wind Energy Project forward at its Jan. 28 meeting after denying three appeals opponents filed over the county Planning Commissionās decision to approve the project in November.Ā
Among their numerous concerns, the appellants argued that the project would be detrimental to federally protected birds and plants within the project site in San Miguelito Canyon. Nick Jensen, a conservation scientist with the California Native Plant Societyāone of the groups that appealed the projectāargued that the development of these turbines could wipe out a significant population of the Gaviota tarplant, which is a federally endangered flower thatās only found in the county.
Jensen said his organization doesnāt outright oppose the development of wind energy on the project site, but that modifications must be made to the location of the turbines.
George and Cheryl Bedford, who live on a ridge in San Miguelito Canyonāabout 2,000 feet from the nearest proposed turbineāalso appealed the project. At the Board of Supervisors meeting, George argued that such a large project shouldnāt take place in a rural area.
āItās just frustrating when my wife and I bought that ranch in 1994 and we decided weād like to live up there. ⦠I didnāt know if I built my house, Iād have to listen to 29 wind turbines circling around,ā Bedford said.Ā
Although the group didnāt appeal the project, the Santa Barbara Audubon Society also raised objections over the number of birds, including golden eagles, that could die as a result of this project. In a previous interview with the Sun, Audubon Society member Steve Ferry said the canyon has one of the highest concentrations of raptors, such as hawks and eagles, in the county.Ā
The county supervisors acknowledged these complaints and admitted that while itās not a perfect project, itās good enough to move forward. First District Supervisor Das Williams said approving the project is a significant step forward for the county, which has preached about the importance of renewable energy, while only making minimal progress.
The development of these 29 wind turbines would be the countyās second utility-scale renewable energy project along with a 40-megawatt solar panel project in the Cuyama Valley. The wind project will generate more than double that amount by producing 98 megawatts of electricity annually, which is enough to power roughly 43,000 homes, according to project planning documents.
āMost people in the county agree about the values of local generation, agree about renewable energy, and itās all sort of in theoretical concept, but then they force people in inland counties to actually do something about it, and thatās environmental hypocrisy,ā Supervisor Williams said. āFrom a larger level, I think approving renewable energy is important for us to get over that environmental hypocrisy.āĀ
About 10 years ago, the county approved the Lompoc Wind Energy Project, which proposed a similar project with 65 turbines. The company behind that project bailed on its plans in 2013, and BayWaāa German company involved in different business sectors, including energyāpicked up where that company left off.
At the Board of Supervisors meeting, BayWa Vice President of Development Daniel Duke said the countyās approval doesnāt give the company the green light to begin construction. Itās still waiting on a few federal and state permits, and he said heās confident the company will receive the approvals it needs soon.
Duke previously told the Sun that constructionāincluding removing oak trees to widen roadwaysāshould begin in February and is expected to take 10 months. He said itās critical that BayWa maintains this schedule because the project has to be operational by the end of the year or else the company loses a federal tax credit thatās making the project financially viable.Ā
āWe canāt wait six months, we canāt wait three months, we have to get this thing done,ā Duke told the Sun. āOtherwise there wonāt be a project.ā
This article appears in Feb 6-13, 2020.

