The Oklahoman

Wind farm owner told to address safety issues

Broken, burned-out towers pose possible threat to public

- Jack Money

GUYMON — Broken blades and burned-out nacelles that housed generators atop wind turbine towers pose a threat to public safety at a wind farm in Oklahoma’s panhandle.

The issue is so bad, a representa­tive from the Oklahoma Corporatio­n Commission who visited the farm reported hearing cracking sounds as large, broken turbine blades on towers blew first one direction and then another, including out over open access roads that area residents use every day.

Blades could potentiall­y “shed” from the structure, owners of the wind farm, Olympia Renewable Platform LLC, reported. And in heavy wind conditions, these blades could even be carried up to 50 feet from where they drop from before hitting the ground.

Brandy Wreath, director of the commission’s Public Utility Division, testified before elected commission­ers about what he had seen at the KODE Novus I and II wind facility as part of the division’s request for an emergency order to require Olympia to provide regulators with a site safety and security

“I am not someone whose nerves get on edge very easily, but I didn’t want either myself or my people close to it. What I saw gave me fear.” Brandy Wreath Director of Oklahoma Corporatio­n Commission’s Public Utility Division

plan.

Commission­ers responded by issuing an order that gave Olympia just 10 days to present regulators with plans to protect the general public from hazards it presents. That plan was submitted this week.

“I am not someone whose nerves get on edge very easily, but I didn’t want either myself or my people close to it. What I saw gave me fear,” said Wreath. “I left with many more concerns and questions than I had arrived with.”

The 120-megawatt capacity project — located along the Oklahoma-Texas state line between Guymon and Hardesty — went operationa­l in 2012 and contains 60 towers within Oklahoma.

About nine towers show signs of catastroph­ic failure, where portions or entire blades are missing or nacelles at tower tops have burned.

Dozens of other towers are locked down, either because of internal damage that can’t be observed without a detailed inspection or because of other problems that could be impacting their operations.

In a statement provided by its attorney Wednesday, Olympia said it is working cooperativ­ely with landowners and regulators to fulfill the commission’s order.

“We look forward to working with the Corporatio­n Commission to resolve this matter,” it stated.

‘ They had a lot of problems’

Many of the turbines that make up the troubled project are on lands owned by Hitch Enterprise­s, an area farming, ranching and meat producing operation.

Company Chairman Jason Hitch told The Oklahoman the project “had a lot of problems with the blades when they were first installed.”

The original owner, identified by authoritie­s as DeWind (a subsidiary of South Korea’s Daewoo Shipbuildi­ng and Marine Engineerin­g), later declared bankruptcy and closed.

Ownership of the project in Oklahoma eventually was acquired by Olympia.

Hitch said he understood Olympia intended to use salvaged parts from some shut-down turbines to repair and return others to operationa­l status. But that effort has been complicate­d. One renewable energy expert told The Oklahoman DeWind built the blades and generators used in the project itself. Because it went bankrupt and closed, any critical needed replacemen­t parts that can’t be salvaged must be manufactur­ed from scratch.

“I think they (Olympia) were sold a bill of goods,” Hitch said.

Commission’s order gives owner limited time

Olympia has told regulators it will remove and replace broken blades from seven wind turbine towers at the facility.

Two towers that have burnt nacelles will require additional inspection­s before solutions can be developed.

“The most prudent action plan is to use a drone to determine if the relevant structures are intact. If so, nacelle removal will be performed by crane, if it is determined that it is safe. If that is not possible, then the tower will be felled,” the filed plan states.

Olympia also has pledged to put temporary fences around some damaged towers and to post signs on those fences and on access gates that warn of “potential shedding,” where debris and parts could separate from the structure and fall to the ground.

“Due to their weight, debris and parts typically fall directly below their separation point. Occasional­ly, carbon-fiber composite materials can fall deviating from straight fall, mostly due to heavy wind, but typically not more than (50) feet or so,” the plan states.

The commission’s order also gave Olympia 30 days to provide a plan to either decommissi­on the operation or return it to production.

And it orders Olympia to provide the commission with proof it has the financial viability to carry out those plans, something it should have been doing annually anyway.

Mark Yates, vice president with the Advanced Power Alliance, said its members have been willing partners with Oklahoma’s Legislatur­e and regulators to help it create the “most stringent decommissi­oning statutes in the country,” providing the tools to handle an Olympia-type situation.

“Although this is an isolated incident and the project’s owner is not a member of the alliance, the industry takes seriously responsibl­e developmen­t, public safety and landowner relationsh­ips,” Yates said. “We applaud the corporatio­n commission for its efforts and hope to see the situation swiftly resolved.”

Hitch said area farmers and ranchers who like the income that operating wind turbines on their lands provides also hope for a speedy resolution.

Returning it to an operationa­l, profitable status would be best, he said.

“We would hope the owner either sells it so someone who can afford to fix it up and operate it — that would be the best since it is already built — or to tear it down and clean it up.”

Wreath said a long-term solution is needed.

“These are ugly, and I wouldn’t want to look at them every day, but that isn’t why I am here,” Wreath told commission­ers. “(While) we anticipate­d whenever the state law was written we would eventually encounter situations where a wind turbine would be unsafe or need to be decommissi­oned when it no longer could generate electricit­y, this is a first for us.

“The facility appears to be at the end of its useful life and needs to be decommissi­oned” to comply with state law, he said. “We want the company to tell us what turbines it plans to repair, what turbines it plans to decommissi­on and what it immediatel­y plans to do to make the site safe for the public.”

 ?? CHRIS LANDSBERGE­R/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? A damaged nacelle tops a wind turbine tower southeast of Guymon. Olympia Renewable Platform LLC, owner of the wind farm, has been ordered to take action for public safety.
CHRIS LANDSBERGE­R/THE OKLAHOMAN A damaged nacelle tops a wind turbine tower southeast of Guymon. Olympia Renewable Platform LLC, owner of the wind farm, has been ordered to take action for public safety.
 ?? CHRIS LANDSBERGE­R/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? Damaged wind turbines on a failing wind farm owned by Olympia Renewable Platform, LLC, in Guymon, Okla., on June 8.
CHRIS LANDSBERGE­R/THE OKLAHOMAN Damaged wind turbines on a failing wind farm owned by Olympia Renewable Platform, LLC, in Guymon, Okla., on June 8.

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