Oh Chemistry II

Yesterday the South Bend Tribune covered an announcement by Indiana Michigan Power to explore wind energy sites in east-central Indiana:
I&M announced Wednesday that it would place meteorological test sites in east-central Indiana to explore the economic and technical feasibility of building a wind farm in the area.
A specific test site has not been selected in east-central Indiana, Mayne said. East-central Indiana includes areas such as Jay, Randolph and Wayne counties.
I&M will locate two or three 200-foot towers that will collect long-term wind data to determine the profile of wind resources in the area.
The towers will have instruments that can measure wind speed and the consistency of the wind in the area. The company will analyze whether there is sufficient wind to generate electricity economically.
This announcement comes on the heals heels of two others [1] [2] by companies planning wind farms in Benton and Allen counties. I learned through a conversation with Phil Seybold, local owner of a green building company and consultant with CEC, that RP&L has sponsored a meteorological study of wind in northern Wayne county by placing wind measuring equipment on the Kicks96 towers on Tingler Rd. This is great news. The genie is out of the bottle. Will this push Indiana lawmakers to enact a Renewable Energy Portfolio? Who knows, but the prospect of hundreds of millions of dollars in wind energy investment should get their attention. The road map for these companies to develop wind project seems to be:
Is this accurate? I don’t know. I do know that local government should take notice. There are lots of good reasons to support projects like these. Climate change happens to be #1 on my list. Others include the potential for economic development and offsetting rising energy costs. There is real possibility here to invest in a better future.
I stumbled across an interesting story while scanning my bloglines feeds. One of the blogs I read pretty infrequently, A Networked World, is written by a guy down under name Earl Mardle. I find his posts interesting and informative and this one was no exception. The idea, from this Sydney Morning Herald article is that individuals in the UK will be given a yearly allotment of carbon credit with which to purchase goods (e.g. fuel, groceries, electricity) and services. At the end of the year individuals will be either charged for more carbon credits or given the opportunity to sell their credit to others.
[Sidebar: When I followed the link to the SMH article smack dab on the middle of the articles was an ad for the new BMW 3series coupe (an amazing car BTW, but not headed for the top 10 fuel efficient list any time soon) AND to the right of the articles was a link advertisment to win $10k in free petrol (gas)!]
The idea of individuals being given carbon credits sounds like a reasonable approach to putting reponsibility where it should be. I imagine it will be very difficult to get buy-in from the average person who cannot be bothered to think about environmental footprint.