Activists Blockade Mega-Wind Project!
Jul 23rd, 2010

Maine EF!er stops a truck carrying a wind turbine, July 2010
On July 6, following the annual Earth First! Round River Rendezvous, about 50 protesters blockaded the access to a mega-wind project in the Maine North Woods, while others locked themselves to a truck carrying a massive turbine blade to the site.
The construction site was shut down for the entire morning, and the truck was blocked for several hours.
From the press release:
“At least fifty Earth First! activists blockaded … the access point to the Kibby Mountain wind project outside the town of Stratton, halting the construction of 22 industrial wind turbines on the delicate Alpine ecosystems of Maine’s western boundary mountains. The action comes just before the Land Use Regulation Commission’s (LURC) meeting July 7 to consider a proposal for a similar project on neighboring Sisk Mountain….
“TransCanada, the transnational corporation responsible for the devastating practice of tar sands oil extraction in Alberta, Canada, has already built 24 mammoth turbines on Kibby Mountain, and has begun construction of an additional 22 turbines, a process that includes significant road building and wide transmission line corridors. These projects are part of a trend that shifts from forest management to development in Maine, which threatens to permanently change the face of Maine’s North Woods, the largest undeveloped wilderness east of the Mississippi river.”

Offshore wind turbines
“These projects are a perfect example of how corporations and investors are taking advantage of the climate and energy crises to make profits while avoiding accountability,” said Meg Gilmartin of Maine Earth First! “We don’t view projects on this industrial scale as being the solution to our problems.”
“If we really want to look at how the North Woods can mitigate climate change, we should restore our forest and protect sensitive ecosystems, like those on Sisk and Kibby Mountain,” said Ryan Clark of Maine Earth First!
Critics of the project also note that it is intended to increase power capacity rather than fight global warming, as no fossil-fuel plants are being taken offline.
For more on why wind and solar power won’t solve our problems, see “‘Any Compromise in Defense of Civilization’? : Wind, Solar and the Great Climate Sellout.”