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独家报道: 明尼苏达大学因奥巴马政府资助的一项清洁能源计划导致一只美国白头海雕惨死,正面临超过14,000美元的拟议处罚。

该事件发生在明尼苏达州达科他县的明尼苏达大学Eolos风能研究站。

图片50:占位符

福克斯新闻数字版获得的照片显示,明尼苏达大学的一台风力涡轮机撞击白头海雕的瞬间,将其肢解为三部分,并在下方地面留下一具血迹斑斑的尸体。

一份违规通知称,该大学在未获得所谓的”偶然捕获许可证”的情况下杀死了海雕,违反了《白头海雕和金雕保护法》。因此,该大学正面临14,536美元的拟议民事处罚,因为内政部一名官员称其非法杀害了”国宝”级别的海雕。

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  • 图片51图片1/5 下一张 显示白头海雕与涡轮机相撞的瞬间,导致其被肢解成三块的图片。(美国内政部)
  • 图片52:明尼苏达涡轮机杀死的白头海雕残骸图片2/5 上一张 下一张 涡轮机附近首先发现了白头海雕的下躯干和尾部。(美国内政部)
  • 图片53:明尼苏达涡轮机杀死的白头海雕残骸图片3/5 上一张 下一张 可见白头海雕的下躯干,背景为涡轮机。(美国内政部)
  • 图片54:明尼苏达涡轮机杀死的白头海雕残骸图片4/5 上一张 下一张 可见白头海雕的尾部,背景为涡轮机。(美国内政部)
  • 图片55:明尼苏达涡轮机杀死的白头海雕残骸图片5/5 上一张 可见被杀死的白头海雕的血迹斑斑的尾部,背景为涡轮机。(美国内政部)

根据福克斯新闻数字版审阅的内政部违规通知,该大学明知鸟类碰撞是一种危险,且在事件发生时正处于测试其碰撞检测传感器的过程中。

海雕的遗体被发现时已支离破碎。技术人员首先发现了下躯干和尾部,而头部和翅膀则在一个多月后才被找到。

事件发生后,美国鱼类和野生动物管理局向该大学发送了一封信,敦促其重新评估涡轮机对海雕的危险,并考虑申请长期的海雕偶然捕获许可证。然而,内政部1月份发布的违规通知并未表明该大学此后已获得此类许可证。

如果拜登的气候政策未被扭转,暴风雪本可能引发电网灾难:能源部

  • 图片56:一张显示白头海雕残骸在撞击涡轮机后散落位置的图表图片1/2 下一张 显示白头海雕与涡轮机碰撞后残骸散落位置的图表。(美国内政部)
  • 图片57:明尼苏达涡轮机杀死的白头海雕残骸图片2/2 上一张 白头海雕的头部和翅膀直到一个多月后才被发现。(美国内政部)

图片58:占位符

明尼苏达的这台涡轮机是该大学Eolos风能研究联盟的一部分,该联盟是一个风能研究合作项目。据当地媒体《明尼苏达日报》报道,该涡轮机的建设由2010年奥巴马政府能源部提供的790万美元拨款资助。

前总统奥巴马的早期重大立法成就之一是通过了2009年《美国复苏与再投资法案》(ARRA)。根据气候与能源解决方案中心的报告,该法案”拨出了前所未有的900亿美元用于’为未来清洁能源经济奠定基础’,其中美国能源部获得了352亿美元”。

明尼苏达事件并非近年来唯一发生的此类杀戮。

11月,福克斯新闻数字版曾报道美国鱼类和野生动物管理局拟对可再生能源公司Ørsted北美陆上公司处以高额罚款,因其在内布拉斯加州和伊利诺伊州的风力涡轮机导致两只白头海雕死亡。1月,内政部发布通知,对这两只被Ørsted涡轮机杀死的海雕处以总计32,340美元的最终罚款。

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图片59:涡轮机杀死的白头海雕特写图片

2024年3月在Ørsted位于内布拉斯加州韦恩县的Plum Creek设施中发现的被涡轮机杀死的白头海雕特写。(福克斯新闻数字版)

美国内政部长道格·伯古姆此前曾批评太阳能和风能项目”破坏我们的电网并推高价格”。

“当你想到绿色新骗局时,它是亲中国的、反美国的,而且还负担不起、不可靠,”伯古姆在6月的《杰西·沃特斯黄金时段》节目中说道。

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内政部发言人马修·米德尔顿对福克斯新闻数字版表示,在特朗普总统和伯古姆部长领导下,该部门”正在执法保护这些标志性鸟类,并要求那些危害这些受保护物种的行业承担责任”。

点击此处下载福克斯新闻应用程序

“美国的白头海雕是国宝,不是昂贵风力实验的附带损害,”米德尔顿补充道,”随着本政府保护白头海雕并推进优先考虑负担能力和加强美国经济的能源政策,风电公司将不再逍遥法外。”

明尼苏达大学一位发言人向福克斯新闻数字版证实,该大学已收到内政部的通知,并表示正在”目前正在审查中”。

Ørsted未立即回应福克斯新闻数字版的置评请求。

彼得·皮内多是福克斯新闻数字版的政治记者。

EXCLUSIVE: The University of Minnesota is facing a proposed penalty of over $14,000 after it was discovered that a green energy initiative funded by a grant from the Obama administration was responsible for the gruesome death of an American bald eagle.

The incident occurred at the University of Minnesota’s Eolos Wind Energy Research Field Station in Dakota County, Minnesota.

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Photos obtained by Fox News Digital show the moment a University of Minnesota wind turbine struck the bald eagle, dismembering it into three pieces and leaving a bloodied carcass on the floor below.

A violation notice says the university violated the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act by killing the eagles without what is called an “incidental take permit.” As such, the university is facing a proposed civil penalty of $14,536 for illegally killing what one Department of the Interior official called a “national treasure.”

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  • Image 51Image 1 of 5 next A picture showing the moment of impact in which the bald eagle collided with the turbine, resulting in it being dismembered into three pieces.(U.S. Department of the Interior)
  • Image 52: Remains of a bald eagle killed by a turbine in MinnesotaImage 2 of 5 prev next The lower torso and tail of the bald eagle were found first in the vicinity of the turbine.(U.S. Department of the Interior)
  • Image 53: Remains of a bald eagle killed by a turbine in MinnesotaImage 3 of 5 prev next The lower torso of the bald eagle can be seen with the turbine in the background.(U.S. Department of the Interior)
  • Image 54: Remains of a bald eagle killed by a turbine in MinnesotaImage 4 of 5 prev next The tail of the bald eagle is seen with the turbine in the background.(U.S. Department of the Interior)
  • Image 55: Remains of a bald eagle killed by a turbine in MinnesotaImage 5 of 5 prev The bloodied tail of a bald eagle is seen with the turbine that killed it in the background.(U.S. Department of the Interior)

According to a Department of the Interior violation notice reviewed by Fox News Digital, the university was aware that bird collisions were a danger and was in the process of testing its collision detection sensors when the incident occurred.

The eagle’s remains were discovered in pieces. The lower torso and tail were found by technicians first, while the head and wings were not found until over a month later.

Following the incident, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service sent the university a letter, urging the institution to reassess the turbine’s danger to eagles and to consider applying for a long-term permit for incidental take of eagles. However, the January notice of violation issued by the DOI does not indicate that the university has since obtained any such permit.

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  • Image 56: A graph showing the where a bald eagle's remains were scattered after hitting a turbineImage 1 of 2 next A graph depicting where the bald eagle’s remains were scattered after colliding with the turbine.(U.S. Department of the Interior)
  • Image 57: Remains of a bald eagle killed by a Minnesota turbineImage 2 of 2 prev The eagle’s head and wings were not discovered until over a month later.(U.S. Department of the Interior)

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The Minnesota turbine is a part of the university’s Eolos Wind Energy Research Consortium, a wind-energy research collaboration. The construction of the turbine was funded by a $7.9 million grant from the Obama Department of Energy awarded in 2010, according to local outlet the Minnesota Daily.

One of former President Barack Obama’s first major legislative achievements was the passage of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA), which according to a report by the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions, appropriated an “unprecedented $90 billion to ‘lay the foundation for a clean energy economy of the future,’ of which the U.S. Department of Energy received $35.2 billion.”

The Minnesota incident is not the only such killing to have occurred in recent years.

In November, Fox News Digital reported on FWS proposing hefty fines on renewable energy company Ørsted Onshore North America for two bald eagle kills by wind turbines in Nebraska and Illinois. In January, FWS issued notice of finalized fines of a total of $32,340 for the two eagles killed by Ørsted turbines.

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Image 59: Close up images of bald eagles killed by turbines

Close up stills of a bald eagle killed by a turbine discovered dead in March 2024 at Ørsted’s Plum Creek facility in Wayne County, Nebraska.(Fox News Digital)

U.S. Secretary of Interior Doug Burgum has previously criticized solar and wind projects, saying they are “destabilizing our grid and driving up prices.”

“When you think about the green new scam, it was pro-China, and it’s anti-American, and it’s also unaffordable and unreliable,” Burgum said on Jesse Watters Primetime in June.

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Matthew Middleton, a spokesperson for DOI, commented on the killings, telling Fox News Digital that under President Donald Trump and Secretary Doug Burgum, the department “is enforcing the law to protect these iconic birds and demand accountability from an industry that has jeopardized these protected species.”

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“America’s bald eagles are a national treasure, not collateral damage for costly wind experiments,” said Middleton, adding, “Wind companies will no longer get a free pass as this administration safeguards bald eagles and advances energy policies that prioritize affordability and strengthen America’s economy.”

A spokesperson for the University of Minnesota confirmed to Fox News Digital that the university had received DOI’s notice and said it is “currently under review.”

Ørsted did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

Peter Pinedo is a politics writer for Fox News Digital.

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