Wind Turbines, Rusting Giants of the
Environmental Watermelon Religion
I saw the once verdant wheat fields of Eastern Europe
covered with ugly wind turbines, slowly spinning their huge
blades into the wind. A few funnel dust swirls were blowing the topsoil into
the air. They did not appear to be connected to any storage station that would
distribute the electrical power generated. I searched and found out that they
were really not connected to any network, were not generating usable
electricity, they were all for show to placate the “green growth” European
bureaucrats who gave them money to install the eye sores instead of growing
crops.
Turbines kill
birds on a large scale around the world and disturb humans and wildlife.
According to Save the Eagles International, “contrary to what we are
told, wind farms will cause the extinction of many bird and bat species”
because birds are naturally attracted to tall structures.
While millions of
birds and bats are dying needlessly, wind turbines and solar panels are still
installed around the world despite the fact that they produce inconsistent
energy that cannot possibly replace the consistent and cheap energy produced by
coal. The world’s economy needs fossil fuels, nuclear energy, and hydro-power
that provide a constant source of electricity, not the small scale partial or
intermittent Aeolian or solar energy.
In the green state
of Vermont, a 28-turbine mega-wind project is being vehemently opposed by some
board members and citizens in the towns of Windham and Grafton, concerned that
the power station would affect property values and the environment.
Iberdrola, the
Spanish public multinational utility company based in Bilbao, Spain, proposed
the project. Subsidiaries include Scottish Power, Iberdrola USA, and Elektro
Brazil, with the largest shareholder in 2013, Qatar Investment Holding.
Frank Seawright,
Windham Selectboard Chairman, remarked that more than 200 houses in Windham are
located within a mile and a half from the proposed turbines and the rest are
also close, including his own home, 3,000 feet from the proposed site.
Lacking confidence that the developers and the Public
Service Board will protect the locals in accordance to S.260, Seawright said:
“The people who
complain about the noise are dismissed by wind developers as just a bunch of
trouble makers. That’s probably one of the worst things they can do is to just
blame the victim.”
Act 174 (S.260),
act relating to improving the siting of energy projects in Vermont passed and was signed into law in June 2016.
The Selectboard sent a letter to Iberdrola citing
their well-founded concern for water quality, wildlife, and human health.
“We are unwilling
to subject any of our town’s property owners to the unknown short- and
long-term effects of exposure to turbine noise, vibration, infrasound, and
shadow flicker.” (Source)
According to the
Watchdog, the Selectboard members were concerned that the turbines would not
produce consistent power, delivering on the average 60 percent of the time, and
would destroy property values with no compensation for homeowners.
National
Wind Watch tells a different story about the efficacy of wind
turbine performance.
“Wind turbines
generate electrical energy when they are not shut down for maintenance, repair,
or tours and the wind is between about 8 and 55 mph. Below a wind speed of
around 30 mph, however, the amount of energy generated is very small.
Wind turbines produce at or above their average rate around 40% of the time.
Conversely, they produce little or no power around 60% of the
time.”
The annual
financial benefit from Iberdrola would be $715,000 for Windham and $285,000 for
Grafton. The most interesting objection was the “utilities lack of need
for purchasing additional wind power” – they don’t need the electricity.
Additional concerns were Iberdrola’s $27 million fine from Spain’s
National Markets and Competition Commission and the higher cost of
wind-generated electricity.
Watchdog quoted
Seawright, who was frustrated with the Vermont government, “hell bent on
getting these things:” [wind turbines]
“I have always voted
for Democrats, (but) now I’m more concerned about the Democrats than the
Republicans. The Democrats here seem to be exploiting the countryside.”
As long as there
are government subsidies for wind and solar power projects to be exploited,
despite the many failures and bankruptcies when billions of taxpayer dollars
have been wasted, politics make strange bedfellows with “investors” and
“developers.”
In 2001 a 400-acre
site became a wind farm in Somerset Township, Pennsylvania. It was touted to
produce 25,000 megawatt hours of electricity a year, enough to provide power to
2,500 families with “lower-cost, more environmentally friendly way to produce
electricity.” This happened at a time when 52 percent of electricity in the
U.S. was generated by coal-fired plants and for Pennsylvania, “the fourth
largest coal-producing state, the figure is about 60 percent.”
Money came from sustainable
energy funds and developers received federal energy tax credits. As John Hanger
of Citizens for Pennsylvania’s Future said, “This is a terrific Earth Day
present for the people of Pennsylvania. PECO customers will be the first in the
commonwealth to directly help the planet through their local electricity
choices.”
If these wind
farms could have helped the citizens’ pockets, it would have been terrific. For
starters, they had to pay higher electricity rates and some lost their
coal-mining jobs as a result of mines closing around the country due to onerous
EPA regulations. The other damaging side effects were felt later.
When I stopped in
Somerset a few days ago, the turbine blades did not seem to move at all. An
educational display was still posted outside the turnpike service plaza, with
all the potential savings for the Earth from harnessing wind power. No mention
of the huge costs associated with such a pie in the sky watermelon dream.
When the wind
turbines break down, catch fire, rust out, or their blades disintegrate, they
are abandoned by the thousands, ugly giants dotting the pristine landscape.
They are seldom removed because the job would be too expensive. None of them
have produced, by the time they were taken out of service, the amount of energy
that was used to manufacture the giant turbine in the first place. And, the
part that environmentalist do not like to talk about, is that all the steel,
spare parts, transportation, assembly, maintenance, and slow wind down times
were provided by fossil fuel-generated power.
As the American
Elephants said, wind turbines are “the towering symbols of a fading religion”
and… “Without government subsidy, they are unaffordable. With governments
facing financial troubles, the subsidies are unaffordable. It was a nice dream,
a very expensive dream, but it didn’t work.”
I might add that
it was a dream born by the environmental watermelon religion, green on the
outside, red on the inside.