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Painful Lessons for Wind Power
by=
=
Brian Sussman
03/24/2011
Wind energy took another blow—this time in the liberal
Wind
One is the 400-foot-tall wind turbine owned by t=
he
town of
Installed in the spring of 2010 at a cost of $5.1 million (with some $3 mil=
lion
derived through grants, government kickbacks, and credits), the huge turbine
cranks out 1.65 megawatts of electricity during optimum conditions.
The topography of
But as soon as her majesty was switched on, residents began to
complain—Wind One was as loud as an old Soviet helicopter.
Neil Anderson lives a quarter of a mile from the turbine. He’s =
an
avid supporter of alternative energy, having owned and operated a passive s=
olar
company on
Tired of the constant chopping sound, pained residents
decided to lawyer up. This month a deal was struck with the to=
wn
to disengage the turbine when winds exceed 23 miles an hour. This is
problematic because giant windmills such as Wind One operate at optimum eff=
iciency
at about 30 miles an hour.
So now
Truth is, wind turbines have always suffered fro=
m the
NIMBY—not in my backyard—syndrome. Look no further than t=
he
largest concentration of wind turbines in the world, constructed in the 197=
0s
just east of the
Ever since the multitude of windmills was installed, a significant increase=
in
the numbers of dead birds has been reported. Activists immediately we=
nt
ballistic, demanding action. Over the decades, lawsuits have been fil=
ed
and millions of dollars spent procuring studies to track the bird body coun=
t in
an effort to determine how to address the problem.
In 2008, a two-year, taxpayer-funded examination of the problem was conduct=
ed
by the Altamont Pass Avian Monitoring Team. During the study period, =
the
monitoring team determined that 8,247 birds were wacked dead by the turbine
blades.
In 2010, a settlement was finally reached between the Audubon Society,
Californians for Renewable Energy, and the company running the wind farm, <=
span
class=3DSpellE>NextEra
Painful to the ears, and especially painful to the birds, the painful lesson
environmentalists need to learn is that the answer to America’s growi=
ng
energy needs is not blowing in the wind.=