Wind-Driven Delusions
By Alan Caruba
CNSNews.com Commentary from the National Anxiety Center
September 25, 2007
If
you're expecting the mainstream media to tell you the truth about wind
power, I will be happy to come by and read some fairy tales to you.
In
a recent Newhouse News Service article entitled "Wind-Power Surge,"
reporter Gail Kinsey Hill noted that demand for turbines was generating
higher prices. She wrote that the supply shortage comes just as New
Jersey officials are starting to plan a windmill farm off the South
Jersey coast.
Now it's worth keeping in mind that New Jersey is
one of the East Coast states that is on record as not wanting to permit
any drilling for oil or natural gas on its part of the continental
shelf, presumably because the sight of any rigs might dampen property
values or pose a hazard to the "pristine" environment. So, let's see, a
few oil rigs are bad, but miles of wind turbines are good.
Each
one of the 1.5-megawatt turbines, the most popular size, will cost $2.5
million, including all turbine components and installation. How will
utilities pay for them? They will "recover the expense through rate
increases, but they first must ask state regulators for permission."
Every
megawatt of wind capacity "powers roughly 250 homes annually," said the
article, but failed to mention that only occurs when the wind is
blowing. When it is not blowing, the electricity will have to be
supplied by conventional means of generating electricity. To put it
another way, no wind, no power, no really compelling reason to bother
building a wind farm.
Wind farms are one of those trendy,
environmental fairy tales about "alternative" energy sources that will
save us all from burning coal to provide electricity because, according
the Great Big Book of Environmentally Bad Things, it's "a fossil fuel"
and it "pollutes."
Okay, let's build nuclear facilities. After
decades of opposing nuclear energy the Greens have apparently decided
it's okay, but first we have to do one million environmental studies
before actually building a new one.
There are a few, teeny-weeny
problems with wind farms. First of all, from a purely aesthetic
standpoint they are unsightly. There is nothing pretty or inspiring
about wind farms.
A proposed wind farm, Cape Wind, slated to
cover 24 square miles of federally controlled waters in Nantucket Sound
has found some powerful opponents such as Massachusetts Sen. Ted
Kennedy who lives on the Cape. Loath as I am to agree with anything
Teddy says, he's right when he says the wind farm will destroy some of
the most beautiful ocean vistas on the East Coast, not to mention being
a danger to sea and air vessels. Even presidential candidate and former
Governor, Mitt Romney, opposes this project.
Bird lovers hate
wind farms. Back in April when the issue of federal tax credits for
wind energy was all the rage, the American Bird Conservancy, quoted the
National Wind Coordinating Committee whose own estimates reveal that,
"this growing alternative energy source is killing between 30,000 to
60,000 birds a year."
Yikes! "At the current mortality rate and
growth rate of the wind industry," said the bird folks "by 2030 a
projected 900,000 to1.8 million birds would be killed per year by wind
turbines, unless protective measures are implemented." Considering how
Greens go nuts over ordinary hunting and fishing, their indifference to
this bird Holocaust is fairly astonishing.
Then there's the
problem with the way wind farms play havoc with radar that is used for
commercial flight control and by the military as well. It turns out
that, if you plant a wind farm anywhere within the proximity of an
airfield, it "clutters" the signals needed to guide your flight from
Phoenix to a safe landing. This is why the siting of wind farms is
subject to Federal Aviation Agency approval.
Wind farms are
quite possibly the dumbest way possible to produce electricity. Coal,
uranium, natural gas, and hydro currently produces 97% of all the
electricity used in the United States. Of these energy sources, coal
accounts for half of all the electricity generated. It's abundant and
it's cheap. Apparently that's a bad thing.
Suffice it to say
that to replace one traditional 1,000-magawatt power plant you need a
lot of wind turbines that, in turn, take up a lot of space whether on
land or at sea.
Picture in your mind that you're driving along
the shoreline of New Jersey, glancing over at the Atlantic Ocean...and
seeing hundreds of wind turbines. These towers can stand over 400 feet
into the air, have gigantic blades that make them into bird Cuisinarts,
and, in the winter, they throw off big chunks of ice. In addition, the
blades have been known to come loose. Lightning has a particular
affinity for wind towers. Keeping a respectful distance is a good idea.
With
wind power advocates pushing for more "renewable energy" by the year
2020, the energy projected would require between 50,000 and 100,000
towers, occupying some 7,500 to more than 10,000 square miles. That's
an area comparable to the entire state of Vermont.
So the
"wind-power surge" may not be such a wonderful thing in either the
short or long run. It is, like so many other strange environmental
ideas, a fantasy, a delusion that sounds rational right up to the
moment you begin to look at it closely.
When you do that, the
vision of hundreds of wind towers producing miniscule amounts of
electricity -- and only when the wind is blowing-seems, well, nuts!
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