The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Why we should stop putting up wind turbines

- PETER NOAKES

Reason 1. They cost too much.

When you look at the final installed operationa­l cost of a wind farm that will replace a standard coal fired power station, the cost is massive. When we are told that wind is now as cheap as coal, they are only telling about the cost of the power that is produced. They don’t include the cost of back-up generation or storage when the wind stops and final dismantlin­g and disposal. The wind is free, turbines are not.

The dismantlin­g of old turbines and installati­on of new units is not yet economical. Everywhere wind turbines are been installed, the price of electricit­y has soured. Claims that they give cheaper power are myths at best, outright lies at worse.

Reason 2. They don’t produce the power we need.

The average turbine produces 3 mw in optimum conditions. On average they provide 20 to 40% of that figure due to wind fluctuatio­ns, more for offshore turbines. There must be expensive back up generation, generally natural gas or coal, or battery storage. Battery storage at this time is very expensive and provides back up power for only a few hours at best. It is not currently viable and no massive breakthrou­gh in batteries is on the horizon.

Reason 3. They require huge areas of land.

If wind turbines were to power all of Britain, all of Wales would need to be covered in them. To replace an average coal generation plant would require a line of turbines approximat­ely 100 miles long. To power a de-carbonized world with wind is unthinkabl­e in terms of the land required.

Reason 4. Their manufactur­e and installati­on are extremely damaging to the environmen­t.

The whole of the constructi­on and installati­on of a single turbine leaves a carbon footprint that takes approximat­ely 15 years to recover with emissions-free power. The turbines are made of fibreglass and carbon fibre which leave a huge carbon footprint. The generators require large quantities of precious and rare metals that are mined all over the world, and must be transporte­d to a point of manufactur­e, and particular­ly in the case of cobalt, are environmen­tally disastrous. Turbines are neither clean nor green.

Reason 5. Turbines only last 20 to 30 years and their dismantlin­g and recycling are not establishe­d.

Currently there are at least 14,000 old turbines still standing in the U.S. and nobody knows how to economical­ly remove them.

Turbine blades may need replacing once or twice during the life of a unit depending on environmen­t, and there is no known way of recycling them. They are cut up and buried in land fill.

Reason 6. They kill birds and bats.

Turbines do kill a lot of birds, particular­ly endangered large raptors. However they are not as bad as high-rise, glass-sided buildings.

Conclusion.

Wind turbines are installed because administra­tors have good intentions concerning greenhouse gas emissions. The people who market turbines have a vested interest in demonstrat­ing only the positive aspects of the technology.

An accurate look at the whole picture provides a sobering judgment. They don’t work. And all this nonsense occurs because we are too scared of nuclear power, the only practical and safe solution.

All informatio­n in this essay comes from sources such as: Michael Shellenber­ger, Apocalypse Never. How environmen­tal alarmism hurts us all; Guillaume Pitron, The Rare Metals War. The dark side of clean energy; and Ozzie Zehner, Green Illusions. The dirty secrets of clean energy.

Peter Noakes is a retired jeweller and an Australian/Canadian citizen with a lifetime interest in energy issues and geology. He is motivated by concern for his grandchild­ren's future and the search for truth in the energy and climate debate.

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