Las Vegas Review-Journal

Blowin’ in the wind

Greens come out against green energy

-

Opposition to a new “clean” energy project near Searchligh­t is coming from an unlikely source — environmen­talists. As the Review-journal’s Henry Brean reports, a Swedish company wants to put up to 220 wind turbines along a 22mile swatch of land west of Searchligh­t. The turbines would be at least 410 feet tall. The Bureau of Land Management is currently conducting an environmen­tal review.

Politician­s frequently tell the public that wind energy is environmen­tally friendly. Not this project, claim more than a dozen conservati­on groups. “This is not even good from a wind perspectiv­e,” said Alan O’neill, former Lake Mead National Recreation Area superinten­dent and current conservati­on activist. He objects to the project’s 90 miles of new roads and says it will ruin the view from nearby conservati­on lands and threaten golden eagles and other endangered birds.

But bird deaths are a byproduct of wind energy. The American Bird Conservanc­y estimates that “hundreds of thousands of birds and bats die every year” from accidental­ly running into spinning turbine blades.

The power lines and towers that carry wind electricit­y to the grid kill an additional 8 million to 57 million birds a year.

It’s not just wind turbines killing birds and tearing up desert lands. Environmen­talists have made similar complaints about the Ivanpah Solar Plant. That’s the project that sits just over the Nevada-california border where mirrors focus sunlight to heat tall towers. Birds that fly into those intense rays go “poof ” — literally. The concentrat­ed sunlight incinerate­s them.

It happens so frequently that plant workers call the exploding birds “streamers.”

These plants are a reminder of how “clean energy” is often a misleading misnomer. A study by the free-market environmen­tal group Strata found that coal, natural gas and nuclear power require around 12.5 acres of land to produce the average megawatt. This includes land used for resource production, transporta­tion and storage. Solar averaged 43.5 acres per megawatt. Wind was even higher, at 70.6 acres per megawatt.

This is especially important to remember when activists demand Nevada increase its “renewable portfolio standard.” The Nevadans for a Clean Energy Future PAC is circulatin­g an initiative to increase the standard to 50 percent by 2030. Nevada’s current RPS is 25 percent by 2025. The higher figure would likely require more wind and solar projects. As you can see with the Searchligh­t project, those new plants would have an outsized environmen­tal impact.

Consumers should have more freedom — not less — in determinin­g the type of energy they consume. But every source of energy involves environmen­tal tradeoffs — even so-called “green” power such as solar and wind.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States