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#11
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In article , jeff miller
writes bat and bird impact statements are usually required as part of the regulatory approval process for wind farms. i'll be interested in your report and opinion of the experience up there. the wind farm i saw in wyoming this summer was visually appealing on the windy plains and hills in unitas county. while i have no doubt there are and will be bat casualties, i doubt it will be of sufficient significance in most of the areas wind farms will be located. jeff USA and UK have one thing in common ....."U" If you want to have another view on Bird casualties because of wind farms Try Googling "Bird Casualty statistics in the UK" and you will find some interesting articles there completely opposed to the proliferation of wind farms in this green and pleasant land. Oh yes - off shore ones as well. -- Bill Grey |
#12
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![]() "jeff miller" wrote in message . .. bat and bird impact statements are usually required as part of the regulatory approval process for wind farms. i'll be interested in your report and opinion of the experience up there. the wind farm i saw in wyoming this summer was visually appealing on the windy plains and hills in unitas county. while i have no doubt there are and will be bat casualties, i doubt it will be of sufficient significance in most of the areas wind farms will be located. Interestingly, I got a couple of emails on Thursday (while I was out of state) concerning efforts to evaluate wind power generation from a number of perspectives. Both of these came from people involved in birdwatching and involved in various organizations related to this avocation as well as others on broadly environmental themes. One of those emails concerned proposals to set up windfarms IN the great lakes.......an idea I seem to recall hearing something about a while back. ![]() As Bill Grey pointed out, not everyone is yet sanguine about the birds and whirling blades scenario. However, I suspect that even in these days of increasing green consciousness, economics will come to dwarf other considerations. In the meantime, while the currently available technology is rather mature (enough so that major electrical power generation companies are now large players in this nascent industry), there are vast untapped resources available in as yet untested....hell, even undreamed of.....designs, many of which will be safer for wildlife (assuming that the risks, which are by no means yet clearly understood in enough detail, are great enough to warrant greater protection) and various of which are likely to be more efficient than current designs in differing sets of conditions. In the near future, there is every reason to believe that new designs will overcome many of the remaining technological hurdles. This is no pie in the sky dreaming of miracle solutions. Rather, it is a sober reflection on the vast technological and engineering forces that are currently available, and the money which will soon become available in the search for replacements for fossil fuels. Solar generation, on the other hand, MAY be feasible on a large scale.....someday.....but most certainly not without some unpredictable major technological breakthroughs. At any rate, it's going to be fun to watch what happens in the next couple of decades......and the smart money will be on wind. I'll keep you posted on anything that crops up around here. Wolfgang |
#13
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In article , Wolfgang
writes As Bill Grey pointed out, not everyone is yet sanguine about the birds and whirling blades scenario. However, I suspect that even in these days of increasing green consciousness, economics will come to dwarf other considerations. I A few years ago when I was involved with the electricity supply industry as a surveyor, It was my task to survey a route for an overhead line to service a proposed windfarm. Interestingly enough, the windfarm was being built largely on a farm where several fields were unproductive and difficult to work. The farmer had been coaxed to sell his fields to the developers and was given a directorship in the new supply company. I'll bet he took some coaxing! You are right Wolfgang, economics did dwarf other considerations. It might be argued that building the windfarm on unproductive farmland was a good decision, but here in Wales, pristine hillside is being swallowed up by these horrendous eyesores with hardly any capacity to provide sufficient electricity in real terms. Wales has precious little unspoilt hills now that the roller-coaster of windfarms has gained momentum.It may bee green in one sense but is destroying our green landscapes in another. -- Bill Grey |
#14
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![]() "W. D. Grey" wrote in message ... In article , Wolfgang writes As Bill Grey pointed out, not everyone is yet sanguine about the birds and whirling blades scenario. However, I suspect that even in these days of increasing green consciousness, economics will come to dwarf other considerations. I A few years ago when I was involved with the electricity supply industry as a surveyor, It was my task to survey a route for an overhead line to service a proposed windfarm. Interestingly enough, the windfarm was being built largely on a farm where several fields were unproductive and difficult to work. The farmer had been coaxed to sell his fields to the developers and was given a directorship in the new supply company. I'll bet he took some coaxing! You are right Wolfgang, economics did dwarf other considerations. Even stoic Welsh farmers feel they have a right, as well as a need, to eat, huh? ![]() It might be argued that building the windfarm on unproductive farmland was a good decision, but here in Wales, pristine hillside is being swallowed up by these horrendous eyesores with hardly any capacity to provide sufficient electricity in real terms. Wales has precious little unspoilt hills now that the roller-coaster of windfarms has gained momentum.It may bee green in one sense but is destroying our green landscapes in another. De gustibus non est disputandum. Personally, I think they are beautiful. Stately and majestic come to mind as fitting (if somewhat hackneyed) adjectives. But then, I've spent all of my life in more or less close proximity to conventional (fossil fuel) and nuclear power plants. I have a positively dantesque photo (with a bit of a wry twist) that illustrates rather well why I, for one, consider windfarms to be a more than reasonable alternative, even on esthetic grounds, to more traditional electrical power generation schemes. I'll be happy to send it to you (or anyone else) if you like. As for your criticism concerning generating capacity, I find it more than a little vague. I'm not sure I'd be able to assess hard data accurately and to my own or anyone else's advantage without doing a lot more research (a path I am no more eager to tread than most, I suppose) but the electrical energy suppliers I'm familiar with here in the colonies tend to the colossal corporation end of the business spectrum and have traditionally shied away from speculative ventures that promise little return on their investments. I can't see any way for them to benefit from erecting windfarms other than selling a substantial amount of electricity. Moreover, wind generated electricity is in its infancy.....efficiency is bound to increase. Wolfgang |
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