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Tuesday, December 26, 2006

Wind Turbine Troubles By Dr. Jimmy Tragle, Part IIIA

Part III A

Operational events pose some points of concern. These are down to siting turbines on improper locations when it comes to affecting various populations.

Blade strikes are a big issue in at least three locations in the US where turbines are already sited. Perhaps the most famous one is Altamont in California. This is a site placed in an area that has a lot of raptor activity. The bird counts are tremendously high in this region.

Backbone Mountain in West Virginia and Buffalo Mountain in Tennessee have high numbers of bat kills. Buffalo Ridge MN has a high number but also has a high number of turbines compared to the other two. Backbone Mountain boasts the highest bat kill rates per turbine on the planet. Not a good record to have in my humble opinion. You may not think much of bats, but they're an important part of the local ecosystem and play an important factor in insect population control.

Industry stance on bat and bird kills are for me an indication of the absence of real concern for the environment. The bird kills are fobbed off by pointing out that cats, cars, power lines, towers, and high buildings kill a larger number of birds. They don't mention that the birds killed by most of these "problems" aren't the same type dying at Altamont. Not too many cats I know of that can bring down an eagle. And is it really sound to defend your destruction by pointing out the destruction of another source?

I personally witnessed a proponent for wind industry citing from findings of an expert witness that bats wouldn't be an issue on the Jack Mountain site. The claim was based upon the fact that bat feeding range doesn't typically go above tree canopy height. The turbine blades are much higher. Indications are that bat mortalities occur in migration, not feeding. Migration occurs at much greater heights above treetops. Bats also don't use their sonar capabilities when migrating. That may help in part to explain why they cannot miss the blades. In general though I'd think any flighted animal would have a difficult time dodging something that is going 180 MPH and has a pair of twins chasing it (each turbine has three blades).

Jack Mountain hosts a larger population of bats than Backbone Mountain. Logic would imply a potential for higher kill rates I would think. One of the latest maneuvers by the company that wishes to develop Jack Mountain is to ask to be excused from considering potential impacts to wildlife. Hardly the voice of an environmentally responsible organization, again, in my opinion. I do believe this covers the disregard for the cave systems mentioned in Part II. That also should wipe out concerns for the damage to waterways that drain the area many many miles away from the site.

Blade throw and ice throw are possible sources for animal and human injuries and property damage. Blade throw is where pieces of blade break off for a variety of reasons and get tossed by the spinning blade. Ice throw is where ice forms on blades and gets thrown in the same fashion. Siting set backs can serve to mitigate human injury (apart from facility employees and people that don't respect fence lines) as well as property damage. On the other hand I've been to a wind plant and I must say one of the turbines seemed dangerously close to a public road. There are equations that can be used to calculate blade and ice throw. One must also be aware that potential distances can go up for turbines sited on ridge tops. Think about how far you can throw an object up a steep hill vs how far you can throw it down a steep hill. There will be obvious limits on just how far the distance will increase as an object will eventually assume near vertical free fall, but one can expect greater blade throw distances on a steep mountain than on flat land. Then there is the question about what happens once a piece of airfoil strikes the ground on a steep mountain. It stands a good chance of carrying on down hill. Impact speeds can reach 200 mph. Imagine stopping several tons going that fast with your house. I personally find it to be a valid concern in the hills of West Virginia. It is not an issue in the ocean I suppose.

I've seen arguments from proponents that neither is of concern. There is one report of a German wind plant having a failure in a windstorm. The blades on a turbine failed and it spun up too fast for its own good. One of the blades flexed and hit the tower. This ripped off the entire blade and nacelle assembly sending 50+ tons of debris flying. One piece was reported to have gone over 1500 feet.

The argument has been put forward that ice throw isn't an issue as ice only forms on stationary blades. This is not quite the case. At elevations above 3500 feet (don't quote me, I may be wrong on the exact height) there is the increased probability that ice will form on moving blades just as it does on aircraft wings. It has also been suggested that the blades lose their aerodynamics and are therefore not apt to spin fast with ice on them. Somehow planes manage to fly with ice on the wings. Chunks of ice weighing several hundred pounds have been lobbed off blades.

In all honesty the modern blades are heated to help mitigate the ice issue. I have to admit that I don't know if this is done full time during appropriate conditions or if it is only done intermittently. I've seen no detailed commentary. The process does require electricity and is also an area of potential breakdown for the turbine. The heated blades come in as a potential drain to the electricity produced by turbines. That is an issue to be touched upon later.

As mentioned, appropriate siting can minimize these issues. And offshore they may not be a big deal provided curious boaters cannot get too close.

Noise pollution is a big issue and deserves a lot more attention than industry proponents wish to give it. This single topic deserves a lot of attention so I'm going to skip over it for this segment and bring it up in the next part.

Strobe effect describes the flashing that occurs when the sun reflects off the blades as they spin during sunset and sunrise. This is a rather disturbing occurrence for people living near turbines as it happens for a period each day the sun is out and shining. It will happen either at sunset or sunrise for a given household depending upon where the house is in relation to the turbines.

Shadow flicker is the same but opposite so to speak. The blades cast shadows that are particularly long near sunset and sunrise. For a given location this will occur at sunset if strobe occurs at sunrise and so on. Evidently pulling the blinds doesn't abate the problem as the shadows or flashes are still evident through all but the most opaque draperies.

One can surmise that during the winter months when the sun stays fairly low in the sky both of these events could be quite prolonged if the turbines are situated upon a ridge in a line and a house is positioned so the effect is brought upon the house by different turbines as the day rolls on.

Shadow flicker and strobe effect are reported to cause some issues with dizziness, nausea, and seizures in individuals so disposed.

Stray voltage has been reported on one dairy farm. Stray voltage occurs when there are improper grounding done, most often in barns with concrete floors and metal railings. A cow moves against a railing and gets electrocuted. In this particular case the dairy owner spent something akin to $100,000 on upgrades in an attempt to mitigate the problem. In frustration he disconnected some ground cables on the turbines and the problem went away. This was done illegally and to avoid prosecution the man didn't file suit against the power company. The cables were connected again and the problem returned. The power company maintained the problem was all his due to faulty wiring.

Before anyone gets too critical of the above issues as not applying to offshore facilities, I recognize this. I could omit most of the section I suppose. Yet I feel it offers a glimpse at the attitude that seems to be underlying the industry. All concerns are pushed aside as the unreasonable rantings of people that don't want to live in the shadow of turbines. t I'd like to see anyone that accuses others of being the NIMBY type have an extended vacation and take up residence in an abandoned family home in Nova Scotia that I have been made aware of in the last year. When confronted by people with this type of concern industry representatives take the tone that suggests "You don't know what you're talking about and we do. Everything will be just fine."

My apologies if these articles seem lengthy and at times irrelevant to the offshore plants. I’m trying to be general and I have a better understanding about the onshore ones. This comes from a year of trawling through arguments for and against them and some independent findings. Independent findings are very difficult to locate as one can usually detect an agenda at some point in most studies and commentaries. I make no apologies for my own giving a voice to my own agenda as it is a shared one. Parts IIIB, IV, and V are nearly finished, but there will be one or two more parts to follow.

1 comment:

  1. Here are some good points about the bad things that a wind farm can do to you. But what about a new nuclear power plant in your backyard? What about fall out from another Chernobyl type accident? Not to mention how to store or ship that waste.

    The point about wind power is that it will not replace the eniter power structure in place now, it is meant to suppliment that system. There is no future in coal powered anything, no future in oil powered anything, no future in natural gas. ALL of those will go away or put this country in a position to but that energy from a country that can put the screws to us for money or influence. Think Russia here becasue they have the largest proven reserves of natuarl gas in the world and they are number 2 on the oil export business. Thats why they are laughin at us spending our asses in the middle east to get cheap oil. While we widdle our country's future away in the sands of Iwo Raqa, Russia is quietly selling arms to anyone who will buy them, and they are hording thier cash. Last time I looked, Moscow had more billionares than any city in the world. You want to find the power? Follwo the money.

    Still, for as much energy as you put into these articles about why wind power sucks the big weenie, why not research other methods of alternative energy and write why those would be better than a wind farm? What about Biodielsel made from animal byproducts? That is a great alternative for this area and no is pushing that. And it make way more sense too.

    NIMBY types always bitch when environmental racism happens to them. Let them get a lawyer and fight it in court. Just like Albero. Thats the beauty of this country, you don't like it, fight it. Unless you don't have the money, then you're stuck with a situaiton that you have to live with.

    Still the bigger point is something has to be done to get us off fossil fuels. Fossil fuels are a crutch that someday someone is going to kick out from under us. And it will hurt. I have not read anything in your writing about how there are insutries that undermine the alternative energy movement. like the incident of Who killed the electric car?

    I dont know. Some people will resist whats coming, others will try to help prevent it. All of us will be affected. Be it poisonous choking gases from a coal fired plant, the shitty smell from biodiesel plant, or the fact that that island you wanted to buy is now underwater, we will all have to put up with something, will have to make some sacrifices to help our future generations to survive on this planet.

    And if your looking into the future and wondering, why not talk about colonizing other planets? I mean as humans, thats what we do. Go places and stick our feet in the dirt and claim it as our own. Moon first, then Mars next. Lets learn how to create an atmosphere, how to control the weather, how to make the sunshine 24 7, how t create energy without consequences. Until these things happen, we are destined to dies as a whole right here on this planet. They whos gonna take theblame for that? All it takes is an asteroid the size of Rhode Island. A massive methane release. A massive volcanic erpution, like whats lurking under Yellowstone.

    Alright, said my piece. latter. good work, best stuff Joes put up on his site.

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