Attention

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not represent our advertisers

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Delaware Making In-Roads Into Renewable Energy





Today my wife and I decided to visit Lewes, Delaware to see the gigantic wind turbine that was turned on this past week. It is an awesome sight to see. From ground elevation it extends to 400'. It is so huge that you can see it as far away as Rehoboth Beach, DE.

What a sight to see - and it is relatively quite. You can hear a slight whisper sound as the blades rotate.

The turbine is relatively easy to find. . . just look to the left as you are on Route 24 headed east on the road leading from Millsboro to Rehoboth Beach, DE. Continue to take the road to the Cape-May Lewis Ferry and you can't miss it. Look for the University of Delaware signs and it is located near the Lewis Boat Ramp.

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

any stats you can give us, cost, generating capacity, operational; characteristics, why thus site was chosen?

Anonymous said...

Wonder how many I could put on my 113 acres?

Anonymous said...

that whisper sound is the dollars slipping away from the arabs

Anonymous said...

now if they could get all the vehicles off the beaches

Anonymous said...

Good for Delaware..Maryland needs to do that.

Brian Dayton said...

I think it is a UD study project. It looks like about a 35-40kW turbine. Probable cost about $250k. Green energy grants would have paid either 50% of cost if approved before 09/09, or 25% if after that date.

I was passing through PA last week; saw 12 of these along a mountain top. Very, very neat looking.

Anonymous said...

What a dumb idea. Wind can only provide maybe 20% of the energy, while coal fire plants have to remain active 90% of the time.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous said...
now if they could get all the vehicles off the beaches

8:08 PM

Why? What has that got to do with this post?

Anonymous said...

Without the heavy subsidies, wind power is not viable!
It is an eyesore and a blight on the face of the earth!

Anonymous said...

7:10

I wouldn't be surprised if more farmers/landowners that own large acreage approaches these gigantic wind turbine companies and lease plots on their property for the installation of these wind turbines. The land needed to construct the base of each wind turbine is small and the farmers can still farm the land surrounding the wind turbine.

Anonymous said...

Reference: 5:52

I'm quite sure Maryland won't allow the farmers to lease these plots for construction of windfarms.

You see the politicos campaigns are financed by the utilities.

That's the way its always been done here in Maryland.

Anonymous said...

I would rather have a wind turbine down the street from me than an oil or coal powerplant. As a matter of fact put a little wind turbine right in my front yard.

Anonymous said...

i''l lease my land for a nuke reactor before a wind farm. wind is too finicky

Anonymous said...

12:55pm
Check out Three Mile Island, Chernobyl reactor, This are not FINICKY? LOL

NRX (military), Ontario, Canada, in 1952
EBR-I (military), Idaho, USA, in 1955
Windscale (military), Sellafield, England, in 1957 (see Windscale fire)
Santa Susana Field Laboratory (military), Simi Hills, California, in 1959
SL-1, Idaho, USA in 1961. (US military)
Enrico Fermi Nuclear Generating Station (civil), Newport, Michigan, USA, in 1966
Chapelcross, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland, in 1967
Lucens reactor, Switzerland, in 1969
A1 plant at Jaslovské Bohunice, Czechoslovakia.

All of these have had problems. Most of them Killed.


Love WIKIPEDIA