dave1949
Super Star Member
I'm sure that in some locations, windmills will produce electricity. As I said earlier, most of those locations are NOT where we need most of the electricity.
We live on a ridgetop that seems quite windy at times. I just checked our weather records for last year. Most months, the average wind speed was 3.5 mph. It did get higher in November and December, 4.6 mph.
As I recall, a minimum of about 10 mph is required to turn the turbines and they really need at least 20 mph average to be worthwhile. Now I'm sure there are places out on the Plains and in mountain areas that do have enough wind, but those places are not where most of the nation needs electricity!
I also distinctly remember Sierra magazine (voice of the Sierra Club) having a cover article attacking wind farms. Seems even the hyper Green folks didn't like them.
Take away the government incentives and cost sharing (which the oil companies do NOT get), and you will find, just like ethanol, it doesn't make economic sense in most locations.
If we want to really reduce our "carbon footprint", we need to figure out nuclear power. We could start with Fast Breeder Reactors, but our government won't allow that even though France has been using them successfully for decades. Besides, anything like that, Washington and the environmentalists would tie up with decades of paperwork and counter productive regulations.
No, this isn't about the environment, or global climate change, it's about destroying the economies of the developed nations. As I've said several times, Kyoto and Copenhagen were not designed to change the environment for the good, they were designed to destroy the developed economies and move industrial production to MORE POLLUTING COUNTRIES, a net loss for the environment. I challenge anyone here to tell me how moving industrial production to China will improve the environment. I'm sure that no one will answer that.
Ken
No quibbles on having production in the US, we need that here and the jobs it creates.
Wind turbine siting is very critical. If the evaluations of a site's wind potential isn't done correctly, there is a good chance of failure.
What I don't understand is the position some groups take on windmills. Here in Maine a hilltop was tested for turbines and found to have good potential. But, the Appalachian Trail runs close to it and the turbines would be visible. They managed to get the project cancelled eventhough the landowner's and affected towns were agreeable.
To me, that's wanting to have your cake and eat it too. It makes no sense, those trail users probably don't want a coal fired plant around them at home either - which creates the acid rain that impacts the forest they love to walk through.
On the northeast coast, there are thought to be good wind turbine sites offshore. These are close enough to urban centers like Boston and New York City to be practical. You know how that went, people living in their multimillion dollar seaside homes don't want their view spoiled. More of the same in lots of places.
The only two real objections I know of to wind turbines are the annoying whoosh noise they can make with the right weather conditions if you are living close enough, and when they are sited in a heavily used migratory path. The bird people have begun mapping these paths and now can tell which sites are better choices in that regard. I have no idea if migrating birds can learn to shift their flight paths, it would seem they could be capable of doing that, but that is just a guess.
Turbines aside, we obviously need an energy strategy that is based across multiple non-fossil technologies. Nuclear, wind, solar, hydro, and tidal are all potential sources that we should use to our advantage.
Dave.