Planning Commission Finalizes Wind Regulations
Planning Commission finalizes Wind Regulations and forwards it on to the Board of County Commissioners for approval
Learn morePlanning Commission finalizes Wind Regulations and forwards it on to the Board of County Commissioners for approval
Learn moreFarmers foolish enough to enter contracts with wind power outfits soon live to regret it. Having their land permanently contaminated by shredded fibreglass when turbines explode into balls of flame and/or their blades merely disintegrate (known in the trade as “component liberation”) is just one of a list of disasters waiting to happen.
Learn moreGreen energy and fossil fuels are rising hand in hand. The growth-based climate framework is fundamentally broken.
Learn moreAmerica’s wind industry is moaning about the lack of wind, much like the Ancient Mariner becalmed and befuddled by the weather.
Learn moreThe claim that spreading wind turbines far and wide means you’ll have power around-the-clock is just more wind industry myth. Australia’s Eastern Grid provides all the evidence required to render that story plainly risible – and it can all be done with pictures.
Learn moreWind energy agreements pose financial potential for landowners, but do create legal risk. Beforeentering into an agreement a landowner should have the agreement carefully evaluated todetermine if the financial benefits of the agreement truly outweigh the associated risk.
Learn moreESI Energy Inc. (ESI) was sentenced today in Cheyenne, Wyoming, for violations of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA), announced Assistant Attorney General Todd Kim for the Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division and U.S. Attorney L. Robert Murray for the District of Wyoming.
Learn moreEnergy Engineer Bill Acker on the dangers of wind turbines.
Learn moreThe town of Forest, WI has concerns over the end results of the Highland Wind Farm. Forest has spent more than half-a-million dollars fighting the project at the Public Service Commission. The devastation from the Shirley Wind Farm is a prime example as to why the town is fighting this project.
Learn more“I am not from Douglas County, but I do live in the Kansas Reading Wind Farm. Not far from the windfarm office. At first, I was excited about the idea of the windfarm but when the process started, I realized this was in no way going to be a positive project for our community. First,…
Learn moreSeveral studies have shown that industrial wind turbines produce infrasound. It is produced by the gigantic blades passing the pole in a roughly 180-degree arc. The taller the pole, the greater the swath of infrasound. Infrasound is a sound below the normal hearing level. Dr. Mariana Alves-Pereira, who has studied infrasound for 30 years in…
Learn moreWind energy generators are in rural locations for the simple reason that they need to be out in the open. That means construction companies must use gravel and asphalt surfaced roads to reach the many construction sites of the wind farm. This presents several problems to the people responsible for maintaining those roads.
Learn moreA Jackson County Highway Engineer, was among a group of engineers from across southern Minnesota, has examined the issues associated with the large loads hauling wind turbine parts through the county, and the toll those heavy loads are taking on the road system.
Learn moreThousands and thousands of birds and bats are killed from wind turbines every year. The blades of the tower spin very fast, which either kills the airborne creature upon impact, or disorients it into a fatal-fall. Wind turbines are responsible for bird deaths around the world. In the United States alone it is estimated the…
Learn moreLeading edge erosion is well a known and problematic issue with commercial wind turbine blades. Erosion is the reason that turbine blades need to be replaced considerably more often that the industry’s proclaimed life of 20 years. Erosion is caused by dust, rain, snow, hail, bird/bat/insect strikes and wind friction. Modern turbines can reach speeds…
Learn moreWind energy is terribly inefficient (approximately 35%) and requires another source of energy as a backup. The backup power must enable utilities to balance power grids when wind conditions aren’t optimum, which is often. All existing solar and wind power must have fossil fuel back up, while solar and wind power cannot be used as…
Learn moreWe get our drinking water from surface and groundwater. It is a precious natural resource we cannot live without. Water quality and wind turbines do not mix. The wind turbines can have a negative affect the groundwater. Let’s look at the wind turbine. The steel tower of an industrial wind turbine is anchored in a…
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