Costly wind power menaces man and nature

The true costs of wind energy are too often (deliberately?) ignored or underestimated

Dr. Jay Lehr and Tom Harris

Wind energy can never replace fossil fuels, despite claims of environmentalists and advocates of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s Green New Deal (GND). It’s not environment-friendly either. Indeed, wind power is hampered by many limitations, including:

* its intermittent and inefficient nature

* insufficient sites with adequate, reliable wind

* acreage required to erect turbines and harness wind

* excessive expenses, many of them rarely mentioned

* dangers to bird and bat populations

* dangers to human health from light flicker and low frequency throbbing noise (infrasound).

* costs, limitations, and health and environmental impacts of batteries and other back-up systems

Wind turbines are highly inefficient. Large industrial wind turbines (IWT) typically produce about 2.5 megawatts of power when wind speed is between about 8 and 25 miles per hour. However, most of the time it’s not, even at the best locations.

Today’s wind farms have a 30–40% average “capacity factor.” That means their average annual output is only 30–40% of “nameplate” capacity, or what they would produce if the wind were blowing 8–25 mph 24/7/365. As we erect more turbines, they must be placed in less optimal locations, and capacity numbers will drop, perhaps dramatically. And no one can predict when they will generate electricity.

When the wind isn’t blowing, the electricity grid cannot provide the energy we need to operate and maintain our standard of living. Today fossil fuels stand ready to step in when wind speeds decline. But under the GND, virtually all fossil fuels would be eliminated, making it impossible to keep the lights on without a major increase in nuclear power, which environmental activists hate even more than fossil fuels.

To generate significant wind energy, facilities must be located where there is steady wind most of the time. Such areas exist along the West Coast of the United States and a strip of the Midwest from the Dakotas to Texas. But 75% of the conterminous 48 states have only half the wind of these locations. Offshore areas have higher wind potential but are be at least three times more expensive to develop.

Perhaps the biggest drawback to relying on wind power is the immense amount of land required. IWTs must be placed far apart so they don’t interfere with each turbine’s “wind capture area.”

In his keynote address at the 2018 America First Energy Conference , Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry explained that generating enough electricity to power just the Houston metropolitan area would require almost 900 square miles of wind turbines. This is six-times more land than an equivalent solar farm of photovoltaic cells, assuming they operate at full efficiency 24/7/365; dozens of times the land required for an equivalent nuclear power plant; and 16 times the size of Washington, DC.

Wind is also much more expensive than existing conventional energy sources. The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) claims that wind power can generate electricity for 8¢ per kilowatt-hour (kWh). However, this is based on poor assumptions and glossing over important realities.

It assumes average wind turbine lifetime is 30 years, the same as a conventional fossil fuel power plant. In reality, most turbines last only 15 years, and less offshore. It ignores the cost of backup power. It includes no cost for transmission lines from wind farms to distant cities. Most significantly, it omits subsidies.

A 2016 Utah State University study shows the following extra costs omitted or miscalculated by the EIA for wind power: 15-years not 30-year life expectancies (US 7¢ per kWh), backup power (at least 2.3¢ cents if the back-up is natural gas), transmission costs (2.7¢), government subsidies (23¢). All that means the real cost of wind power is a staggering 43¢ per kilowatt hour! That’s seven times the cost of natural gas-generated electricity! What family, factory, hospital, office, church or school can afford this?

GND promoters would like wind farms everywhere, but even the most supposedly environmentally friendly communities often do not want wind turbines in their own neighborhoods: they spoil the landscape and cause serious environmental impacts, such as killing many birds and bats each year.

In 2013, Loss, Will and Marra estimated that 140,000 to 328,000 birds are killed each year in the contiguous United States by wind turbines. The Audubon Society says that makes wind “the most threatening form of green energy.” Other sources say the death tolls are far higher.

Bat deaths are even worse and potentially more threatening to human health and welfare. Spain’s Save the Eagles International says industrial wind turbines “kill millions of bats & birds, worsening an environmental and epidemiological crisis.” The 2016 study “Multiple mortality events in bats: A global review” reports that since 2000 industrial wind turbines have overtaken all other causes of mass mortality for bats in North America and Europe.

A conservative estimate of bat mortality in the USA is that at least 4 million bats have been killed by wind turbines since 2012. Bats are our primary natural defense in keeping mosquito and crop-damaging insect populations in check. One bat can eat between 500 and 1,000 mosquitoes and other insects in just one hour, or about 6,000 per night.

Fish and wildlife specialists were stunned at the number of dead bats they found at industrial wind turbines in the eastern US. About half were due to barotrauma: a bat only has to come close to a spinning blade, and the pressure change bursts the blood vessels in its lungs.

Save the Eagles explains that killing millions of bats results in billions of extra mosquitoes. It is no coincidence that mosquito populations have increased up to tenfold over the last 50 years, according to long-term mosquito monitoring programs, which also note that increased urbanization and reduced use of insecticides were the main drivers of this change.

Finally, noise generated by wind turbines is akin to that of a helicopter, affecting quality of life and causing serious health problems for people living within a quarter-mile of a turbine. A 2013 Canadian paper reported, “People who live or work in close proximity to IWTs have experienced symptoms that include decreased quality of life, annoyance, stress, sleep disturbance, headache, anxiety, depression and cognitive dysfunction.” Other studies report the same problems.

A woman who was forced out of her Ontario, Canada home said “the problem is not just cyclical audible noise keeping people awake, but also low frequency infrasound, which can travel many kilometres.” The former operator of the Wind Victims Ontario website added, “Infrasound goes right through walls. It pummels your body.” Sherri Lange, CEO of North American Platform Against Wind, says she has “personally received hundreds of phone calls from distressed people who need to vacate their homes.”

Across the world, governments have received tens of thousands of complaints. They rarely even try to address the problems raised. “It is my experience from talking to doctors, researchers and other high-level professionals, that governments seem to be [under the influence of] the industry,” Lange says.

Less frequent but more serious are 192 deaths over the past decade, primarily from massive failures of turbine blades. The deaths have prompted Finland, Bavaria and Scotland to propose legislation that no wind farm be allowed within 1.2 miles (2 kilometers) of any housing.

Many Americans think wind energy is cheap, eco-friendly and wonderful. But that’s because few are ever exposed to the real human, animal, scenic and environmental costs. Green New Deal supporters are counting on people to remain in the dark about these serious problems, to turn their plans into law.

We all need to do more to get the truth out, and confront activists, legislators, regulators and journalists with tough questions and hard realities.

Dr. Jay Lehr is Senior Policy Analyst for the Ottawa-based International Climate Science Coalition. Tom Harris is Executive Director of the ICSC. (Some of the information for this article was derived from the 2018 book The Mythology of Global Warming by Bruce Bunker PhD, published by Moonshine Cove. The authors recommend this book as an excellent source of information on the climate change debate.)

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Duane
May 22, 2019 10:20 am

So much BS to unpack this all too typical rant against wind power. Where to begin?

First of all, the claimed data point that wind turbines only last 15 years is based upon utter bullshit – the same kind of twisted data that climate skeptics love to accuse the climate alarmists of (I am in the former camp, by the way – but being a lifetime engineer, I reject bullshit in all its forms, no matter the source). The data isn’t what it sounds like. The average lifetime of a failed turbine is around 17 years .. but unless you are a dolt, you get the difference between counting only the population of failures as being radically different from the total population of wind turbines.

Secondly, even if a turbine “fails”, it doesn’t blow up or melt down or become a total loss. In virtually all cases a failure simply means a replacement of a part – the only moving parts being the generator rotor and the blade pitch system and the turbine rotation system … all of which are extremely simple mechanical systems of just one or a small handful of parts, all easily replaced at minimal cost. Vastly different, say, than the cost to refurbish or overhaul a natural gas powered or coal powered steam plant, which are massively complex and extremely expensive to overhaul or replace with many thousands of moving parts.

Thirdly, the “massive bird kill” meme has been not only debunked but literally destroyed over and over again, yet keeps getting cited over and over again by the anti-wind luddites.

The numbers of birds killed by wind turbines measure in the thousands .. the numbers of birds killed by colliding with powerlines, buildings, and with motor vehicles numbers in the BILLIONS PER YEAR. The number one killer of all birds in the developed world is ferral cats. The number of avian deaths due to wind turbines does not remotely approach even the noise level in the actual data.

Then the luddites come back with, “well, not all birds are created equal .. it’s the raptors and bats that are really suffering”. Of course they – you all here – never provide a shred of data to back that up. In reality, if you look at the trend lines of raptor populations in the western USA where most of the US wind turbines are installed, raptor populations have either increased substantially in the last two decades since wind turbine farms became a reality, or at worst have stabilized. Again, as with all other avian mortality the biggest killers of raptors are powerlines, buildings, and vehicles. With raptors, habitat loss is the single biggest threat to their populations.

Whether wind turbines continue to grow in number or not, they have zilch to do with climate science. The climate science is what it is. It is not necessary for climate alarmist skeptics to go all luddite on renewable technology enerty sources. They will generate whatever they generate, and no matter how loudly you whine it will make not a damned bit of difference.

Stick to facts and logic and leave the ranting to the climate alarmists.

KcTaz
Reply to  Duane
May 22, 2019 12:53 pm

Duane, I am afraid I can’t agree with you on just about any part of your comment.
First.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/what-if-green-energy-isnt-the-future-11558294830

What if Green Energy Isn’t the Future?
There’s a reason Warren Buffett decided to bet $10 billion on the future of oil and natural gas.

Second. Guess whose been counting the dead birds and bats? The windmill farms. Also, the endangered birds often fly away from the windmill and die well outside of its perimeters.
From a lawsuit. Guess who’s been counting the dead birds? Thanks to a lawsuit, this may change. We will see what the counts are after a third party starts counting them.
“The revised permit requires companies to hire a third party to collect data on eagle deaths rather than consultants hired by permit holders, a change hailed by Defenders of Wildlife…”
us-usa-eagles-idUSKBN1432R2
You are correct about Bald Eagles increasing but Golden Eagles are declining and they are killing bats at alarming rates. Solar arrays instantaneously roast the birds when flying over them. There is not much left to count, assuming they count any of them.
The endangered species are rare in the cities and not often killed by bldgs. or cars. As for cats, eagles eat cats, not the other way around. You may dismiss it, but that which kills sparrows are not the same as what it killing eagles etc., which is windmills and solar arrays.
On top of all that, these things are not green and consume vast quantities of fossil fuel energy to make, require mining and fossil fuels to get the materials and this is extremely damaging to man and earth where they are mined which is usually China which is note noted for environmental concerns, and deliver and maintain. The windmill investors in the US are not required to dispose of them when their life is over and the same is true of solar. They will, if removed at all, be sent to the third world where they will pollute the groundwater and expose those doing the disposing to toxic chemicals.
On top of all that, more CO2 and fossil fuels are used to make, install and operate them since they all need fossil fuel backup, than if we just used natural gas to start with.
Are we headed for a solar waste crisis?
http://bit.ly/2ZBR4Vp

Poison wind power: the shocking environmental damage they don’t want you… https://youtu.be/_7Q8qU4LUi0 via @YouTube

Grid Reliability: DOE Throws Down Red Flags On Unreliable Wind And Solar

https://www.forbes.com/sites/markpmills/2017/08/28/grid-reliability-doe-throws-down-red-flags-on-unreliable-wind-and-solar/#52056bd221ef
ADDING More Solar And Wind Power ‘Doubles’ CO2 Emissions
http://bit.ly/2URDcH2
The only reason to use them is to reduce CO2 and pollutants and FF use. They do neither.

Reply to  KcTaz
May 23, 2019 6:05 am

They will, if removed at all, be sent to the third world where they will pollute the groundwater and expose those doing the disposing to toxic chemicals.

They’ll mostly all sit there and decay.

Bindidon
Reply to  Duane
May 22, 2019 1:02 pm

Duane

Many thanks for this excellent, sober comment. I couldn’t have written that better.

KcTaz
Reply to  Duane
May 22, 2019 1:16 pm

This fellow is considered to be pretty smart. He has made a fortune in wind energy. Here’s his opinion about it.

Big Wind’s Bogus Subsidies
Giving tax credits to the wind energy industry is a waste of time and money.
Warren Buffet

http://bit.ly/2zOQR5x

DESPITE BEING FAMOUS for touting the idea that the rich don’t pay their fair share of taxes, investor Warren Buffet seems to be perfectly fine with receiving tax breaks for making investments in Big Wind. 
“I will do anything that is basically covered by the law to reduce Berkshire’s tax rate,” Buffet told an audience in Omaha, Nebraska recently. Big Wind’s Bogus Subsidies
Giving tax credits to the wind energy industry is a waste of time and money.
Warren Buffet
Also, these noted greens.
Shocker: Top Google Engineers Say Renewable Energy ‘Simply won’t work’
http://bit.ly/2Z1LVG0
The Clean Power Plan Will Collide With The Incredibly Weird Physics Of The Electric Grid
http://bit.ly/2VAQCo6

Also, among many others, here is this fellow.

BILL GATES Slams Unreliable Wind & Solar: ‘Let’s Quit Jerking Around With Renewables & Batteries’ |
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x443Ei7AkBk
Even James Hansen admits they don’t work.
* GODFATHER Of Global Warming Alarmism James Hansen Admits Renewable Energy Is A “Nice Idea” Though Useless
* http://bit.ly/2P5L6Y1
NOW That We Know Renewables Can’t ‘Save The Planet’, Are We Really Going To Stand By And Let Them Destroy It? |
bit.ly/2XuPofr
I don’t know from where you are getting your information, though, it sounds like it’s straight from those profiting mightily off of “green” energy fantasies that we are going to power the 21st Century with 13th Century technology who just happen to have created a can’t lose investment, thanks to taxpayers providing them with a profit no matter what, but you are seriously wrong. In the meantime, they are doing serious environmental and ecological damage.

buggs
May 22, 2019 10:44 am

Birds, bats AND insects. Flying insects. Sometimes they function as pollinators.

While true that many insects (notably honey bees) do not necessarily fly at those heights consistently they are up there. Excluding the discussion on “bees” specifically many other insects will fly at those heights and also function as pollinators so they are indeed being impacted.

Migratory flights of Monarchs? There will be some mortality. Is that acceptable?

Similar if not stronger arguments could be made for the impacts of large arrays of ground arrayed solar installations. Significant disruption of the native environment and alteration of the albedo within the area surely must change the ecosystem in the region substantially. You’ve taken a rather substantial footprint and completely altered it’s vegetation patterns and subsequent fauna as well. What people perceive as “dead” or devoid of life is usually a poor understanding of the ecosystem that exists, largely because it’s small and not pretty. Certainly the Sahara is not as vividly live as an old growth rain forest (or at least not as obviously) but neither is it without its own functioning ecosystem.

KcTaz
Reply to  buggs
May 22, 2019 1:25 pm

buggs, you are correct.

German study on the tonnes of insects killed by wind turbines. Not old. Not ‘cherrypicked’. October 2018.
https://docs.wind-watch.org/Interference-of-Flying-Insects-and-Wind-Parks.pdf …
“Hypothesis: Radical Greens are the Great Killers of Our Age” is published at
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2019/04/14/hypothesis-radical-greens-are-the-great-killers-of-our-age/
Cutting Down Forests To Save The Earth; You Simply Can’t Get Any More Stupid Than This
https://co2islife.wordpress.com/2018/04/19/cutting-down-forests-to-save-the-earth-you-simply-cant-get-any-more-stupid-than-this/

“BIOFUELS, BIOMASS and WINDFARMS are destroying wildlife habitats at great speed, yet they do not produce any environmental benefits at all. They are remedies that are worse than the illness and should be abandoned immediately.”
D4CIgKrXsAYLgvg.jpg

May 22, 2019 10:50 am

There is nothing as exhilarating as seeing a Wind Turbine burning and collapsing under its own weight. All around you can hear the birds, bats and farmers cheering it on.

Bill Powers
May 22, 2019 11:02 am

A hundred years from now scientists and historians will look back on the first 2 decades of this century and wonder why there were no adults in the room when governments were making lame brain decisions regarding energy and environmental policy.

May 22, 2019 12:16 pm

The true cost of renewables must include supporting their intermittency, in the UK this is roughly 35% duty cycle, the 65% is in fact delivered by the reliable and clean gas CCGT generation on which renewables rely for their subsidies and 65% of their rated output. If fossil is removed from the hrid the 65% has to come from somewhere, basically tripled renewable generation and storage if 100% renewable generated. With battery storage or pumped storage added to the cost of over generation when renewable energy is plentiful the wholesale cost goes up 10 times for batteries, at the cheapest cost, because storing electrical energy in another form takes huge amounts of resource comared to the primary enrgy form it came from. I costed this for the UK here, it translates directly to any scenario pro rata. https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3274611.

UK renewable scenario has to be wind and battery based as there are few hydro opportunities and solar is insignificant in winter when we need the most energy for light and heat at 50 degrees North, close to serial killer latitudes. The CAPEX for battery and pumped storage is around £50Billion per TWh capacity.

This neds renewing every 4 years or so if batteries, which would buy a lot of 60 year life nuclear power stations – which also generate energy cheaper than renewables or fossil – because their fuel is so energy dense it is virtually cost free, as with renewables, but requires so much less resource in materials and land to collect .

If its pumped storage that needs a major refit every 60 or so years, say, so that’s cheaper. BUT the land use of the renewable generation plus the land use for pumped storage feeder lakes is still considerable iftaking days of grid supply is contemplated. U;timately nuclear must always be cheapest because it uses far less resources in material and land /KWh, so why bother with anythimg else..

AND, FINALLY, the above gnores the simple fact that this is not even an otion for many countries because the available renewable energy supply cannot meet the demand in any practical economic or physical sense. Excepting Norway.

Patrick MJD
May 22, 2019 2:58 pm

“It is no coincidence that mosquito populations have increased up to tenfold over the last 50 years, according to long-term mosquito monitoring programs, which also note that increased urbanization and reduced use of insecticides were the main drivers of this change.”

Wait a minute! Aren’t we supposed to be in the greatest insect extinction event evah?

Robber
May 22, 2019 3:26 pm

The big lie we keep getting told about intermittent wind and solar electricity – it’s now cheaper than coal or gas generated electricity. That ignores the cost of backup power. It includes no cost for transmission lines from remote locations and new control systems to ensure synchronous power.
If it was cheaper, why would any mandates be required to force its adoption?

Derek Colman
May 22, 2019 5:29 pm

I have been monitoring UK wind power now for 16 days via the Gridwatch site. We have an installed capacity capable of supplying around 30% of demand. During that 16 days it has managed less than 5% most days, with 2 days at 0.6%, one at 10%, and one at 28.5%. Today it is at 11.8%. During all that time no coal was used because we have replaced it with gas, which with a 60% capability along with 20% from nuclear, and up to 10% from imports, is the mainstay of the grid. Re. hidden costs, headlines tell us wind is as cheap as coal or gas, and it is at the point of delivery. It’s just that they don’t include the subsidies which are paid separately, and the subsidies paid to gas back up, which together triple the real cost. If you are interested to follow this saga of wind failure, go here:-
http://gridwatch.co.uk/

SAMURAI
May 22, 2019 6:59 pm

Suppose you are very wealthy and only had the insane option of either buying a mint condition Guards Red 2016 Porsche 911 R $200,000, or a beat up Monkey Barf Yellow 1976 AMC Pacer $1,200,000 (which only works 33% of the time)…

Which car would buy?

That’s the crazy option Leftists propose..

I don’t know about you, but I’m buying the Porsche..

MeWhoElse
May 22, 2019 7:15 pm

You’re obviously not aware of large cities before the wide spread use of motorised transport.
Cities had a stench of two things, death, and feces… both of which were due to horses.
Horses would literally die in the streets and people would leave them there.
People that don’t learn from history are doomed to repeat it…. so enjoy the lovely aroma coming your way if you get your wish.

rk
May 23, 2019 1:10 am

A most fundamental problem with wind turbines is they can be destroyed by thunderstorms and then you do not have any power. It is impossible to design for vertical downloads and this is what occurs under the downbursts in big thunderstorms when all the blades would be driven downwards even if in a feathered position. Hail, lightning, icing, and huge turbulence forces can cause this damage and even if not severe enough on the first occasion it starts the degradation in the gear boxes. In Germany it is now mandated that if you want insurance you have to replace the gear box every five years – at huge costs, more than $600,000 + for a gear box. Puerto Rico still has no grid power after all it’s solar and wind installations were destroyed by ” Marcia ” over 18 months ago.

Reply to  rk
May 25, 2019 10:55 am

re: “Puerto Rico still has no grid power”

Statement appears untrue.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/puerto-rico-hurricane-maria-recovery-last-customers-reconnected-main-power-grid-today-2019-03-20/

“Last of Puerto Rican customers being reconnected to island’s main power grid”

TimD
May 23, 2019 8:54 am

Does anybody know a reliable source of comparative unsubsidized costs for various forms of electric generation, in terms of cents per kilowatt hour? Most of the stuff I’ve read seems to favor green energy sources because they are subsidized.