The Giga And Terra Scam Of Offshore Wind Energy

The latest “renewable, sustainable” energy claims show the IEA belongs in an insane asylum

Paul Driessen

Can anti-fossil fuel policies based on climate crisis alarmism possibly get any more insane than this?

In what might be described as a pre-Halloween trick of ginormous proportions, the International Energy Agency (IEA) now asserts that “renewable, sustainable” energy output will explode over the next two decades. Certainly for onshore wind and solar energy – but especially for offshore wind, says the IEA.

“Offshore wind currently provides just 0.3% of global power generation,” IEA executive director Fatih Birol noted. But “wind farms” constructed closer than 37 miles from coastlines around the world, where waters are less than 60 meters (197 feet) deep, could generate 36,000 terawatt-hours (36 million gigawatt-hours or 36 billion megawatt-hours) of electricity a year, he assures us. That’s well above the current global demand of 23,000 terawatt hours, Birol and a new IEA report say.

In fact, the potential for offshore wind energy is so great, the IEA asserts, that 20 years from now the industry will be 15 times bigger than in 2019 – and will attract $1 trillion a year in investments (riding the coat tails of government mandates and subsidies). The boom will result from lower costs per megawatt, larger turbines, and technological developments like floating platforms for turbines, says the IEA.

Wind “farms”? Like some cute, rustic Old McDonald family farm? Are you kidding me? These would be massive offshore electricity factories, with thousands, even millions, of turbines and blades towering 500-700 feet above the waves. Only a certifiable lunatic, congenital liar, complete true believer, would-be global overseer or campaign-cash-hungry politician could possibly repeat this IEA hype – or call these wind energy factories renewable, sustainable or eco-friendly.

They all clearly need yet another bucket of icy cold energy reality dumped over their heads – in addition to this one, this one and this one. If the world buys into this crazy scheme, we all belong in straitjackets.

As I have said many times, wind and sunshine may be free, renewable, sustainable and eco-friendly. But the turbines, solar panels, transmission lines, lands, raw materials and dead birds required to harness this widely dispersed, intermittent, weather-dependent energy to benefit humanity absolutely are not.

A single 1.8-MW onshore wind turbine requires over 1,000 tons of steel, copper, aluminum, rare earth elements, zinc, molybdenum, petroleum-based composites, reinforced concrete and other raw materials. A 3-MW version requires 1,550 tons of these non-renewable materials.

By my rough calculations (here and here), replacing just the USA’s current electricity generation, backup coal and natural gas power plants, gasoline-powered vehicles, factory furnaces, and other fossil fuel uses with wind turbines and backup batteries would require: some 14 million 1.8-MW onshore turbines, sprawling across some 1.8 billion acres, some 15 billion tons of raw materials, thousands of new or expanded mines worldwide, and thousands of mostly fossil fuel-powered factories working 24/7/365 in various foreign countries (since we won’t allow them in the USA) to manufacture all this equipment.

Those overseas mines now “employ” tens of thousands of fathers, mothers and children – at slave wages.

Can you imagine what it would take to build, install and maintain 36 billion megawatt-hours of offshore wind turbines … in 20 to 200 feet of water … many on floating platforms big and strong enough to support monstrous 600-foot-tall turbines … in the face of winds, waves, salt spray, storms and hurricanes?

The impacts on terra firma … and terra aqua … would be monumental, intolerable and unsustainable.

Moreover, a new study – by the company that has built more offshore industrial wind facilities than any other on Earth – has found that offshore turbines and facilities actually generate much less electricity than previously calculated, expected or claimed! That’s because every turbine slows wind speeds for every other turbine. Of course, that means even more turbines, floating platforms and raw materials. Using 3, 9 or 10-MW turbines would mean fewer of the beasts, of course, but larger towers, bases and platforms.

More turbines will mean countless seagoing birds will get slaughtered and left to sink uncounted and unaccountable beneath the waves. The growing jungle of fixed and floating turbines will severely interfere with surface and submarine ship traffic, while constant vibration noises from the towers will impair whale and other marine mammals’ sonar navigation systems. Visual pollution will be significant. And there’d be thousands of miles of submarine cables bringing electricity to onshore transmission lines.

Maps depicting the USA’s best wind resource areas show that they are concentrated down the middle of the continent – right along migratory flyways for monarch butterflies, geese, endangered whooping cranes and other airborne species; along the Pacific Coast; and along the Atlantic Seaboard.

Coastal states, especially their big urban areas, tend to be hotbeds of climate anxiety and wind-solar activism. Indeed, many Democrat Green New Deal governors and legislators have mandated 80-100% “clean, renewable, sustainable, eco-friendly” energy by 2040 or 2050. California, Oregon and Washington in the West … and Maine, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Virginia in the East … are notable examples. So the IEA’s love affair with offshore wind energy is certainly understandable. Of course, Blue State Great Lakes would also be excellent candidates for fixed and floating turbines.

Pacific Ocean waters typically get deep very quickly. So thousands of huge floating platforms would be needed there, although Puget Sound is also windy and could be partially denuded for turbines, as they’ve done in West Virginia’s mountains. California prefers to import its electricity from neighboring states, rather than generating its own power. However, as Margaret Thatcher might say, pretty soon you run out of other people’s energy. So homegrown wind energy will soon be essential – and inland Golden State and Middle America voters would almost certainly support putting turbines straight offshore from Al Gore’s $9-million mansion in Montecito and the Obamas’ $15-million cottage in Rancho Mirage.

When it comes to actually implementing these ambitious “renewable energy goals,” resistance and delays grow exponentially. A Massachusetts wind project for 170 offshore wind turbines was originally proposed around 2001. It’s now down to 130 3.6-MW behemoth turbines, with the US Interior Department delaying permits yet again, pending “further study.” The reaction of coastal residents to the reality of endless thousands of turbines could well turn into Fossil Fuels and Nuclear Forever.

Actual electricity output is rarely as advertised. It often hits 20% or lower, depending on locations – and fails completely on the hottest and coldest days, when electricity is most urgently needed. During the July 2006 California heat wave, turbines generated only 5% of nameplate capacity. In Texas, wind capacity factors are generally 9% to 12% (or even down to 4% or zero) during torrid summer months. Offshore, echoing Samuel Taylor Coleridge, they’d be as idle as a fleet of painted turbines upon a painted ocean.

Actual wind turbine electricity output declines by 16% per decade of operation – and worse than that offshore, because of storms and salt spray. Removing obsolete offshore turbines requires huge derrick barges and near-perfect weather. Costs and difficulties multiply with turbine size, increasing distance from shore, and whether concrete bases and electrical cables must be removed and seabeds returned to their original condition, as is required today for offshore oil and gas operations.

Cutting up 300-foot (or taller) towers and 200-foot (or longer) blades from offshore turbines, and hauling the sections to onshore landfills and scrap yards, is no piece of cake. Recycling blades is also difficult, because they are made from fiberglass, carbon fibers and petroleum resins; burning blades releases hazardous dust and toxic gases, and so is (or should be) prohibited.

Dismantling and disposal costs could easily reach millions of dollars per offshore turbine, and many billions for every industrial-scale wind “farm.” But wind energy operators should not be allowed to simply leave their derelicts behind, as they have done with smaller turbines in Hawaii and California.

Bottom line: From any economic, environmental, raw materials or energy perspective, offshore wind energy is simply unsustainable. It’s time for politicians, environmentalists and industry promoters to stop selling offshore wind (and onshore wind and solar power) as magic pixie dust to replace fossil fuels.

Paul Driessen is senior policy advisor for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org) and author of many books, reports and articles on energy, climate and environmental issues.

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michael hart
November 4, 2019 1:54 pm

“Offshore wind currently provides just 0.3% of global power generation,” IEA executive director Fatih Birol noted. But “wind farms” constructed closer than 37 miles from coastlines around the world, where waters are less than 60 meters (197 feet) deep, could generate 36,000 terawatt-hours (36 million gigawatt-hours or 36 billion megawatt-hours) of electricity a year, he assures us. That’s well above the current global demand of 23,000 terawatt hours, Birol and a new IEA report say.

Once again, it’s the use of one the magic words. In this case it is

“could”

.

We “could” form a permanent colony on Mars.
We “could” build a space-going ship to take humans to Alpha Centauri.
We “could” supply all of our energy needs with offshore wind farms.
We “could” just jerk ourselves off to the prospect of telling the whole world to do something amounting to economic and social suicide.

We could do all of the above, to ruin ourselves and our civilization. But we won’t (apart from the few people subscribing to the last of the above-enumerated options.)
How many normies are deceived by this twaddle? My guess is some, but less than the majority.

A quick analysis by a half-competent person will quickly conclude that costs would be literally (literally!) astronomical, and therefore will not happen in the foreseeable centuries. To seriously talk of them today in policy terms indicates a person (politician) who knows nothing and cares even less.
/rant

November 4, 2019 2:38 pm

Well, at least they’ll be a lot fewer of those annoying seagulls on the beach ….

Kemaris
November 4, 2019 2:59 pm

I, for one, welcome this opportunity for our left-wing coastal elites to finally shoulder some of the cost, both environmentally and financially, of their religious beliefs.

November 4, 2019 3:02 pm

I have an idea !! construct two reservoirs, one ant a few hundred feet above the other. Run the water in the upper reservoir through generators into the lower reservoir. Place a dome above the lower one with a fresnel lens designed to provide maximum heating effect to the water. Direct the steam up to the upper reservoir using a shape like those used in whisky stills and then through a cooling coil in that stored water. This would provide an almost perpetual motion like sourcerce of power.

Reply to  Usurbrain
November 4, 2019 4:06 pm

A perpetual energy machine!
But I doubt the Fresnel lens will provide enough hot air.
(Perhaps build the system near Hollywood or Berkeley ….)

David Blenkinsop
Reply to  Usurbrain
November 4, 2019 4:36 pm

Make the reservoirs large enough to be a “tidal bore” in response to the relative positions of the moon and the earth, and arrange them so they overflow one way or the other roughly every 12 hours or so. Run a turbine off that and you have real perpetual motion!

Or maybe just hook a cable to the moon and draw power off the orbital motion more directly?

November 4, 2019 3:14 pm

Wind turbines are usually sited a long way from the towns and cities which
require the energy. So two additional costs should be considered. Transmission lines from the coast and or sea based turbines.

So because of the costs we can end up with the “”El Cheapo ” small towers,
which in the case of the ones in South Australia, were blown over by a strong wind.

Also what about the resistance of such long power lines from the turbines to
the Cities. What voltage is the power. If directly from the turbines its Direct Currant, very high loss factor, but if its to be High voltage Alternating
Currant, the most efficient way, then we will need both inverters and
transformers at each site.

Also for sites both on the coast and worse off shore, then salt spray should be considered as a factor in the life of such turbines.

In regard to the cost of disposal of these turbines, are the contracts so worded that such costs must be met by whoever owns them, in which case such needed
cash should be in a fund separate from the turbines owners.

So forget the wild claims of how many homes can be powered by each turbine,
just how much actual electrical energy really reaches the main grid ?

MJE VK5ELL

Sara
November 4, 2019 3:53 pm

“Maps depicting the USA’s best wind resource areas show that they are concentrated down the middle of the continent – right along migratory flyways for monarch butterflies, geese, endangered whooping cranes and other airborne species; along the Pacific Coast; and along the Atlantic Seaboard.” article

Yes, let’s do kill off the really important things with no thought to the consequences, shall we? Geese don’t matter. Goldfinches don’t matter. Swallows don’t matter. Butterflies don’t matter. Whales don’t matter. Nothing matters but giving this bunch of numbskulled drek-lovers a chance to feed their useless, worthless egos.

Can you tell that they P_)(*&&*** me off yet?

They want to “save the environment”, do they? Well, fine. The most important thing they can do is try living in the real world with the rest of us peones, not in those ivory towers that they so blissfully inhabit, unaware of reality.

Gary
November 4, 2019 4:34 pm

Not to mention the total disruption of the inshore fishing industry. Already the proposed development off the coast of RI and has met with pushback from fishermen and assurance from the Congressional delegation that they won’t be harmed. Then there is navigational hazzards to coastal shipping…

James Francisco
November 4, 2019 5:32 pm

My hope is for the out of commission wind turbines to be left in place like our amendments to the Constitution so everyone will be reminded of the mass delusion that took hold of most people in the world for awhile. So as the music group “The Who” said “we won’t be fooled again”.

stockdoc77
November 4, 2019 7:04 pm

We have reached 1 terawatt of installed renewable capacity around the world, and are adding about 200 GW per year. We will reach 2 terawatt by 2023, and likely 4 terawatt by 2030. Current global generating capacity is about 7 terawatt. To provide for an electric car fleet and for increased power usage in the developing world, we should need about 15 terawatts by 2050. Given intermittency, that would mean total installed base of perhaps 15 terawatts of wind/solar and 5 terawatts of nuclear and hydro plus grid scale storage. We are on track to reach 15 terawatts of wind/solar by 2050, if we continue to grow installations by 5% per year for the next thirty years.

Reply to  stockdoc77
November 4, 2019 8:47 pm

Pure fantasy. Your numbers are lies.
And BTW there is no such thing as grid scale storage.
Not likely there ever will be using current technology.

observa
November 4, 2019 7:09 pm

Idiocy!
https://anero.id/energy/wind-energy/2019/october
Good for maybe desalination plants to add to existing water catchments or windmill bores for stock watering (solar pumps at ground level have replaced them on cost grounds in Oz) but that’s about it. There aren’t enough battery resources to iron out geographically disperse yet variable wind power like that to ever guarantee its annual average output of 30% of installed capacity.
Those who advocate doing so are either technical/economic illiterates, morons or deliberately lying about that or some combination of the three I care not which.

William
November 4, 2019 9:48 pm

Here in Virginia, where nuclear, coal, and natural gas provide 1/3 of the power with some minor electrical noise generated by solar, Dominion power is paying an OBSCENE 79 cents/kw-hr wholesale for their first off-shore wind project. Those other sources wholesale power for less than 4 cents. All because our governor is a green Democrat and new green Democrat businesses are fleeing electrically unstable California for the reliable cheap power of Virginia… but then they insist that us locals pay to add dancing unicorn “green” power to the grid so they can satisfy their Gaia worshiping religion by pretending that the power THEY are using on a dark and still night is coming from those dark solar panels and the non-rotating turbines.

Kemaris
Reply to  William
November 4, 2019 10:21 pm

Who do I have to kill for 4 cent/kW-hr electricity wholesale? I personally know of a municipal utility in California, about ten years ago, that passed on 11 cent/kW-hr electricity from a biomass boiler but accepted 17 cent/kW-hr electricity from a solar farm that only provided 1/4 of the generating capacity.

Reply to  William
November 5, 2019 12:39 am

Dominion Power isn’t paying 79¢/Kwhr. Their customers are. It is simply a pass thru for them.
That is you are paying to make the GreenSlime investors richer. That is You, the middle class, getting fleeced. For the very rich, electricity is tiny part of their spending. And there is a whole lot more of middle class folks to fleece than there is rich folks to fleece.

Alex
November 4, 2019 11:30 pm

One more important point:
Windmills damp winds.
They see it already: they cannot build more windmills in one place. One windmill takes the wind from another.
But on the global scale? Which impact do the windmills on the global and local climate?
We were taught about the “butterfly effect” on the weather.
Here we have billions and trillions of “butterflies”.
Are they already responsible for the recent two hot and dry summers in Europe without any wind?

talgus
Reply to  Alex
November 5, 2019 1:34 pm

energy from wind does not spring from nothingness. Extracting it will have an effect. No one has even guessed at where. my guess, the planets dynamics in the solar system.

n.n
Reply to  Alex
November 5, 2019 6:15 pm

Ironically, the turbulence and other side-effects limit the progress of the Green blight.

Thomas
November 4, 2019 11:55 pm

Sorry, but it is clear to me that you absolutly have no idea what is wind energy. The number you quoted here are not true, and your assumptions are not correct. Wind energy and solar is the answer to energy demand until Cern is operable and technology of fusion is ready to the market. Wind creates jobs locally, and gradually cost less then now than coal.

Reply to  Thomas
November 5, 2019 1:47 pm

Costs less than coal if you do not include the cost of backup. Or batteries (if available).

Clever.

Kiwi Gary
November 5, 2019 12:02 am

I read recently, possibly on WUWT, that Chinese investigators have found that the potential wind power in the Northern hemisphere has reduced by 30% since 1975. China will, of course, be most interested in such data as they have some of the world’s biggest wind farms. Nobody else will, as the supposed wind farms are actually farming subsidies, and very profittably too.

Gerald the Mole
November 5, 2019 3:30 am

I do wish that energy was always expressed in Joules and power in Joules per second. This would, hopefully, avoid a recent press release that had the interesting unit of Joules per second per second.

Kemaris
Reply to  Gerald the Mole
November 5, 2019 8:50 pm

Then show me a working facility and source test data.

As for the PTO, physical possibility and economic viability are not in their purview. I’m not going to bother answering your deliberate misreading of what I actually wrote.

Mike Keller
Reply to  Kemaris
November 5, 2019 9:08 pm

You clearly implied the U.S. patent office grants patents to hair brained ideas. Again, rather arrogant on your part.

There are no working advanced reactor facilities, of any type, in the U.S. nor will there be for some time. Your criteria are disingenuous, as a minimum.

Teddylee
November 5, 2019 1:09 pm

Danish wind energy company have recently released some their latest data.Not only do wind turbines suffer blockage (where wind slows as it approaches the blades) but wake turbulence causes significant loss of output. Article in recent Times article

Teddylee
November 5, 2019 1:12 pm

Orsted is the name of the Danish wind energy company.

Cattleman
November 5, 2019 1:37 pm

Are there any studies of the effect that the reduced wind speed will have on on shore weather, and what effect or heat island effect does solar farms have in weather in local and adjacent areas

Peter D
November 6, 2019 1:38 am

I’m going to miss the birds. Near where I was born in South Australia, there were few left last time I visited. I understand from WUTU, there has been a similar collapse in bird populations.
So sad.

Peter D
November 6, 2019 2:42 am

I’m going to miss the birds. Near where I was born in South Australia, there were few left last time I visited. I understand from WUTU, there has been a similar collapse in California bird populations.
So sad.

flyboy46
November 7, 2019 5:13 pm

Poland Bans Wind Turbines in 17 years!
Now we have the nation of Poland examining the health damages of Wind turbines. They have discovered that the low frequency noise given off by wind turbines, affects cellular development and mimics heart problems.
And don’t think you can block these low frequency vibrations with a normal sound barrier. The lower the frequency, the thicker the barrier needs to be. For these very low frequencies, the barrier NEEDS to be 17 meters THICK! The lady who did the study says she wouldn’t live within 17 kilometer’s of a wind turbine!
They are going to force REMOVAL of ALL wind turbines in 17 years! Check this out, https://wattsupwiththat.com/?s=poland+%2Cwind+turbines and read to the end and check the comments of Sommer, and watch the YouTube video for a real education in the subject.

Luca
November 8, 2019 10:48 am

You calculation are not correct. Actual power for offshore wind turbines is higher than the onshore ones is 6 to 10 MW. Also no one is saying to switch EVERY single energy source to the sole offshore wind, like you supposed. It’s necessary to diversificate the sources. Than, I understand your entire website is a scam and I stop reading on.

Johann Wundersamer
November 16, 2019 4:26 pm