Destroying countrysides to save Earth from a climate non-crisis

Make-believe renewable energy hammers croplands, habitats, scenery – and families  

Paul Driessen

Energy analyst Robert Bryce maintains a database showing that, as of November 2025, local communities have rejected or restricted 595 wind, 475 solar and (more recently) 72 large-scale battery projects.

Many don’t want the installations blanketing wildlife habitats, scenic vistas, croplands or their backyard viewsheds; especially when the unreliable electricity is exported to faraway, power-hungry, virtue-signaling cities; and particularly when they are expected to help pay for installations and transmission lines that serve another state: North Dakota ratepayers to help Minneapolis, for example.

Other locals worry about health risks posed by light flicker, low-frequency noise and infrasound.

Many people also get riled up over the real costs of “green” energy – the total actual costs … versus deliberately lowballed costs that advocates emphasize.

This opposition is not only an American phenomenon. French and other European towns are also raising concerns, as are others around the world.

A recurrent sales pitch is that wind and solar power costs are declining and are now lower than coal, gas or nuclear electricity, ensuring lower prices for consumers. The claims leave out important but studiously unmentioned costs – economic, environmental and human.

“Save with renewable energy” promotions typically look only at initial costs associated with installing wind turbines and solar panels – which often come from China and are manufactured with cheap labor, using materials extracted with child labor, in mines and facilities with minimal or no workplace safety or environmental safeguards, with every phase fueled by oil, natural gas or coal.

Promoters also ignore sneaky subsidies paid via taxes and hidden charges on electric bills. They ignore payments to companies for not producing electricity when they must shut down because of high winds or when generation exceeds supply or grid capacity.

They don’t mention the costs of constructing, maintaining and operating duplicative backup systems: coal- or gas-fired power plants that must operate full-time at low throttle and go full-bore whenever wind and sunshine are inadequate. Or the mining and pollution involved in manufacturing all these technologies.

Grid-scale backup batteries cost tens of billions of dollars and carry significant fire and toxic emission risks, as with the 300-megawatt battery inferno at Moss Landing, California.

Offshore oceanic wind turbines must be replaced frequently, due to salt spray and storms. Hailstorms can destroy entire solar panel installations. The trillions of dollars keep adding up.

High-voltage transmission lines, often hundreds of miles long, cost $1-8 million per mile – for concrete, power lines, transformers, towers 50-200 feet tall, and warehouses of other equipment.

No wonder states and countries obsessed over climate cataclysms, net zero, and wind and solar have outrageous electricity rates. Germany now has the developed world’s highest domestic electricity prices; Britan has its highest industrial rates. Average prices for Europe’s heavy industries are double those in the United States. US states heavily reliant on wind and solar likewise pay exorbitant prices.

When families cannot afford electricity or gas, their homes are frigid and thousands die every winter from illnesses they would survive if they had proper heat.

Even France – which generates two-thirds of its electricity with nuclear power and leads Europe and the world in this regard – is betting big on solar, plus some wind. President Emmanuel Macron’s government intends to install millions of solar panels on “wastelands” and along freeways, and still “protect the beauty of our landscapes.”

The French Parliament has mandated that parking lots larger than 1,500 square meters (16,145 square feet; 80 vehicles) be 50% covered with solar panels. The government claims this electricity will equal the output of ten nuclear power plants producing a total of 10 Gigawatts on about 13 square miles of land.

It’s a fantastical assertion.

A 1-GW solar installation requires 4,000-5000 acres (6-8 sq. mi.), so ten will cover roughly 70 square miles. That’s nearly twice the land area of Paris, if entire parking lots are covered by panels. Can there possibly be that many appropriately sized outdoor lots in France?

Moreover, actually generating Gigawatts with photovoltaic solar requires – sunlight! France averages about 2,000 hours a year (23% of total annual hours). So legislators will have to conjure up many more parking lots covered in solar panels. Or compel the sun to shine longer and brighter.

Unless France builds more coal and gas power plants, it will also have to spend tens of billions of euros to install hundreds of thousands of grid-scale batteries, to store much of that electricity for nighttime and cloudy-day needs, diverting electricity from homes to batteries.

Perhaps the Macron government recognizes these obstacles. It’s blanketing, not just roadsides, “wastelands” and parking lots, but farmlands, meadows and forests all over France.

Seventeen solar projects are being fast-tracked in the Lot River Valley region alone. Macron officials are having thousands of trees chopped down there to “plant” Chinese solar panels next to the Causses du Quercy regional natural park, home to Saint Cirq Lapopie – France’s “most beautiful village.”

Tourists come to the Lot Valley to enjoy its stunning cliffs, historic villages, vineyards, superb cuisine and outdoor activities – not to see wind turbines, solar panels, battery “farms” and transmission lines.

But when national governments make “climate stabilization” and “saving the planet” their top priority, destroying villages, scenery, croplands and habitats becomes a minor inconvenience. So does the fact that much of the pseudo-sustainable electricity will likely be exported to Belgium, Switzerland and CERN – or to Spain during its next massive blackout.

The German government even bulldozes ancient villages to mine dirty, low-quality lignite coal, because it opposes nuclear power plants … and refuses to frack for natural gas for backup power.

This craziness could be coming to your neighborhood, as governments commit varying degrees of environmental vandalism and economic suicide in pursuit of solutions to the imaginary “climate crisis.”

Sometimes a wildly “green” state or provincial government preempts local zoning laws that could otherwise be used to reject wind, solar, battery and transmission line projects, so that “70% green energy by 2030” goals can be met by building in rural areas to serve high-voter urban areas.

Climate-obsessed national governments often act to control local voices and choices in pursuit of “decarbonization” even without being bound by international treaties. However, nations frequently trample on both state and local needs and concerns by signing onto Kyoto and Paris climate agreements that impose “tyranny by treaty” and thereby let unelected, unaccountable international politicians and bureaucrats rule in contravention of national laws and even constitutions.

President Trump took America out of the Paris climate pact, President Biden put it back in, and Trump 47 removed the US again in 2025. The cycle could repeat at the national or state level, as elections install new governments. Virginia is already finding that out, as its Clean Economy Act gets a “progressive” political power boost, though Trump just suspended its offshore wind project.

Voters and ratepayers need to wake up to these realities – and vote ideologues out of power before they destroy the planet in misguided attempts to save it.

Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org) and author of books and articles on energy, climate change and human rights. Special thanks to researcher T.H. Platt, author of The Dark Side of Hunger Mountain, for assisting with this article.

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December 24, 2025 10:03 pm

We had to destroy the environment in order to save it!

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Zig Zag Wanderer
December 26, 2025 9:35 am

The planet, civilization, all of humanity….

A. O. Gilmore
December 24, 2025 10:19 pm

I recently had an opportunity to see the craziness in the northern latitudes of Europe. Solar panels marring the beautiful countryside and farmlands, and for what? It doesn’t produce much power. Rube Goldberg machines!

Bryan A
Reply to  A. O. Gilmore
December 25, 2025 5:24 am

France, if they continue to shut down their Nuclear, will need to place Solar Panels on the Eiffel Tower and wind turbines on all 4 sides…something like this…
comment image

Reply to  Bryan A
December 26, 2025 7:30 am

France, if they continue to shut down their Nuclear, will experience frequent blackouts.

FIFY

Bryan A
December 24, 2025 11:34 pm

A 1-GW solar installation requires 4,000-5000 acres (6-8 sq. mi.)

And that same 1GW Solar installation will produce only 250 MW/hr for 4 hours a day…in Summer.
And that same 1GW Solar installation will produce only 100-120 MW/hr for 4 hours a day…in winter.
.
While the same 1GW Nuclear facility will produce 1GW/hr for 24 hours a day…every day…for all but 2 weeks every 2 years for refueling.
And do so for over 60 to likely 80 years before needing to be replaced while the Solar installation will need complete replacement every 15 years and partial replacement after every storm…as often as 3 times per year.

Reply to  Bryan A
December 25, 2025 5:11 am

You made a very good case for dumping solar and replacing it with reliable generation.

Petey Bird
Reply to  Bryan A
December 25, 2025 8:56 am

Solar plants don’t have output every day even in summer in locations where there is weather.
I think your winter estimates are over optimistic. Where I am it drops to as low as 1 – 5%.
Never mind that the output is never at high demand periods.

Reply to  Bryan A
December 26, 2025 8:43 am

Watts per hour?
What the heck does that mean?

Bryan A
December 24, 2025 11:40 pm

A 1-GW solar installation requires 4,000-5000 acres (6-8 sq. mi.),

Topaz Solar Farm is a 550MW Subsidy Farm that produces 145MW/hr for 4 hours a day and covers 9.5 sq mi. That same proposed 1GW Subsidy Farm will more likely cover 19 sq mi in practice and still only produce 250-280MW/hr for 4 hours a day.
To get the full 1GW/hr you would need 4 times as much capacity in Summer and nearly 10 times as much capacity in winter.

Peter Jennings
December 25, 2025 2:38 am

It seems that the people will soon have to make the choice between food or power. IMO if this NWO madness and false science continues then both will be rationed, along with the water supply, and travel, and expenditure, purchases, and free speech, and very probably freedom itself.
Man is on a slippery slope caused by the avarice of charlatans, useful idiots, and indoctrinated fatalists with far too much time on their hands.

George Thompson
Reply to  Peter Jennings
December 25, 2025 3:50 am

The inmates are in charge of the asylum…and I do not see any real chance of getting rid of them before a real disaster occurs. The sheep will never said up in time.

Bryan A
Reply to  Peter Jennings
December 25, 2025 5:07 am

They’ll start paying exclusively for power then Hunt & Gather their food … from their neighbors stores…

Reply to  Bryan A
December 26, 2025 10:53 am

Until their neighbors’ stores vanish because existing to hand stuff to thieves for free is not a business model.

Denis
Reply to  Peter Jennings
December 25, 2025 6:13 am

And so so many politicians who are technically ignorant. They really do not know, do not want to know, and do not seek to know what they are doing, aided and abetted by entrepreneurs who may know but seek profits from their wind and solar machinery above all else. These people, as a group, define the meaning of the word cabal.

Reply to  Denis
December 26, 2025 10:57 am

Oh I’d say the politicians pushing the climate nonsense are more than *technically* ignorant.

Willfully ignorant, for one.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Peter Jennings
December 26, 2025 9:38 am

It’s very simple. Read The Population Bomb.
Reduce the world population to 500 million and all of these problems go away.

The question is, who decided who lives and dies?
And who gets a free pass?

Bruce Cobb
December 25, 2025 2:45 am

In the late 17th and 18th centuries, we had the Age of Enlightenment. Then in the late 20th and 21st centuries we now have the Age of Stupid.
Progress!

Bryan A
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
December 25, 2025 5:14 am

Nope…Congress!

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Bryan A
December 26, 2025 9:45 am

Do you realize that translating congress from Latin is fornication?

Most online translations omit that translation.

These are more honest:
https://www.latin-english.com/latin/congressio/
https://www.latin-english.com/latin/congressus/

December 25, 2025 4:54 am

From the article: “They don’t mention the costs of constructing, maintaining and operating duplicative backup systems: coal- or gas-fired power plants that must operate full-time at low throttle and go full-bore whenever wind and sunshine are inadequate.”

This is the most ridiculous part of the windmill and solar story: In order for them to operate, you have to have a duplicate generation system made up of coal and natural gas plants that can fill in when the windmills and solar don’t work.

The smart thing to do is throw the windmills and solar in the trash and use coal, natural gas and nuclear to power the grids. It is much cheaper.

The only reason for a setup like this is if the powers-that-be consider the Climate situation to be desperate and doubling up on generating capacity is a small price to pay to save the planet.

The problem with this thinking is there is no Climate Crisis. These Climate Alarmists are fighting a phantom, to the detriment of all of us.

Bryan A
Reply to  Tom Abbott
December 25, 2025 5:13 am

And those we Windmills don’t work 60% of the time while Solar doesn’t work over 66% of the day…at Night and during Peak Demand. Anything near Nameplate is only available from 10am until 2pm with an 8-10am ramp up and a 2-4 drop off.
Windmills only work with wind in the goldilocks zone. Lower than 9mph and wind can’t overcome inertia and the turbine doesn’t spin. Over 55mph and the Turbine automatically breaks to save the bearings.

Jimmie Dollard
Reply to  Tom Abbott
December 25, 2025 10:04 am

Reply to Tom Abbott. I think you have it backwards by starting with an unreliable grid and adding backup. Let’s start with a fully reliable grid and ask what is the value of power from the unreliables. If you look at any utility when there is no sun and no wind you see a utility powered entirely by reliable and dispatchable sources. This is a standalone reliable utility that needs no solar or wind power. If we start to add solar and wind power, it can increase power at that moment, but it does not increase the maximum capacity of the grid that must be capable of meeting the load without wind and solar. As solar and wind come on line we begin to shut down reliable generators, probably simple cycle gas first, then combined cycle gas then coal. So, what is the price we should we pay for the intermittent power. The only utility expense that is reduced as solar or wind is added is the displaced fuel costs. All other expenses are unchanged. You could  claim a reduced wear and tear on the equipment and maybe things like maintenance and insurance, but these are second order effect. 
The utility could also request the cost of running the machines at less than full power which reduces efficiency. Coal system efficiency, especially, falls off as power factor is reduced. The utility sould pay the provider of wind or solar only the amount equal to the cost of the fuel displaced plus or minus the some small, negotiated adjustments.  The supplier of the unreliables should pay all cost of delivering the power at the specifide condition including tranmission and conditioning. If the wind and solar power provider cannot supply power for the adjusted cost of the fuel the utility should not be forced to take it. Of course the wind and solar could not survive if they were only paid what the power is worth, and would’nt that be good. I will ask the reader; do you see any value to the utility other than the fuel displaced plus a few small adjustments?

Reply to  Jimmie Dollard
December 28, 2025 6:08 am

You could claim a reduced wear and tear on the equipment and maybe things like maintenance and insurance, but these are second order effect. 

Actually ramping up and down of output on equipment designed for steady state, continuous operation INCREASES wear and tear, rather than decreases it. And the dispatchable plants, when not operating at full/constant load, are still operating, inefficiently, in “standby” mode, so they can perform frequency modulation and step in or out as wind and solar fluctuate wildly.

So the only *possible* benefit is the reduced fuel costs (which will be significantly LESS than the amount required to generate the amount of worse-than-useless wind and/or solar power “contributed”) less SIGNIFICANT additional costs for ADDITIONAL wear and tear AND reduced efficiency.

And by the time the ADDITIONAL costs of multitudes of additional transmission and distribution lines and ancillary equipment to accommodate the poor quality power wind and solar produce (and to get it from its often far from end user locations to where it is needed) is considered, the “benefit” is most likely NEGATIVE.

What’s more, the increased vulnerability of the power production infrastructure itself, plus the vulnerability increase caused by the *necessary* additional transmission and distribution equipment, means power production interruptions following weather-related damage will take far longer to remedy, which will cause massive economic damage in addition to unnecessary human suffering and deaths.

So all in all, wind and solar are all pain and absolutely nothing gained, unless you’re in on the grift.

December 25, 2025 5:06 am

From the article: “No wonder states and countries obsessed over climate cataclysms, net zero, and wind and solar have outrageous electricity rates. Germany now has the developed world’s highest domestic electricity prices; Britan has its highest industrial rates. Average prices for Europe’s heavy industries are double those in the United States.”

These crazy Europeans are bankrupting their economies over a Climate Crisis that doesn’t exist.

Here is reality: At the last accounting, The United States economy grew at a rate of 4.3 percent, the UK economy grew at 0.1 percent, and the EU economy grew at 0.4 percent.

Industries are flocking to the United States because of the lower electricity rates, and the tax breaks available, and because of Trump’s tariffs.

Some pundits predicted that Trump’s tariffs would send the U.S. economy into a recession. They were wrong. And some pundits predicted that Trump’s tariffs would increase inflation. At the last report, the U.S. inflation rate was down to 2.7 percent. The pundits are wrong again.

Don’t put too much faith in Climate pundits, or Economic pundits.

Denis
December 25, 2025 6:02 am

“The claims leave out important but studiously unmentioned costs – economic, environmental and human.”

One need not cite such obscure costs to correct the record. The most significant unmentioned costs are all technical and require no consideration of things such as the “cost of carbon”s or noise. The real costs are long power lines to get the power to where it is needed (expensive), the cost of DC conversion to AC, the cost of frequency, voltage and phase stabilization which wind and solar have none of (expensive,) the cost of backup power which must be provided to fill in the holes in the erratic and unpredictable production from wind and solar (really expensive) and of course the cost of subsidies . These are among the real costs which really must be paid and when considered, illustrate that wind and solar are the most expensive of all, hands down, no contest.

ResourceGuy
December 25, 2025 8:04 am

By order of the French King, all slaves in the western Chinese ethnic prisons will now work two more hours per day/night.

December 25, 2025 8:48 am

My house has a 3.12 kW (nameplate) solar panel system. During the rain yesterday, it produced 0.6 kWh of electricity. The system was installed 10 years ago. It’s lifetime production has been 15 MWh of electricity.

If this system were to have produced its nameplate production every hour since installation, it would have produced 273.5 MWh of electricity. The actual production has been 5.5% of nameplate over 10 years. This is on California’s Central Coast.

My point is that the nameplate is a deceptive rating for intermittent power production systems. It is based on peak instantaneous production under ideal conditions.

John Hultquist
December 25, 2025 9:24 am

Voters and ratepayers need to …” There are believers!
Washington State voters rejected Initiative 2117 on November 5, 2024, which aimed to repeal the Climate Commitment Act, thereby affirming their support for the state’s climate legislation and its cap-and-invest program. About 60% of voters chose to keep the CCA.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  John Hultquist
December 26, 2025 9:50 am

About 60% of those that voted.
What percentage of voters voted?

Alan
December 25, 2025 9:37 am

Go into a city or even a small town and you’ll find big parking lots. There’s a church near me, has a huge parking lot, used only on Sunday and special occasions. Cowboy stadium in Dallas has a parking lot the size of a small town. Has anyone proposed putting solar panels on parking lots? You wouldn’t have to plow up someone’s farm and it could be shade to park under.

Bruce Cobb
Reply to  Alan
December 25, 2025 11:05 am

No matter what the scheme is, solar power is dumb to begin with. The idea of parking lot solar has been floated before, and found to be impractical. So, it’s both dumb and impractical.

Randle Dewees
Reply to  Alan
December 25, 2025 12:53 pm

There is a practical consideration. It costs a lot of money to build high structures that must be certified to be safe for people to be around and under. It’s not like just slinging a bunch of racks up.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Alan
December 26, 2025 9:51 am

Yes they have and there are places where it has been effectively done, primarily to power the lamps that light the parking lots at night.

Bob
December 25, 2025 8:36 pm

Punish people and organizations for lying and cheating and all of this goes away. Government should be the first held accountable.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Bob
December 26, 2025 9:52 am

The primary goal of any government is (or should be) to protect the people from the government.

sidabma
December 26, 2025 10:36 am

I wish these solar companies instead of building solar farms out in the Mohavie Desert were to instead put all these solar panels on every roof in America and also supply a battery with each installation. America would not lose the electricity in transportation and the national grid would not have to balace it’s load because of this unreliable energy.

1saveenergy
Reply to  sidabma
December 27, 2025 12:44 am

“put all these solar panels on every roof in America and also supply a battery with each installation.”

And then you’ll need to employ lots more firefighters (are they green or red jobs?).