Friday, 22 August 2008
HERALD POLL: Should wind power get priority? Print E-mail
Daily Herald   

A famous oilman is touting windmills as a solution to the energy crisis, and a few Utahns are jumping on board.

T. Boone Pickens says the Pickens Plan will greatly reduce our dependence on foreign oil while providing jobs for rural America. The Utah chapter of his group held its first meeting this month at the state Capitol. Noting that the White House will have a new occupant in January, the Utah group's president was quoted as saying, "Let's get ready to step up to the plate and propose a plan that maybe he's not going to be able to argue with."

But there are solid grounds for arguing against the scheme. The much-hyped potential for windpower is itself largely wind.

Yes, wind power has contributed to our energy mix. It's now up to a whopping ... 1 percent. It is virtually impossible that wind power could deliver 20 percent of our power, as the Pickens Plan claims, at least in the foreseeable future.

Wind turbines operate at about 20 to 30 percent of capacity, compared to 85 percent for coal, gas and nuclear plants. Obviously, when the winds die down, so do windmills. That is why they are destined to be only a part of any energy mix, no matter what.

Many other obstacles remain. For one, wind farms gobble up land. In West Virginia, for example, there's a proposal for building up to 400 windmills. They would march over 50 miles of the state's much-lauded mountain skyline. Meanwhile, a coal-powered plant already existing in that state pumps out 15 times as much energy, but occupies less than a tenth of the land.

In fact, wind power will be an environmental disaster. The turbine blades measure 130 feet long, and weigh 7 tons. Guess who wins in any collision with a bald eagle or other bird?

The windmills rise 400 feet above the ground, and because they must catch the breezes, they often hog the ridges and skylines. Do you think Squaw Peak or Mt. Timpanogos would look better with windmills 400 feet high running along their spines?

Liberals never picture windmills obscuring the view from places like Nob Hill in San Francisco or beaches at Malibu or Nantucket. Their opposition comes out anytime wind turbines are proposed in their own backyards. They just don't care about "flyover" country. A proposed wind farm off of Cape Cod, for instance, brought furious opposition from liberals who suddenly found that their summer haunts might be affected by this technology.

Many who live near the windmills complain bitterly about the sight and sound of them. The "whoosh, whoosh, whoosh" never stops; the blades send flickering shadows across the land.

Worries about health problems are now surfacing. Some observers suggest that low-frequency noise and vibration generated by wind machines can have an effect on the inner ear, triggering headaches; difficulty sleeping; tinnitus, or ringing in the ears; learning and mood disorders; panic attacks; irritability; disruption of equilibrium, concentration and memory; and childhood behavior problems.

And nobody has even mentioned Don Quixote Syndrome.

One expert has calculated that building and installing enough wind turbines to produce as much electricity as a single nuclear plant would require five to 10 times as much steel and concrete as the nuke plant would need -- not to mention a vast amount of land.

There are better alternatives. Nuclear is a proven energy source that doesn't emit greenhouse gases. The $1 trillion sought for wind power could instead pay for major nuclear power plants in each of the 50 states.

Even if we overcame all the problems, a bigger roadblock remains: environmentalists themselves.

Yes, it's true. Wind farms (and solar farms) require transmission lines, and environmentalists and their accomplices in the bureaucracy fight every power line every inch of the way. This month, Duke Energy and American Power announced plans to build 240 miles of transmission lines in Indiana for new power plants. That's not very much -- but it will take at least six years, the utilities estimate, because of regulatory roadblocks and environmental lawsuits.

In California this summer, protesters and pressure groups are trying to kill power lines from solar and geothermal fields. Worries about the greater sage grouse are threatening to block power lines from a wind project in Oregon. Similar conflicts are hampering wind and solar projects in other states.

As the Wall Street Journal noted, this is a classic bait-and-switch tactic. Liberals and environmental fanatics have demonized oil, coal and nuclear power while extolling the supposed benefits of solar and wind power. But when those projects suddenly become reality, the same lobbyists begins shrieking all over again.

Sure, wind power might have a role to play -- a minor one. The real answer is first of all to tap our vast resources of oil, coal, oil shale and natural gas, plus build more nuclear power plants. Then unleash our dynamic economy and spur industry to develop new sources of energy.

The Pickens plans is hot air at best. At worst it's a dangerous drain on our national resources and attention.

Should the U.S. back the Pickens Plan to use more wind power? Send your comments to This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it or call 344-2942. Please leave your name, hometown and phone number with your comments. E-mail comments should not exceed 100 words; voicemail comments should be no longer than 30 seconds. Anonymous and unverifiable responses will not be published. You can also comment online at our home page at heraldextra.com. The Daily Herald will publish results on Aug. 31.
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Discuss (10 posts)

Sir John the Apostate
Aug 23 2008 16:08:37
Lovie wrote:
truthhurts wrote:
Perhaps before the DH wrote this editorial (and to say that it qualifies as writing is being kind...attempted hatchet job is a better description) perhaps they should have hopped on the old Vespa and motored on up to the mouth of Spanish Fork Canyon. By golly there is a wind farm there! Is it an eyesore? Not in my mind. Looks great to me. Eagle and hawk carcasses all over the ground? None that I can see.

Does it run all the time? No, but if we had enough of them throughout the country that would be moot, because while the wind does not blow all the time in one particular place, it is blowing at any given time in lots and lots of places. And you don't need the big windmills either. They also have the smaller versions that can be put on the roofs of homes or buildings and backfeed into the existing power grid. And the Pickens plan is not only about making power from wind either. It is about freeing up more natural gas, a lot of which is currently being used to make electricity, for use in vehicles, thus lessening the need for foreign oil.

Will wind ever be the whole answer? No. But combined with solar, hydroelectric, and yes, nuclear, we can get away from using fossil fuels to make power.

We have no choice.


ditto truthhurts, the only eye I see is the Smog over the valley. I think Electric cars should be next!!!!


I agree I would rather see windmills. Than, the permanent haze from smog we have now.
#388962
Marylb Aug 23 2008 18:22:16
The writer made some valid as well as invalid points. Many of the statements, even when correct, come from an emotion jerk for readers who may be unfamiliar with the windmills. There is no question that they are not pretty and they are big and they serve a purpose, not the full answer but to pretend that California and any state who has been using this for as long as I can remember hasn't found a solution is bogus. Of course no one wants a windmill blocking their view, and they don't. In some cases you must actually drive along certain highways to even find them in a rolling hill rural area near Livermore, the hub of advanced thinking.

I don't think anyone should expect people to be scared out of logic. That just won't work. I personally prefer the top focus be on Solar Power but there is room for priority in all alternative sources.

#1 thing we can do in the short run: Stop allowing oil companies to contractually dictate ALL the pumps in all the stations. Require 1(one) pump be alternative fuel for access to this fast growing market where access is a problem.

Let's get serious for a change.
#388983
schreinervideo Aug 25 2008 15:01:46
Even the oil companies are investing billions in renewable energy like wind, solar and geothermal. Utah has an abundance of all these resources. But entrenched special interests and lobbyists have our legislators in their pockets preventing any significant development of them. The Herald should spend less time defending these wealthy special interests, and attacking those they disagree with despite the evidence, and more time helping to improve our air, make America energy independent again, create new jobs and businesses, and maintain the great quality of life we have in Utah.
#389171
unaffiliated_person Aug 25 2008 16:02:35
schreinervideo wrote:
Even the oil companies are investing billions in renewable energy like wind, solar and geothermal. Utah has an abundance of all these resources. But entrenched special interests and lobbyists have our legislators in their pockets preventing any significant development of them. The Herald should spend less time defending these wealthy special interests, and attacking those they disagree with despite the evidence, and more time helping to improve our air, make America energy independent again, create new jobs and businesses, and maintain the great quality of life we have in Utah.

The oil companies investing in alternative fuels are foreign oil companies. Exxon already said it has no interest in doing so currently. However, BP and Shell are investing a lot of cash into it. If this keeps up, expect our future energy sources to be foreign-owned as well.
#389178
petersenrj Aug 26 2008 15:31:22
I do not understand how wind power takes up land? Surely the farmer doesn't lose much growing area. As for appearance I love them, but most will be out of view especially in the great plains where Pickens wants to put them. Of course I agree with others who say we need everything: drill now, drill here, wind, natural gas (we have plenty of it and it is much cleaner than gasoline). The first commercial utility grade photovoltaic solar system is under construction in California 250 megawatts. Solar will be very competitive with even coal in 7 years. My hope is the sea algae oil producing farms will start coming in soon. Hopefully 5,000-20,000 gallons an acre per year and oil producing bacteria producing could be good too.
#389416
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