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Wind Farms: Beauty or the Beast

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I took this photo of the wind turbines in Palm Springs, CA

I’ve heard the two windiest spots on our planet are the Coachella Valley of California and South Africa. The wind in California has prompted the installation of thousands of windmills in the Coachella Valley, which generate electricity for nearby Palm Springs and areas spreading toward the Los Angeles basin.

Standing majestically, like some invasive alien lifeform or uniform militia, the windmills have now become the major landmark of the Palm Springs region. Assembled in the desert like something out of a Pink Floyd movie, with towers as high as 150 feet and turbines as wide as the wings of a 747, the windmills are striking.

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The American Wind Energy Association calculates there is enough available land in the Midwest or in just 100 square miles of Nevada’s windiest regions, to house enough wind farms to supply the energy needed to power the United States. The U.S. has been slow to move into wind power, although it is now picking up significantly. In the early years of development, windmills were simply too expensive to produce, install, and maintain. However, over the last ten years, the expense of windmill power has dropped over 80%. Following in the footsteps of progressive countries, such as Denmark, where over 10% of energy is windmill generated, the U.S. has finally been increasing wind energy production.

There are three main arguments against wind farms:
-the environmental impact of the windmills
-energy used to produce and store energy
-the usual NIMBY (Not In My Back Yard) syndrome.

As far as the environmental impact goes, massive turbines can disrupt local ecosystems and wildlife. For example, flight patterns of migratory birds have been altered and birds have died due to collisions. A solution to this is that wind farmers and scientists are working together to avoid placing windmills along flight and migration paths, while also working to avoid endangered plant and animal territory.

The production of the windmills is not without the depletion of non-renewable resources. The storage of the energy harnessed requires battery use, which means toxic waste. The windmills can be massive, which requires large transportation services as well as the use of raw materials to build them.

As for NIMBY, the windmills can cause a fair amount of noise pollution. Besides noise, some people consider windmill farms eyesores. Some people think these problems can be avoided through decentralization of power generation. By going ‘off the grid’ and building homes in windy areas, people can have their own windmills right in their back yard. (RITBY?) Excess energy can be sold to local utilities, which makes the turbines a good long-term investment.

In this time of climate crisis, utility companies need to be willing to participate in a metering program in order for this to happen and right now, the U.S. still has a far way to go before this works as well as it could. Energy utilities generally only pay 35-40% of the retail rate (due to government energy subsidies.) This could be interpreted as a way to dissuade individuals from pursuing this type of self-sufficiency. Wind certainly seems to be a better option, in comparison to coal, oil or nuclear energy.

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Comments
  1. Deb said:

    I was at a concert last November where there was an anti-nuclear activist who gave a quick talk about energy. One of the things he said was that the technology exists to put wind farms a mile off the eastern seaboard, and that it would supply enough energy for the entire east coast. He said it takes care of a majority of the NIMBY and bird issues. I never did look into things to verify any of it, but it sounded interesting to me.

    I’ve also wondered why all parking garages aren’t roofed with solar panels. I seem to recall the Navy did that with a parking garage in San Diego. Seems like it would be a great solution for spaces that are already, essentially, dead zones in terms of environment and being eye-sores.

    Any thoughts on either or both of these?

  2. Starre said:

    From what I understand about alternative energy, it is all about what works in your site. So in some cases wind is the best way to go, some cases solar, some geothermal and some microhydro (or a combination of two or more). What’s important is finding places where each is most useful (solar for Cali or Arizona, geothermal or hydro in Vermont, etc.) Alternative energy is not a one-size-fits-all proposition.

    And as an aside, I’ve always found wind farms to be very pretty- while the natural landscape is the most lovely, I think that a field of windmills, even if they do make some kind of sound, is infinitely preferable to a belching coal plant (which pollutes the air locally as well as contributes to global warming).

  3. Our Green Nest said:

    I also think they’re really beautiful….we have tons here in Texas and I think it’s a pretty site…that’s how we get our energy - wind power - it’s such a better alternative to coal and other sources. But like you say Starre, it really is what works best for different areas - wind farms wouldn’t work in many areas like they do in Texas…so it’s just choosing the best option for that particular area.

  4. Kalesy said:

    From what I’ve read, there is work being done in looking at storing wind energy in forms other than traditional battery. A company here in MA, General Compression, is building prototypes of “batteries” that store the compressed air and release it as needed. So you get energy as a constant, not just when the wind is blowing.

    I’m happy to say that our governor, Deval Patrick, is a proponent of legislation that allows the zoning for off-shore wind farms, which can definitely circumvent a lot of the NIMBY and bird-related issues.

  5. Amber said:

    I remember my first sighting of those particular wind turbines almost 9 years ago when I moved to 29 Palms, about an hour from those windmills. I had never seen so many of them together. Just a few wind turbines here and there on the road trip from Texas to Southern California.

    There is sooooo much space around that area that there should be more windmills. Hopefully more will be installed.

  6. Kathryn said:

    Dear Deb-

    The wind speeds off the east coast are good in some areas- areas where real estate is also good. The contradiction is a enough to throw a serious wrench into any plan to put wind power in water.

    See the NIMBY folks who have opposed the cape wind project for 8 years.

    I’m glad the author of this article said that wind power “can” be noisy. because it is not necessary noisy. I have only seen two wind turbine installations and they were both very very very quiet. I need to go searching for a noisy one to believe that they can be noisy.

  7. Kathryn said:

    * necessarily

  8. WeEarth said:

    It’s a breathtaking view to see so many of them lined up like that. Was watching Dirty Jobs when they cleaned one. Really cool.

  9. April said:

    I for one think they are beautiful, especially considering the pros for the environment. And I’m hard pressed to believe the cons outweight the good when it comes to greener energy production.

    I’m in Canada and windpower is slowly making an appearance. Geothermal is big in some areas but I’ll have to read more on some of the other alternatives.

    Thanks for the info and great blog!

    April

  10. sophie said:

    Been looking at your views on windfarms! I live in Wales in the U.K.
    My husband and I have a strange plan to one day make an eco house -well actually an eco-windmill !!
    Just wondered if anyone knew if it has done before??
    We have some old one’s in Norfolk in England that are being restored but that’s just to provide electricity.
    Any thoughts?? let me know!
    Thanks
    Sophie

  11. Emily @ Brighterplanet said:

    I also think wind turbines are beautiful and I recently drove through a huge wind farm in upstate New York - the sun was shining and it was snowing, the whole experience was magical!

    That being said, I’m a Vermonter and spent my senior year in college trying to get to the bottom of NIMBYism and understand the anti-wind power sentiments of my fellow Vermonters. I went to Sheffield,VT where there is a huge debate over the proposal for 16 1-megawatt turbines to go up and I got to interview some of the most vocal leaders of the anti-wind groups. Birds and noise were on their list of arguments, but the most convincing one for me was clear-cutting. For each turbine, the company would have to totally clear-cut 1 acre of beautiful VT forest!

    Echoing what Starre said, I truly think that wind power is not always the appropriate renewable energy source for a given region. In the case of Northeastern VT, they’d argue that a biomass burner fueled by waste wood is the way to go. And despite loving wind power, I’d have to agree.

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