Windfarm

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The BATTLE campaign group was formed following a proposal by npower Renewables to site a collection of 400 foot wind turbines between the rural villages of Bradwell on Sea and Tillingham in Essex.

The original proposals were for twenty six turbines, but, following a huge response from BATTLE members, four of the original five land owners considered the opinions of their neighbours and withdrew from the development.

The plans were amended to increase the number of turbines on the remaining land to ten, more than double the original proposal of four on that land.

The planning application for this amended proposal was rejected by Maldon Planning Office on 7 July 2006.

Blade Flicker

Blade flicker is a known problem with wind turbines.

The turbine close to Whitemoor Prison, March, Cambridgeshire is frequently turned off to avoid disturbing prisoners.



Noise

Wind turbines are known to produce noise in two ways. The first is mechanical noise created by the turning bearings and gearbox. The second and much more important noise factor is aerodynamic noise created by the blades passing through the air, and the pressure wave as they travel past the mast.

It is this second form of noise that is believed to cause many problems for nearby housing, especially when turbines are erected in groups as these sound pulses come into phase with those of the other turbines. This phenomenon is most noticable 500meters and more from the site.

There is currently ongoing research into this field by Nina Pierpont, MD, PhD at the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York. Of particular interest is the case of Daniel and Carolyn d'Entremont of Nova Scotia, Canada. Sited 1000foot from turbines of similar size to those proposed at Bradwell, the family have reported exhibiting serious chronic illness caused by the low frequency sound generated by the neighbouring wind farm. Pierpont.

Dr. Pierpont has also provided a Testimony before the New York State Legislature Energy Committee in which she concludes with a recommendation of a setback of 1.5 miles 8000ft between industrial wind turbines and people's homes, schools, hospitals or similar institutions.

 

Turbine Figures Blown Off Course
Source: The Journal - Newcastle-upon-Tyne Publication date: 2005-12-27

By Robert Brooks

Wind farms planned for the North may not be as "green" as developers claim, after an advertising watchdog ruled that crucial pollution figures were exaggerated.

The Advertising Standards Authority upheld a complaint against Hertfordshire-based Renewable Energy Systems over the company's published estimates of how far its turbines would reduce carbon dioxide emissions.

They based their figures on the typical emissions from a coal- burning powerplant, but after taking expert advice, the authority determined that it "was not reasonable" to use present figures for calculating the reduction in emissions over a period of as long as 25 years. And it has now asked RES not to publish the results of similar calculations in the future.

The ruling has wide-reaching implications for all similar developers across the UK because RES's figures are the same as those used by the wind industry and recommended by the British Wind Energy Association (BWEA).

In the North-East, they include npower renewables, which is currently engaged in consultation over a proposed 18-turbine wind farm at Middlemoor, near Alnwick in Northumberland.

Protester Dominic Coupe, whose family farms near Middlemoor, said: "The review affects the rash of North wind turbine schemes, and for the first time gives clear guidance on how CO2 savings from wind power must be estimated. This more sensible estimate puts the staggering cost of wind farms into perspective. Wind turbines are hugely costly relative to the alternatives, and they offer no significant reliable capacity.

"Now they have been shown not to save anything like the CO2 claimed."

Nina Thorpe, who owns holiday chalets near North Charlton, added: "Wind energy has again been shown up for what it is ( an expensive way of saving a derisory amount of CO2. It is, frankly, a disgrace, that the wind turbine farce continues in the name of saving the planet.

"The Government should intervene immediately and stop these projects ( they are a waste of our resources."

Dr John Constable, policy and research director of the Renewable Energy Foundation, said: "It's good to see that the ASA has revisited this issue and brought its ruling into line with commonsense engineering principles.

"The wind industry as a whole must now revise claims which have seriously distorted debate about the value of onshore windpower."

Npower declined to comment but has previously stated that the amount of carbon dioxide emissions which would be saved by the Middlemoor wind farm would be around 110,000 tonnes.

Original Source http://www.industrywatch.com


BETWEEN THE LINES

George Kerevan

Danes have much to teach on green power - like how not to do it

DENMARK is often held up as a model of what Scotland could be: rich, environmentally friendly and impeccably politically correct in its international commitments.

This is a comforting myth that has just been kicked into touch by the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) report on how EU countries are measuring up to their Kyoto targets for cutting greenhouse gas emissions.

Denmark generates about 20 per cent of its electricity using wind turbines. The country is aiming for 50 per cent by 2025. Just what Scotland should be emulating rather than building a new generation of nuclear power plants, goes the conventional wisdom. And Danish wind turbine technology now dominates the world market. The two top Danish turbine manufacturers, Vestas and Siemens Wind Power, grabbed 40 per cent of the global market in 2004.

Just one tiny problem: as the IPPR report reveals, Denmark is set to miss its Kyoto target for cutting emissions by a mile. Originally Denmark agreed to cut its greenhouse gases by 21 per cent by 2012 (using 1990 as the base year). However, according to the Danish government's statement to the European Commission in June, the country is actually set to increase its gas emissions over 1990 by 4 per cent. Which means nuclear-free Denmark will be 25 percentage points behind its stated Kyoto goal, despite all those windmills.

I'm really a fan of Denmark and (especially) cool Danish design. But I do think Denmark is a valuable lesson in confusing energy economics and wishful thinking, a disease we suffer from in spades in Scotland.

The Danish economy used to run on coal and oil. In the 1980s and 1990s the Danes switched to natural gas (like the UK) and a lot of wind power (unlike us).

Wind power has a defect: it only generates when there is a breeze, so it's no good for supplying peak electricity just when you need it.

The Danes get around this problem by importing lots of electricity from Sweden and Germany, thereby passing the pollution problem to someone else, as well as quietly making use of Sweden's atomic stations. If the Danes didn't import electricity, they'd have to have more gas plants and so make even more emissions.

As a result, the Danes have pretty well used up their ability to squeeze more cuts in emissions from their electricity generating sector, so their Kyoto target was a nonsense from day one. Except the Danes could not lose face by saying so. The big jump in Danish greenhouse gases has come from the transport sector. Short of getting everyone onto bikes, abandoning holidays in Thailand, or scrapping the entire Danish export trade, the Danes have a difficulty with making any strategic cut in emissions.

Unless, of course, they follow the Americans down the line of throwing a lot of money at new, emissions-lite transport technology. But we Europeans are not supposed to talk about such things because emissions targets are the Holy Grail.

Back here in Scotland, the Executive has set a target of generating 18 per cent of our electricity from renewables by 2010 and 40 per cent by 2020. The upper figure is a nonsense, especially if the Executive is set against replacing Scotland's two nuclear stations, though I suspect Jack McConnell will get round this by discretely ensuring that Torness stays in commission for another 20 years. Besides, that amount of wind power could see us importing peak capacity from English nuclear stations, Danish-fashion. I don't mind the hypocrisy if you don't.

What will this obsession with renewables do to energy costs in Scotland? Calculating electricity costs is more voodoo than economics. However, if oil prices stay above $40 a barrel over the next decade, Shell is convinced renewables will be able to close the gap with fossil fuels. Who am I to argue with Shell? But we will still take a hit. There are many imponderables: for instance, there is now a worldwide shortage of silicon because of a surge in demand for solar panels. I'll feel happier when we get away from politicians grandstanding on energy issues and move to a position where there are robust business models behind investment in renewable energy. Where renewables score is that, once in place, they have predictable long-run costs (being outside the volatile fossil fuel market). That should allow renewables to be built into dedicated housing projects. And expect to see lots of turbines on redundant North Sea oil platforms, which is a no-brainer.

As Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, said: "When the wind is southerly I know a hawk from a handsaw."

Original source http://business.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=2465442005

 

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