The Briefing Room

General Category => Science, Technology and Knowledge => Topic started by: SirLinksALot on September 02, 2016, 01:57:35 pm

Title: Windmills: Despoiling the Environment to Save the Climate
Post by: SirLinksALot on September 02, 2016, 01:57:35 pm
SOURCE: NATIONAL REVIEW

http://www.nationalreview.com/article/439629/climate-change-environment-bill-mckibben-renewable-energy-bird-conservation-wind-turbines (http://www.nationalreview.com/article/439629/climate-change-environment-bill-mckibben-renewable-energy-bird-conservation-wind-turbines)

by: Robert Bryce



Bill McKibben loves the climate. Unfortunately, he hates the environment.

For proof of that, consider McKibben’s recent cover story in The New Republic, where he asserts that the U.S. must mobilize to fight climate change with the same fervor the Allies used to defeat Hitler during World War II. After citing a few examples of recent weather events, which, in his view, prove that global warming is happening now, McKibben writes, “If Nazis were the ones threatening destruction on such a global scale today, America and its allies would already be mobilizing for a full-scale war.”

While Nazi analogies can be fun, the climate cure that McKibben, the founder of 350.org, and his friends are pushing would result in the despoliation of vast swaths of the American landscape. Indeed, it would require  that an area the size of Texas and Louisiana combined be covered with hundreds of thousands of wind turbines.

The strategist behind McKibben’s climate crusade is Stanford professor Mark Jacobson, who has published papers arguing that the U.S. doesn’t need oil, coal, natural gas, or nuclear energy. According to Jacobson, the U.S. can rely solely on energy derived from wind, water, and the sun.

Jacobson has an entire claque of admirers. During his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination, Senator Bernie Sanders, (I., Vt.) adopted Jacobson’s all-renewable scheme whole cloth and made it his energy plan. That move immediately won praise from the leaders of both the Sierra Club and Greenpeace USA. In addition, the recent Democratic-party platform claims that the U.S. should be running entirely on “clean” energy by 2050.  Jacobson’s all-renewable dystopia is also being promoted by actors Leonardo DiCaprio and Mark Ruffalo as well as by anti-fracking activist Josh Fox. In addition, Jacobson has formed a group call the Solutions Project, which is avidly promoting his 100 percent–renewables plan.

In his essay, McKibben adheres to the liberal-left orthodoxy by completely ignoring nuclear energy’s pivotal role in cutting greenhouse-gas emissions. Instead, he praises Jacobson’s work, claiming that it “demonstrates conclusively” that the U.S. could be running solely on renewables by 2050. Achieving that, says McKibben, would need about 6,448 gigawatts of renewable generation capacity.

As usual, the devil is in the details. Jacobson’s 50-state scenario, which is available on a Stanford University website, needs about 2,500 gigawatts of wind-energy capacity and another 3,200 gigawatts or so of solar capacity. Those are staggering quantities, particularly when you consider that current U.S. generation capacity — from nuclear to geothermal —  totals about 1,000 gigawatts.


Jacobson and McKibben downplay their scheme’s impact on land use. Without providing any sources, McKibben asserts that the all-renewable plan would cover only “four-tenths of one percent of America’s landmass.” That claim is patently false. Studies published by the U.S. Department of Energy and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, as well as published data on more than 50 onshore wind projects, show that the capacity density — that is, the project footprint — of an average wind-energy facility is three watts per square meter. 

The math, then, is simple: 2,500 gigawatts is 2.5 trillion watts. At three watts per square meter, that much wind capacity would cover roughly 833 billion square meters of territory, which is 833,000 square kilometers, or more than 321,000 square miles.


In his blitzkrieg against climate change, McKibben wants to cover entire regions, including his home state of Vermont, with wind turbines. That’s newsworthy because, as McKibben surely knows, the Green Mountain State has become the epicenter of the backlash against Big Wind.

McKibben, who lives in Ripton and teaches at Middlebury College, doesn’t want his fellow Vermonters to have veto power over wind projects being proposed for their neighborhoods. Local control over wind-project siting was probably the most important issue in the recent gubernatorial primary. Four of the five candidates — both of the Republicans, and two of the three Democrats — favored restricting or prohibiting new wind projects in the state. Just before the August 9 primary, McKibben switched his endorsement from Matt Dunne to Sue Minter  — both are Democrats — after Dunne announced that he favored local control over wind projects. Minter doesn’t. (Minter won the Democratic nomination and will face Republican Phil Scott in November. On August 22, in their first head-to-head debate, wind energy was, again, one of the most prominent issues.)

McKibben didn’t respond to my e-mailed questions. But by endorsing Jacobson’s scheme, he is advocating a 20-fold increase in wind capacity in Vermont, from 119 megawatts to 2.5 gigawatts. Other locales, too, would be covered with forests of turbines. The all-renewable scenario requires — get this — nearly 1,200 megawatts of wind-energy capacity to be constructed in Washington, D.C. Perhaps Jacobson and McKibben are planning to surround Capitol Hill with turbines. Or perhaps they are eyeing Georgetown?

The duo’s climate plan includes a 150-fold increase in onshore wind in Massachusetts, from today’s 105 megawatts to 16 gigawatts. Where will those thousands of turbines be erected? Harvard Yard? The shores of Walden Pond? If that weren’t silly enough, the McKibben-Jacobson climate cure relies on 30 gigawatts of wind offshore Massachusetts. That’s remarkable given the backlash that greeted the 468-megawatt Cape Wind project. That proposal was killed after meeting fierce local resistance, including opposition from climate-change activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who didn’t want a wind project near his family’s Hyannisport hacienda. Despite this history, McKibben and Jacobson want to install the equivalent of 64 Cape Winds offshore Massachusetts! They also want the equivalent of 70 Cape Winds offshore California — Malibu residents are certain to welcome them — and another 120 Cape Winds offshore New York.

What about wildlife? Biologists have repeatedly documented the deadly impact that wind turbines have on birds of all kinds, including bald and golden eagles. They are also killing bats.

In January, a paper published in Mammal Review found that wind turbines are now the largest cause of mass bat mortality. The lead authors of the paper were two scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey: Thomas J. O’Shea and Paul M. Cryan. Last month, a report by Bird Studies Canada, a bird-conservation organization, found that wind turbines in Ontario killed an estimated 42,656 bats over a six-month period in 2015. The carnage included several species of rare or endangered bats, such as the little brown bat and northern long-eared bat. Ecologists have long recognized the critical role that bats play as pollinators and insectivores. Economists have estimated that, in Texas alone, bats save the state more than $1 billion per year in avoided costs for pesticides.

Despite these facts, McKibben wants to erect hundreds of thousands of new wind turbines on the Great Plains, on our coasts, and offshore. The result would be even deadlier impacts on birds and bats.

In short, McKibben and his fellow travelers are anti-environment environmentalists. McKibben claims we need an all-renewable war on climate change. Such a scheme would, instead, result in a war on people, landscapes, seascapes, and wildlife.

— Robert Bryce is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute. His fifth book, Smaller Faster Lighter Denser Cheaper: How Innovation Keeps Proving the Catastrophists Wrong, was recently issued in paperback.
Title: Re: Windmills: Despoiling the Environment to Save the Climate
Post by: bolobaby on September 02, 2016, 02:05:20 pm
Liberal logic...

This despoils a beautiful environment and must be stopped at all costs!

(http://whyanwr.weebly.com/uploads/3/2/1/7/3217066/9626327.jpg?450)

THIS is beautiful and must be spread everywhere in the country!

(https://skparrott.files.wordpress.com/2011/05/windmills.jpg)
Title: Re: Windmills: Despoiling the Environment to Save the Climate
Post by: Cripplecreek on September 02, 2016, 02:11:43 pm
Liberal logic...

This despoils a beautiful environment and must be stopped at all costs!

(http://whyanwr.weebly.com/uploads/3/2/1/7/3217066/9626327.jpg?450)


Liberals never mention the fact tat most of that infrastructure will be gon whether oil is found or not.

Around here when oil or gas is extracted there are only a few pipes rising a few feet out of the ground for access to valves.
Title: Re: Windmills: Despoiling the Environment to Save the Climate
Post by: Smokin Joe on September 02, 2016, 02:57:13 pm
The issue no one addresses is that some 6,448 gigawatts of generated electrical power remove multiples of that amount of energy from prevailing winds, which are part of the atmospheric mixing mechanism that yields climate. I have no idea what percentage of the total energy of atmosphere circulation systems that is, even in just North America, much less the entire globe, so that begs the question of how many wind turbines does it take to actually change those circulation patterns and ....change the climate?

These people aren't talking some butterfly effect, but sapping energy from the atmosphere itself, (not to mention the slaughter of flying critters that use these air corridors for migration).
Title: Re: Windmills: Despoiling the Environment to Save the Climate
Post by: Cripplecreek on September 02, 2016, 03:01:12 pm
The issue no one addresses is that some 6,448 gigawatts of generated electrical power remove multiples of that amount of energy from prevailing winds, which are part of the atmospheric mixing mechanism that yields climate. I have no idea what percentage of the total energy of atmosphere circulation systems that is, even in just North America, much less the entire globe, so that begs the question of how many wind turbines does it take to actually change those circulation patterns and ....change the climate?

These people aren't talking some butterfly effect, but sapping energy from the atmosphere itself, (not to mention the slaughter of flying critters that use these air corridors for migration).

I've wondered about whether a large wind farm or multiple large wind farms could cause things like rain shadows.
Title: Re: Windmills: Despoiling the Environment to Save the Climate
Post by: Crazieman on September 02, 2016, 03:08:04 pm
I've wondered about whether a large wind farm or multiple large wind farms could cause things like rain shadows.

Don't know about actual weather effects, but wind farms are a huge disruptor of weather radar technology.  They cause long range, persistent, and high return artifacts that interfere with data, forecasting, and most importantly, tornado warnings.
Title: Re: Windmills: Despoiling the Environment to Save the Climate
Post by: Smokin Joe on September 02, 2016, 03:12:51 pm
Liberals never mention the fact tat most of that infrastructure will be gon whether oil is found or not.

Around here when oil or gas is extracted there are only a few pipes rising a few feet out of the ground for access to valves.
(http://www.alternet.org/files/industrial.jpg)

A view down one of the well pad corridors in the Williston Basin Bakken play.
Now the writer of that article (where the picture is)  http://www.alternet.org/fracking/10-photos-oilfields-north-dakotas-bakken-shale (http://www.alternet.org/fracking/10-photos-oilfields-north-dakotas-bakken-shale) is no fan of oil boom impacts, and yep for a while, they are messy. Things settle down after a while.
Note, these pads will have up to eight wells drilled from them (hence the large number of tanks), and are along the road. The next line of pads will be 2-4 miles distant. They can be seen on google earth.  As the wells age (deplete) pumping units will go in, and eventually, the whole location will be reclaimed after the wells deplete and are plugged and abandoned. Still, the surface impact is a fraction of what it might have been in the days of drilling each well from a separate location, and the 9500 ft. reach of the laterals separates those pads by a couple of miles, in the direction of the lateral.
Title: Re: Windmills: Despoiling the Environment to Save the Climate
Post by: GtHawk on September 03, 2016, 05:59:03 pm
The issue no one addresses is that some 6,448 gigawatts of generated electrical power remove multiples of that amount of energy from prevailing winds, which are part of the atmospheric mixing mechanism that yields climate. I have no idea what percentage of the total energy of atmosphere circulation systems that is, even in just North America, much less the entire globe, so that begs the question of how many wind turbines does it take to actually change those circulation patterns and ....change the climate?

These people aren't talking some butterfly effect, but sapping energy from the atmosphere itself, (not to mention the slaughter of flying critters that use these air corridors for migration).
Fear not, some brilliant gaia worshiper will come up with a plan to install huge fans leeward from the windmills to boost the wind back up to its windward level :silly: with the added benefit of being able to to decimate twice as many avians ***suicide***
Title: Re: Windmills: Despoiling the Environment to Save the Climate
Post by: truth_seeker on September 03, 2016, 06:35:46 pm

I seem to recall several leading conservatives voice the position on energy of "all the above."

Some technologies NOT in the news lately include deep water thermal ocean gradients,  tidal forces, and satellite focused solar beams.


 
Title: Re: Windmills: Despoiling the Environment to Save the Climate
Post by: Smokin Joe on September 03, 2016, 08:25:15 pm
I seem to recall several leading conservatives voice the position on energy of "all the above."

Some technologies NOT in the news lately include deep water thermal ocean gradients,  tidal forces, and satellite focused solar beams.
Why have chopped fish when you can chop eagles and condors? It isn't Friday...
Title: Re: Windmills: Despoiling the Environment to Save the Climate
Post by: IsailedawayfromFR on September 04, 2016, 02:59:41 pm
Liberal logic...

This despoils a beautiful environment and must be stopped at all costs!

(http://whyanwr.weebly.com/uploads/3/2/1/7/3217066/9626327.jpg?450)

THIS is beautiful and must be spread everywhere in the country!

(https://skparrott.files.wordpress.com/2011/05/windmills.jpg)

The breathtakingly stark truth is that the amount of energy in that single well is likely to be the same as the hundreds of windmills spread over many square miles.
Title: Re: Windmills: Despoiling the Environment to Save the Climate
Post by: SZonian on September 08, 2016, 09:33:55 pm
(http://eastcountymagazine.org/sites/eastcountymagazine.org/files/second%20dead%20red%20kite.jpg)
Title: Re: Windmills: Despoiling the Environment to Save the Climate
Post by: Wingnut on September 08, 2016, 09:37:47 pm
Depressing Eyesores.   They should be banned.     
Title: Re: Windmills: Despoiling the Environment to Save the Climate
Post by: Smokin Joe on September 09, 2016, 12:07:25 am
(http://eastcountymagazine.org/sites/eastcountymagazine.org/files/second%20dead%20red%20kite.jpg)
Gives me an idea for the National Waterfowl Stamp competition...