contessa26
Well-Known Member
No.
Just a money generator for investors. Unit price way, way too high, yet investors make pocket-fulls of dosh.
Like the next person, I’m all for saving the planet. And like a layman on the subject, we drive past a windfarm, seeing turbines rotating, and say – “Hey, look there, that must be free energy! It’s the wind!”
But have a well meaning public, and the government, been duped by the commercial wind industry? I don’t know! (Except that I know I’m always being duped!)
And are we actually saving the environment by inappropriately placing windfarms in areas of natural rural beauty?
Are windfarms are a waste of taxpayer’s money (basically in the massive subsidises, of various forms), that just make a few people rich, to little other benefit? (Some independent landowners can get up to £10K per turbine, per year). Some say, if only all these costly government grants could be diverted to finding more efficient power sources; reductions in black carbon; and ways of saving energy.
Obviously, they produce no power when there is no wind. Thus base load of conventional power stations have to be kept on line. On shore, they need very deep concrete bases; but ironically concrete is very ‘power-hungry’ to make. The concrete bases and access roads to build them will remain a lasting legacy for centuries, long after the turbine's 25 yr life span, and removal – if they even last that long, what with main bearing replacements, maintenance and spiralling future insurance costs. As someone pointed out, windfarms are not very efficient. If you think they're good, surely they shouldn’t be positioned in rural areas, but close to cities in urban areas where transmission line problems are much minimised and the area already industrialised. But I don’t know.
Happy sailing.