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    Blow, Winds!

    What Would Billioniare T. Boone Pickens Do?


    Friday, August 22, 2008
    By Barbara Hirsch (Contact)
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    Wind power has been around for centuries, sailing ships and milling grain. For the last hundred years, it's been producing electricity, but oil and coal prevailed in the field of energy production. Now that fossil fuels are less plentiful and less desirable, wind is in the picture again, one of the great hopes for supplying our future energy needs. Billionaire T. Boone Pickens, who made his money from oil, is now supporting wind technology to help wean us off the black stuff. It's abundant, clean, and won't run out.

    Click to enlarge photo

    One large turbine - they can be 200 to 300 feet in diameter tip to tip and just as tall - can supply enough electricity to fuel 300 average (read: energy hogging) American homes. Employing simple math, one could calculate that twice as many would be served if the households used half as much electricity, for we can assume that greater efficiency and conservation (the cleanest of all) will also be playing huge roles in our future energy scene.

    As with every large-scale human endeavor, there is the less than clean and pure side of the industry. In the run toward profits, wind companies may have influenced local officials in upstate New York to allow wind farms to the distress of the wind towers' neighbors. The state's attorney general, Andrew Cuomo, is looking into what may be the industry's foray into politics and greed.

    This large-scale human endeavor has an emotional issue as well, for some consider the wind turbines unsightly, and the giant windmills can be dangerous to birds, especially if placed in migratory paths. (Let's hear it for environmental reviews!) However studies have indicated that other human enterprises, e.g. vehicles and agriculture, kill far more birds than do wind turbines.

    Worldwide, turbines are turning, and the wind power business is soaring.

    Related Links

    • pickensplan.com
    • Lompoc Wind Farm Could Break Ground this Spring
    • New York Times article, "In Rural New York, Windmills Can Bring Whiff of Corruption"
    • More Ecofacts columns

    Comments

    Discussion Guidelines

    Has anyone looked into wind power for our canyons where the sundowners race through?

    Moonrunner (anonymous profile)
    August 22, 2008 at 2:32 p.m. (Suggest removal)

    Great! So we'd need, what, 200 turbines to power homes in SB (city), maybe 300 for our 'metro' area? Requires land measured in square miles, not acres, where there are fairly steady winds. Top of the mountains, maybe? Sundowners would make lots of power, for a few hours on certain days - what about the rest of the time? But remember what a single citizen can do here - block any project indefinitely. There's a guy in one of the Dakotas that has stopped a huge windfarm project because it will spoil his view. And that's in the Dakotas. Imagine here.....

    My Mantra: Clean coal, well designed and regulated nuclear, increased drilling, solar someday when solar cell and battery efficiency make sense, wind in the very few geographies where it can work.

    Final question: what percentage of already built power-generating wind turbines are actually working?

    RCMeltzer (anonymous profile)
    August 22, 2008 at 4:14 p.m. (Suggest removal)

    Well reasoned argument, RCMeltzer.

    A bone to pick, however: your first salvo is "Clean Coal." If you don't mind my asking, does that even exist?

    Because I heard there were only two plants in the U.S.:

    "In this country, most research focuses on coal gasification, which aims to remove CO2 and other pollutants before combustion. But only two power plants using the technology have actually been built in the United States, in Indiana and Florida, and the purpose of both was to capture sulphur and other pollutants. Neither takes the next step of capturing and storing the CO2.

    They also manage to be online only 60 or 70 percent of the time, versus the 90-95 percent uptime required by the power industry. In Europe, researchers prefer post-combustion carbon capture. But the steam needed to recover CO2 from the smokestack kills the efficiency of a power plant. "

    http://e360.yale.edu/content/feature.msp...

    And even some proposed plants are being taken offline:

    "Meanwhile, leading Democrats were up in arms over the Energy Department's recent decision to abandon the $1.8 billion FutureGen project in eastern Illinois, planned as the first coal-fired plant to capture and store harmful carbon dioxide emissions. Energy Department officials, unlike politicians, had to confront the spiraling costs of this fantasy."

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/con...

    And so I thought maybe it's just a pleasant-sounding buzz word, rather than a real strategy:

    ""There is no such thing as clean coal," says James Hansen, NASA's expert on global warming, who says all coal plants, even TECO's, still emit millions of tons of carbon dioxide - the most threatening greenhouse gas."

    www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/06/20/eveni...

    Well... let me know.

    binky (anonymous profile)
    August 22, 2008 at 4:48 p.m. (Suggest removal)

    Hi, Binky. So if clean coal is an oxymoron, out it goes. In spite of the issues surrounding nuclear waste disposal and all the environmentalist fear-mongering, most of the world (70% of countries, I read recently) seem to manage to generate lots of electricity with nuclear with few problems. Good design, good regulation, frequent inspections by knowledgable inspectors seem to me to be a reasonable road to nuclear-generated electricity.

    P.S.to whatphotosb: who said anything about birds?

    RCMeltzer (anonymous profile)
    August 22, 2008 at 8:29 p.m. (Suggest removal)

    Wondering about the winds in the Santa Barbara area? Take a look at CEC's "Blueprint" chapter on wind power. It has maps showing the intensity of the wind. (Sundowners aren't going to make it.)

    http://www.communityenvironmentalcouncil...

    maven12 (anonymous profile)
    August 25, 2008 at 10:21 a.m. (Suggest removal)

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