{"id":11733,"date":"2010-12-27T10:52:48","date_gmt":"2010-12-27T15:52:48","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/static\/?p=11733"},"modified":"2012-02-03T05:20:57","modified_gmt":"2012-02-03T10:20:57","slug":"pointing-to-phony-measurements-wind-developer-whitewashes-turbine-infrasound-australia","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/2010\/pointing-to-phony-measurements-wind-developer-whitewashes-turbine-infrasound-australia\/","title":{"rendered":"Pointing to (phony) measurements, wind developer whitewashes turbine infrasound (Australia)"},"content":{"rendered":"
\u2014Melissa Fyfe, The Age<\/a> (12\/26\/10)<\/p>\n Remember the orange-bellied parrot, the bird that briefly stopped a wind farm on Victoria\u2019s south-east coast? Well, endangered birds are so 2006 when it comes to wind farm politics. The biggest issue these days is infrasound, the low-frequency noise anti-wind-farm campaigners say is generated by turbines and makes people sick.<\/p>\n Infrasound is the latest front in the battle over wind farms and will be investigated next year by a Senate inquiry set up by Family First\u2019s Steve Fielding. The inquiry will look at the health impacts of living near turbines and concerns over excessive noise and vibrations caused by wind farms.<\/p>\n Anti-wind-farm campaigners say infrasound causes \u201dwind turbine syndrome\u201d. Sufferers complain of nausea, dizziness and headaches.<\/p>\n In July, the National Health and Medical Research Council reviewed the scientific evidence and found no link between wind turbines and illness.<\/p>\n But now one large wind farm operator has put the theory to the test on its own turbines. Pacific Hydro hired Adelaide-based acoustic consulting experts Sonus to measure the level of infrasound—created by the turbine blades moving through the air—at two farms, Cape Bridgewater in Victoria\u2019s west and Clements Gap in the mid-north of South Australia.<\/p>\n As a comparison, they also measured infrasound in the Adelaide central business district and suburbs, at the beach, on a coastal cliff, inland from the coast and at a gas-fired power station.<\/p>\n At all these places, the infrasound was not audible to the human ear. [Editor’s note<\/em>: \u00a0See “Wind Turbines Are Hazardous to Human Health<\/a>” and “Infrasound: Your ears \u2018hear\u2019 it but they don\u2019t tell your brain<\/a>\u201d\u00a0to appreciate how irrelevant and misleading this claim is.<\/span>] \u00a0It was actually recorded at higher levels on the beach and in the Adelaide CBD than it was near a wind turbine.<\/p>\n