{"id":23120,"date":"2012-09-11T12:23:43","date_gmt":"2012-09-11T16:23:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/static\/?p=23120"},"modified":"2014-07-02T09:14:06","modified_gmt":"2014-07-02T13:14:06","slug":"prominent-journalist-pummels-wind-turbine-syndrome-deniers-united-kingdom","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/2012\/prominent-journalist-pummels-wind-turbine-syndrome-deniers-united-kingdom\/","title":{"rendered":"Prominent journalist pummels Wind Turbine Syndrome deniers (United Kingdom)"},"content":{"rendered":"
.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n .<\/span> “The symptoms they claim to have suffered may vary—including dizziness, increased blood pressure and depression—but the theme remains the same”<\/strong><\/p>\n It was Uplawmoor\u2019s tranquillity and wild beauty that drew civil servant Aileen Jackson to settle there 28 years ago.<\/p>\n She\u2019d had enough of life in the big city. Now she wanted somewhere quiet and rural to start a family, keep her horses, and enjoy the magnificent views down the valley and out to sea to the western Scottish isles of Arran and Ailsa Craig.<\/p>\n Then, two years ago, she says, it all turned sour.<\/p>\n A neighbour with whom she and her family had been friends decided to take advantage of the massive public subsidies for \u2018renewable\u2019 energy.<\/p>\n He put up a 64ft-high wind turbine which, though on his own land, stood just 300 yards from the Jackson family\u2019s home.<\/p>\n The sleepless nights caused by its humming were only the start of their problems. Far worse was the impact on their health.<\/p>\n Aileen, a diabetic since the age of 19, found her blood glucose levels rocketing—forcing her to take more insulin and causing her to develop a cataract, she says.<\/p>\n Her younger son, Brian, an outgoing, happy, academically enthusiastic young man, suddenly became a depressive, stopped seeing his friends and dropped out of his studies at college.<\/p>\n Aileen\u2019s husband William, who had always had low blood pressure, now found his blood pressure levels going \u2018sky high\u2019—and has been on medication ever since.<\/p>\n So far so coincidental, you might say. And if you did, you would have the full and enthusiastic support of the wind industry.<\/p>\n Here is what the official trade body RenewableUK has to say on its website: \u2018In over 25 years and with more than 68,000 machines installed around the world, no member of the public has ever been harmed by the normal operation of wind farms.\u2019<\/p>\n But in order to believe that, you would have to discount the testimony of the thousands of people just like Aileen around the world who claim their health has been damaged by wind farms.<\/p>\n You would have to ignore the reports of doctors such as Australia\u2019s Sarah Laurie, Canada\u2019s [America’s] Nina Pierpont and Britain\u2019s Amanda Harry who have collated hundreds of such cases of Wind Turbine Syndrome.<\/p>\n And you\u2019d have to reject the expertise of the acoustic engineers, sleep specialists, epidemiologists and physiologists who all testify that the noise generated by wind farms represents a major threat to public health.<\/p>\n \u2018If this were the nuclear industry, this is a scandal which would be on the front pages of every newspaper every day for months on end,\u2019 says Chris Heaton-Harris, the Conservative MP for Daventry who has been leading the parliamentary revolt against wind farms, demanding that their subsidies be cut.<\/p>\n \u2018But because it\u2019s wind it has been let off the hook. It shouldn\u2019t be.\u2019<\/p>\n Wind Turbine Syndrome. Until you\u2019ve seen for yourself what it can do to a community, you might be tempted to dismiss it as a hypochondriac\u2019s charter or an urban myth.<\/p>\n But the suffering I witnessed earlier this year in Waterloo, a hamlet outside Adelaide in southern Australia, was all too real.<\/p>\n The place felt like a ghost town: shuttered houses and a dust-blown aura of sinister unease, as in a horror movie where something terrible has happened to a previously thriving settlement but at first you\u2019re not sure what.<\/p>\n Then you look to the horizon and see them, turning in the breeze . . .<\/p>\n The wind farm people said we\u2019d be doing our bit to save the planet,” said one resident.<\/p>\n “They said these things were quieter than a fridge. They said it was all going to be fairy floss and candy.<\/p>\n “So how come I can\u2019t sleep in my own house any more? How come sometimes I\u2019m having to take 15 Valium tablets a day? How come, when I used to be a pretty mellow sort of person, I\u2019m now so angry it\u2019s only a matter of time before I end up in jail?”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n I\u2019ve since heard dozens of similar stories from nurses, farmers, panel-beaters, civil servants, businessmen and forestry workers across the world, from New South Wales to Sweden and Pembrokeshire.<\/p>\n The symptoms they claim to have suffered may vary—dizziness; balance problems; memory loss; inability to concentrate; insomnia; tachycardia; increased blood pressure; raised cortisol levels; headaches; nausea; mood swings; anxiety; tinnitus; palpitations; depression—but the theme remains the same.<\/p>\n Here are ordinary people who settled in the country for a quiet life only to have their lives and property values trashed at the stroke of a bureaucrat\u2019s pen.<\/p>\n In December 2011, in a peer-reviewed report in the Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, Dr Carl Phillips—one of the U.S.\u2019s most distinguished epidemiologists—concluded that<\/p>\n there is overwhelming evidence that wind turbines cause serious health problems in nearby residents, usually stress-disorder type diseases, at a nontrivial rate.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n According to a study by U.S. noise control engineer Rick James, wind farms generate the same symptoms as Sick Building Syndrome—the condition that plagued office workers in the Eighties and Nineties as a result of what was eventually discovered to be the Low Frequency Noise (LFN), caused by misaligned air conditioning systems.<\/p>\n The combination of LFN and \u2018amplitude modulation\u2019 (loudness that goes up and down) leads to fatigue, poor concentration and dizziness.<\/p>\n And sleep specialist Dr Chris Hanning believes it stimulates an alert response, leading to arousal episodes throug the night that make restful sleep impossible.<\/p>\n I\u2019ve spoken with many sufferers and sadly the only treatment is for them to move away from the wind farm.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n But if the problem is really so widespread, why isn\u2019t it better known?<\/p>\n The short answer is money: the wind industry is a hugely lucrative business with millions to spend on lobbying.<\/p>\n What\u2019s more, until recently, it benefited from the general public mood that \u2018something ought to be done about climate change\u2019 and wind power—supposedly \u2018free\u2019, \u2018renewable\u2019 and \u2018carbon-friendly\u2019—was the obvious solution.<\/p>\n \u2018For years among the metropolitan elite it has been considered heretical to criticise wind power,\u2019 says Heaton-Harris.<\/p>\n In the last decade, however, a host of evidence has emerged to indicate it is not the panacea it was thought to be.<\/p>\n From economists such as Edinburgh University\u2019s Dr Gordon Hughes we are told that wind energy is unreliable and intermittent, with no real market value because it requires near 100 per cent back-up by conventional fossil-fuel power.<\/p>\n From research institute Verso Economics we are told that that for every \u2018green job\u2019 created by taxpayer subsidy, 3.7 jobs are killed in the real economy.<\/p>\n It is said that thanks to the artificial rise in energy prices caused by renewable subsidies, expected to reach \u00a313 billion per annum by 2020, at least 50,000 people a year in Britain are driven into fuel poverty.<\/p>\n And newly released Spanish government research claims that each turbine kills an average 300 birds a year (often rare ones such as eagles and bustards) and at least as many bats.<\/p>\n Yet still, despite collapsing share prices and increasing public scepticism, the industry continues to grow.<\/p>\n As Matt Ridley noted recently in The Spectator<\/em>, there are \u2018too many people with snouts in the trough.\u2019<\/p>\n Aristocratic landowners have done especially well, such as the Earl of Moray (\u00a32 million a year from his Doune estate) and the Duke of Roxburghe (\u00a31.5 million a year from his estate in Lammermuir Hills).<\/p>\n South of the border, the Prime Minister\u2019s father-in-law Sir Reginald Sheffield makes more than \u00a31,000 a day from the eight turbines on his Lincolnshire estates. Even smaller landholdings can generate a tidy profit: around \u00a340,000 per year, per large (3MW) turbine, for no effort whatsoever.<\/p>\n The biggest winners, though, are the mostly foreign-owned (Mitsubishi, Gamesa, Siemens) firms for whom wind was until recently a virtually risk-free investment.<\/p>\n In Britain, onshore wind farms are subsidised by a levy on consumer bills at 100 per cent; offshore wind is subsidised at 200 per cent: no matter how little energy the turbines actually produce, in other words, healthy returns are guaranteed.<\/p>\n The debate over wind farms has aroused huge passions.<\/p>\n I\u2019ve had death threats. I\u2019m told I\u2019m a witch. I\u2019ve had my reputation trashed in the newspapers,” says Australian campaigner Dr Sarah Laurie.<\/p>\n “And for what? All I\u2019ve ever done is say, ‘People are getting sick and something should be done to stop it.'”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n When Aileen Jackson protested about some of the 23 new turbine projects proposed for Uplawmoor, she too was threatened.<\/p>\n Her car, she says, was vandalised; broken glass was strewn in her horses\u2019 field; on two occasions she found her horses\u2019 anti-midge coats had been cut off and slashed to pieces, the horses left covered in blood from where they rubbed themselves against a fence to stop the itching.<\/p>\n There\u2019s no suggestion anyone locally concerned with wind farms was involved.<\/p>\n But legitimate proponents of wind farms are candid about the benefits.<\/p>\n \u2018There\u2019s so much money to be made from these things, that\u2019s the problem,\u2019 says Jackson.<\/p>\n \u2018You\u2019ll talk to the farmers and they\u2019re quite open about it. \u201cI\u2019ve worked hard all my life and this is my pension plan,\u201d they\u2019ll tell you.\u2019<\/p>\n What horrifies the communities threatened by wind farm developments is how powerless they are to stop them.<\/p>\n At Northwich in Cheshire, I attended the annual meeting of National Opposition to Windfarms (NOW), where lawyers including Lord Carlile (NOW\u2019s chairman) advised local protest groups on how to challenge wind developments in their area.<\/p>\n The desperation was palpable. Current planning laws have a presumption \u2018in favour of sustainable development\u2019.<\/p>\n Wind farms are deemed vital to Britain\u2019s EU-driven campaign to cut its carbon emissions by 20 per cent by 2020. Arguments about wind turbines\u2019 public health impacts seem to cut little ice with planning inspectors.<\/p>\n The whole system has been rigged in the industry\u2019s favour. One of the biggest bones of contention is regulation of acceptable noise levels.<\/p>\n In Britain, wind developers are bound by ETSU-R-97, a code that places modest limits on sound within the normal human hearing range—but which fails to address the damaging aspect of wind turbines: infrasonic (ie, inaudible) Low Frequency Noise.<\/p>\n But according to RenewableUK\u2019s \u2018Top Myths About Wind Energy\u2019 section, accusations that wind farms emit \u2018infrasound and cause associated health problems\u2019 are \u2018unscientific\u2019.<\/p>\n It quotes Dr Geoff Leventhall, author of the Defra report on Low Frequency Noise And Its Effects: \u2018I can state quite categorically that there is no significant infrasound from current designs of wind turbines.\u2019<\/p>\n And Robert Norris, head of communications at RenewableUK, says: \u2018There\u2019s no evidence to link the very low levels of noise produced by wind farms with any effects on people living nearby.<\/p>\n \u2018Low frequency noise isn\u2019t a problem. Extensive measurements taken repeatedly by scientists across Europe and the USA show the level of sound is so minimal that it can\u2019t be perceived, even close up.\u2019<\/p>\n However, Robert Rand of Rand Acoustics in Maine, who has done work on wind farms and been a consultant in acoustics since 1980, says:<\/p>\n All wind turbines produce low-frequency noise. The reason it doesn\u2019t show up on wind industry tests is that the equipment they use excludes low-frequency noise.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Dr John Constable Director of the Renewable Energy Foundation adds: \u2018Audible noise disturbance from wind turbines, particularly at night, is known to be a very serious and fairly common problem, but low frequency noise is a mystery.<\/p>\n ‘No one knows enough about it to say anything definite, one way or the other. This is one of those cases where more research really is needed.\u2019<\/p>\n Dr Alec Salt, a cochlear physiologist at the Department of Otolaryngology at the Washington University School of Medicine in St Louis, Missouri, has studied the topic since the Seventies.<\/p>\n The idea that there is no problem with infrasound couldn\u2019t be more wrong,” he says.<\/p>\n “The responses of the human ear to LFN are just enormous. Bigger than to anything in the audible range.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Audible sound stimulates the inner hair cells on the cochlea (the auditory portion of the inner ear), but LFN triggers the outer hair cells, sending neural signals to the brain. Military special ops departments have known about it for some time.<\/p>\n A 1997 report by the U.S. Air Force Institute For National Security Studies notes:<\/p>\n Acoustic infrasound: very low frequency sound which can travel long distances and easily penetrate most buildings and vehicles.<\/p>\n “Transmission of long wavelength sound creates biophysical effects, nausea, loss of bowels, disorientation, vomiting, potential organ damage or death may occur.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Yet as Dr Phillips notes, instead of protecting the public, governments are actually complicit by encouraging wind farm development via generous subsidies.<\/p>\n It\u2019s ridiculous. Here is an industry which is putting the health of tens of thousands of people at risk. If this were a pharmaceutical company sales would have been suspended by now.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n His views are shared by orthopaedic surgeon Dr Robert McMurtry, once Canada\u2019s most senior public health official:<\/p>\n Whatever you think about climate change, you can be sure that wind energy is not the solution.<\/p>\n “There is an abundance of evidence to the show that infrasound from wind farms represents a serious public health hazard. Until further research is done, there should be an immediate moratorium on building any more of them.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Newspaper columnist Christopher Booker called wind farms \u2018the greatest political blunder of our time\u2019 and \u2018a monument to an age when our leaders collectively went off their heads\u2019.<\/p>\n But a recent statement by energy minister Charles Hendry says: \u2018Studies have considered the noise phenomenon known as amplitude modulation (AM) but show that to date only one wind farm in the UK has presented a noise nuisance to residents. The issue has since been resolved.<\/p>\n ‘We will keep the issue of AM under review and welcome the additional research on AM that RenewableUK have commissioned,\u2019 in answer to a parliamentary question from Chris Heaton-Harris.<\/p>\n Heaton-Harris is not impressed.<\/p>\n Wind farms are destroying people\u2019s lives, destroying the environment, destroying the economy—but instead of opposing it, all three main political parties are committed to building more of them.<\/p>\n “And it\u2019s not accidental. This is a stitch-up between the wind lobby and its friends in Parliament and it\u2019s an outrage.<\/p>\n “It\u2019s the biggest health scandal of our age and the metropolitan elite just don\u2019t care.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" . “Are wind farms saving or killing us? A provocative investigation claims thousands of people are falling sick because they live near them” . . —James Delingpole, The Daily Mail (UK), 9\/8\/12 “The symptoms they claim to have suffered may vary—including dizziness, increased blood pressure and depression—but the theme remains the same” It was Uplawmoor\u2019s tranquillity and wild beauty that drew civil servant Aileen Jackson to settle there 28 years ago. She\u2019d had enough of life in the big city. Now she wanted somewhere quiet and rural to start a family, keep her horses, and enjoy the magnificent views down the valley and out to sea to the western Scottish isles of Arran and Ailsa Craig. Then, two years ago, she says, it all turned sour. A neighbour with whom she and her family had been friends decided to take advantage of the massive public subsidies for \u2018renewable\u2019 energy. He put up a 64ft-high wind turbine which, though on his own land, stood just 300 yards from the Jackson family\u2019s home. The sleepless nights caused by its humming were only the start of their problems. Far worse was the impact on their health. Aileen, a diabetic since the age of 19, found her blood glucose levels rocketing—forcing her to take more insulin and causing her to develop a cataract, she says. Her younger son, Brian, an outgoing, happy, academically enthusiastic young man, suddenly became a depressive, stopped seeing his friends and dropped out of his studies at college. Aileen\u2019s husband William, who had always had low blood pressure, now found his blood pressure levels going \u2018sky high\u2019—and has been on medication ever since. So far so coincidental, you might say. And if you did, you would have the full and enthusiastic support of the wind industry. Here is what theRead More…<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[157,163,166,16,173],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/23120"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=23120"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/23120\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=23120"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=23120"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=23120"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}“Are wind farms saving or killing us? A provocative investigation claims thousands of people are falling sick because they live near them”
\n.<\/span><\/h3>\n
\n—James Delingpole, The Daily Mail<\/a> (UK), 9\/8\/12<\/p>\n