{"id":9547,"date":"2010-08-19T19:02:58","date_gmt":"2010-08-19T23:02:58","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/static\/?p=9547"},"modified":"2012-02-03T09:23:06","modified_gmt":"2012-02-03T14:23:06","slug":"editorial-wind-energy-is-a-government-subsidized-fraud","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/2010\/editorial-wind-energy-is-a-government-subsidized-fraud\/","title":{"rendered":"Editorial: Wind energy is a government subsidized fraud"},"content":{"rendered":"
\u2014Eric Bibler, WTS.com guest editor<\/p>\n
Critics of wind energy are absolutely\u00a0right—the entire idea of wind energy is nonsense. It\u2019s utterly impractical and unsuitable for the production of electricity. It\u2019s a government subsidized fraud. It\u2019s a huge waste of resources, breathtaking in its transparent and inevitable futility, and it destroys our quality of life (and valuable habitat for wildlife) by industrializing vast tracts of land, even as it promises to save us from the sins and excesses of prior, arguably much more defensible, forms of industrialization.<\/p>\n
I don\u2019t see how anyone can conclude otherwise.<\/p>\n
Critics are also correct that ALL means of producing electricity—which are nothing more than the conversion of one form of potential energy into another form, i.e. usable electric energy—create unwanted adverse effects and\/or waste. No means of generating electricity is without consequences. Only a very few forms of potential energy are \u201cdense\u201d—meaning that the energy source which can be converted into electricity is very portable and dense. In fact, the only forms of energy that possess high density are fossil fuels and nukes. Period.<\/p>\n
In effect, we\u2019re wasting our breath—not to mention our time, effort, money, land, health, habitat, quality of life, and endless good intentions—pursuing wind and solar energy. They are not reliable and they will never supply a meaningful amount of electrical energy. And the required dedication of resources—including land, infrastructure, rare strategic minerals, and so forth—is clearly unacceptable to anyone who has access to a calculator or a number two pencil and some scrap paper (assuming rudimentary math skills).<\/p>\n
Fossil fuels spew trillions of tons of pollutants into the atmosphere. No one really knows where the byproducts go (CO2<\/sub> and many far uglier contaminants including mercury) or precisely what effect they have on the environment. But the evidence is not encouraging.<\/p>\n But fossil fuels carry distinct advantages, including the fact that they are relatively plentiful and cheap (relative to the useful energy that can be derived by their \u201cconversion\u201d to electrical energy via combustion) and they are extremely dense. Fossil fuels are extremely portable (you can even carry a tank of them with you in your car) and very dependable and reliable. The technology exists to scrub emissions of most of the worst contaminants, but what about all of those trillions of tons of carbon?<\/p>\n Nuclear fuel is also very dense, relatively plentiful, reasonably priced and produces a predictable flow of electricity in a reactor. There are issues, arguably manageable, related to safety and waste with nukes as well. But the amount of nuclear waste produced during the lifetime of an 85 year old fits in a Coke can. You can store the waste in glass blocks, in a sealed room that is remotely monitored, and you always know where it is. In fact, you can retrieve thirty years from now and reprocess it for additional energy output if this becomes cost effective. It is a form of pollution that you understand and control vs. pollution that you don\u2019t really understand and can\u2019t control.<\/p>\n So, realistically, the choices for producing large, reliable amounts of electricity are, 1) burn fossil fuel, 2) build nuclear reactors, or 3) turn out the lights.<\/p>\n Electric power is directly correlated to wealth and standard of living all over the world. No one in developed or developing nations is going to take a vow of poverty in pursuit of the goal of emitting less carbon dioxide into the air.<\/p>\n None of the other alternatives pencil out. None. Show me the numbers. I\u2019ll bet you you can\u2019t do it.<\/p>\n We should praise God that he gave us the raw material—nuclear fuel which contains almost unlimited potential energy—and the intelligence to use it. And we should apply ourselves to developing robust solutions to problems related to safety and storage of waste. But we should get on with it instead of denying the obvious.<\/p>\n Using nuclear fuel to produce electricity has drawbacks. In my opinion, this is only relevant if other means of producing electricity are trouble free, which they are not. All methods have drawbacks. The question is, which one, or ones of them are most advantageous after all factors are considered? If carbon dioxide and other GHG (greenhouse gases) are reaching lethal proportions and creating unacceptable consequences, then there is only one non-GHG producing fuel that can be substituted.<\/p>\n