Breaking Wind – Quick hits from the industry for December 21, 2010

Items of interest:

1-Friends of Blackwater press release – (h/t Allegheny Highlands Alliance)

2-“Talk about throwing good money after bad. Despite more than $30 billion in subsidies for “clean energy” in the 2009 stimulus bill, Big Wind still can’t make it in the marketplace.”

3-“We didn’t trust them to just walk away as they said they would,” Paine said. “We expected them to come back.” – (h/t AHA)

4-“Without government support, wind projects don’t have a profitable business model.”

5-“Wind is not the energy of our future.”

Posted in Breaking Wind | Tagged | Leave a comment

Breaking Wind – Quick hits from the industry for December 20, 2010

Items of interest:

1-No truth to the rumor that the project will be renamed Crap Wind.

2-“There is no substitute for available, affordable, and reliable supply.”

3-Industrial wind and broken political promises … what could possibly go wrong?

4-Was this first published at The Onion?  I mean, “Now that anti-science Republicans have taken control of the House” and “President Obama has the power to unleash dramatic emissions reductions without congressional approval. And in the course of doing so, the president can bring jobs and profits to communities across the nation, even in places represented by climate change deniers such as Sen.-elect Roy Blunt of Missouri.”  And that’s only in the first two paragraphs.

5-And speaking of The Onion – I almost hesitate posting this oldie but goodie because some loons will claim it as proof we need more wind turbines.

Posted in Breaking Wind | Tagged | Leave a comment

Breaking Wind – Quick hits from the industry for December 19, 2010

Items of interest:

1-“So, let’s get to the cold, hard facts.”

Facts often support NIMBYism – Wind Concerns Ontario

2-Maine under attack!

Winds of change loom in Somerset County – The Morning Sentinel

3-“The biggest limitation of wind farms is the electricity produced.”  But then, isn’t that their purpose?

Wind Farms – Limitations as Energy Platforms – Reference Education Center | biloxibridge.com

4-No!  This is the other Michael Morgan.  I’m not bothered by their appearance.  I just don’t like like the fact that they’re expensive, an environmental hazard and produce a dismal amount of electricity, typically when not needed.

Wind farms are beautiful – michael morgan’s posterous

5-“Facts will lead us to the truth regarding the potential for industrial wind to address our demands for electricity.”

Wind Offers No Way Off Foreign Oil – Friends of Maine’s Mountains

 

Posted in Breaking Wind | Tagged | Leave a comment

John Bambacus – “The Exploitation of Our Region’s Natural Resources”

AT Note:  This important letter has appeared in several publications, and we thank Mr. Bambacus for granting permission to post here:

The Exploitation of Our Region’s Natural Resources

Consider this for a moment: The City of Frostburg is providing city drinking water to Samson Resources to use for hydrofracking just outside of its watershed in an exploratory search for Marcellus Shale.

Hydrofracking is a drilling technique that, because it injects millions of gallons of water-hogging and toxic chemicals into the ground, should be done with a high level of due diligence, to include independent monitoring systems and regulations in place that secure groundwater and protect the public health and well-being.

Frostburg officials have also hired an engineering firm to see if the Piney Watershed Impoundment might also be a good place to consider hydrofracking the City’s freshwater aquifers and stream tributaries for shale gas exploration.

In all cases where it is employed, the work should be monitored by experts employed by the public, but paid for by the developer. Moreover, the monitoring itself should be actively involved on a minute-by- minute basis. It must be extremely proactive for once an aquifer or stream tributary is destroyed it is gone forever.

It is simply breathtakingly incredible that local officials here would sign away something as essential as the public drinking water supply without insisting on this precondition.  The public’s interest needs to be represented—not only by our elected officials, but also by a competent attorney specializing in mineral extraction, the cost of which should be embedded in any permit fees.

The City of Cumberland is considering an offer to sell thousands of acres in its watershed.

Garrett County’s Backbone Mountain industrial wind turbine array is nearly complete, and a proposed mine under the Casselman River awaits local and state approvals.

And much of this destruction, devastation, and industrialization of our ecosystems has been accomplished with the willing and eager participation of many of our state and local elected representatives.  Corporate and political interests are aligned against what should be the public’s interest.

Over the last 5 years, environmental degradation to our beautiful natural landscape is occurring without the public’s knowledge as closed-door negotiations among local and state government and energy companies take place.  And, of course there is very limited federal, state, and local regulatory oversight.  Recall how state politicians recently colluded with local officials to take permitting for the wind industry away from public scrutiny.

Henry Caudill, writing on Appalachia’s natural resources, got to the heart of the matter:

“Industry has always treated the mountains with contempt…protests while heard will produce little change.  Since the year 1000 the discovery of immense new stores of resources coupled with endless technological innovations have elevated living standards enormously but society is still essentially feudal, still fundamentally composed of barons and serfs.  The distinction is one of power.  The industrialists — that is the destroyers and polluters — are the barons.  They sit in boardrooms where the weight of limitless millions focuses.  The serfs are the millions of one vote citizens whose taxes subsidize and support the system.  They can never reach the ear of a president or governor, and their usual, and usually worthless, way of asserting an opinion or preference is a letter to the editor.  As was the case in feudal England, the barons blithely disregard them while acquiring new tax immunities, new special privileges, and new millions.”

The more things change, the more they stay the same…. Let’s challenge our leaders to consult the better angels of their natures.  For if they don’t stand up for our mountains and our supply of drinking water, there’s little hope for much else.

John N. Bambacus

Frostburg

Mr. Bambacus is a former state senator representing Garrett and Allegany Counties and a former mayor of Frostburg

Posted in Allegheny Mountains, Appalachian Mountains, Environment, John Bambacus, Marcellus Shale | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Breaking Wind – Quick hits from the industry for December 18, 2010

Items of interest:

1-This will be interesting:

Science Integrity Guidelines Soon to Come? – Roger Pielke Jr. Blog

2-And, of course, it’s backed by the one entity which cannot afford to do so:  TAXPAYERS

World’s Biggest Wind Farm Gets Backing – GreenTechMedia

3-We had this up some time ago and I thought it was an April fools joke.  But, it’s actually a Wind fools joke … the difference is they last all year and the TAXPAYER usually ends up paying for them!

Nanotube-Tethered Flying Wind Turbines Could Harvest Energy At 30,000 Feet – Popular Science

4-See what I mean?  Note the obvious in the small print:  “Aviation authorities not so keen”

Put wind turbines in the jetstream, says NASA scientist – Tech Eye

5-And I bet if you did this, Item 3 and 4 would disappear faster than a David Copperfield elephant: “The solution to meeting America’s energy demands is so simple that anyone other than a politician could grasp it.  Stop subsidizing industries altogether.”

Solar Eclipse – American Thinker

 

Posted in Breaking Wind | Tagged | Leave a comment

Breaking Wind – Quick hits from the industry for December 17, 2010

Items of interest:

1-Found this gem at Watts Up With That:

2-“Governments can help the market achieve lower costs without resorting to subsidies and grants that are just another form of payment by the public by decreasing red tape and regulatory oversight.”

“Clean Energy Standards”: The Sky is the (Price) Limit – Master Resource

3-If only folks would listen:

Big wind’s hawkers will take the money and run – Morning Sentinel

4-“There is no distinctly native American criminal class except Congress.” – Mark Twain

DC Feeding Frenzy – CATO Institute

5-Without a doubt, Indonesia, Jordan and Vietnam are much better prepared to build and run nuclear power plants than the US.  This story could only get better if we find US taxpayers actually funding them!

IAEA Considers Indonesia Ready To Build Nuclear Power Plant – BERNAMA

 

Posted in Breaking Wind | Tagged | Leave a comment

Breaking Wind – Quick hits from the industry for December 16, 2010

Items of interest:

1-Stunning!

Science on the Conveyor Belt – Roger Pielke Jr.

2-Before everyone gets all tingly and sites this as proof solar will save the world, the “country of Vatican” is equivalent to an office complex.

Vatican says use of solar energy effective in Holy See – RIA Novosti

3-We can certainly relate:

Suggests stories were slanted – Orangeville Citizen

4-If their goal is “to keep the public armed with information not generally distributed by government officials or private corporations,” we are happy to add them to our list of friends.  We recommend you visit their site.

Concerned Citizens of Cattaraugus County, Inc. – Franklinville, NY

5-“Anyone who has ever driven through heartland America on I-40 knows that a growing portion of the Oklahoma, West Texas, and New Mexico landscapes are being desecrated by wind-farms via rows of heinous-looking, government-subsidized wind turbines blanketing the southern plains.”

Someone Tell Robert Redford ‘Green’ Wind Turbines Are Uglier than Coal Mines – Big Hollywood

Posted in Breaking Wind | Tagged | Leave a comment

Breaking Wind – Quick hits from the industry for December 15, 2010

Items of interest:

1-“Industries that require never-ending subsidies simply cannot increase overall economic welfare. To conclude otherwise is to believe in “free-lunch” economics of the worst kind. Yet, freelunch economics are driving the push for renewable energy.”

Gresham’s Law of Green Energy – CATO Institute

2-“Ethanol is the Frankenfuel of the energy business, a subsidy-devouring monster that cannot be killed, no matter how great the political opposition.”

Lame-Duck Bailouts for Ethanol and Wind? – Robert Bryce

3-Some years ago, as part of an agreement to sell our product to the Chinese, they insisted we set up a manufacturing facility in China.  Take a wild guess:  our US facility (which supplied the initial product under EXIM Bank financing requiring US content) no longer manufactures the product for China.

To Conquer Wind Power, China Writes the Rules – NY Times

4-Natural gas:

The Hard Facts About Fracking – Popular Mechanics

5-And we subsidize windmills!

Russia to have a foothold on Turkish energy market – Voice of Russia

Posted in Breaking Wind | Tagged | Leave a comment

Roger Pielke Jr. on Politics and Science

Normally, we prefer to post the original source.  But frankly, when Pielke Jr. weighs in with commentary, that’s what you go with.  It’s like setting up the right cross with an uppercut.

As always, well worth your time:  Political Affiliations of Scientists

Posted in US energy policy | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Breaking Wind – Quick hits from the industry for December 14, 2010

Items of interest:

1-Joe Manchin fails first major test:

Question: On the Cloture Motion (Motion to Invoke Cloture on the Motion to Concur in the House Amdt. to Senate Amdt. with Amdt. No. 4753)

Manchin (D-WV), Yea

2-“The contracts are virtually risk-free — the province guarantees that Ontario consumers will pay the sky-high rates even when the power produced is surplus to their needs, such as in the middle of the night or other periods of low demand. In fact, to deal with the growing amount of surplus wind and solar power that the developers are producing for non-existent Ontario customers, the province is giving away the power to the Americans or actually forcing Ontarians to pay Americans to take the power off our hands.”

How to renege on egregious green contracts – Financial Post

3-By speaking for Maine, Mr. Perkins speaks for all of us.

Wind power grows dirtier since export from Europe – Kennebec Journal

4-Commentary by Lisa Linowes:

Cape Wind: Spreading the Pain – MasterResource

5-“… the frontier for now is in the same place it’s always been — in the mountains of Western Maryland — where the region’s winds and coal and natural gas reserves are drawing prospectors.”  Hmmm!  Prospectors wasn’t the first work that came to my mind.

Western Maryland wrestles with energy future – Baltimore Sun

Oh, and by the way … “Maryland‘s first two industrial-scale wind “plants” are on the verge of generating power atop the state’s highest mountain in Garrett County.”  What are the odds Constellation Energy and Synergics Wind Energy will actually publish the dismal production rates from these giant erector sets?  They could, you know … in a format similar to the IESO folks in Canada.

Why is it that the wind folks blow the horn about how much they will contribute to the energy supply when they want permission to put their contraptions in the middle of the migratory flyway, but grow so quiet about actual hourly performance against nameplate capacity, once the project is up and running?  You see … they know … but maybe they don’t want to make it easy for you to know.

Posted in Breaking Wind | Tagged | Leave a comment