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Henry Lee, a Harvard University environment and energy professor who used to be energy chief for the state of Massachusetts, said there a few problems with the idea of wind powering the world. The first is the cost is too high. Furthermore, all the necessary wind turbines would take up too much land and require dramatic increases in power transmission lines, he said. Jerry Taylor, an energy and environmental analyst at the conservative Cato Institute, said the lack of economic reality in the studies made them "utterly irrelevant." Caldeira acknowledged that the world would need to change dramatically to shift to wind. "To power civilization with wind turbines, I think you're talking about a couple wind turbines every square mile," Caldeira said. "It's not a small undertaking." ___ Online: The journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences:
http://www.pnas.org/ Nature Climate Change:
http://www.nature.com/nclimate/
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