But
many bird lovers — the American Bird Conservancy in particular — don’t like the
idea, saying taller towers and bigger blades make for a deadly combination.
“This expansion, together with larger turbines and larger blades, will mean more
birds will die,” said Michael Parr, chief conservation officer at the American
Bird Conservancy. “Our position is, if there’s something you can do about it,
you should.”
The Audubon Society also has concerns.
“Our advocacy would be to get those (turbines) tested for impacts on birds
before we deploy them on a large scale,” said Garry George, the renewable energy
director of Audubon California.
Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz last month released a report calling on the nation
to “unlock the vast potential for wind energy deployment in all 50 states,”
highlighting technical advancements to greatly expand the areas of the country
where wind turbines can be used.
The agency is calling for taller turbines with larger rotors.
The average wind turbine in the U.S. is 80 meters high, and the DOE report says
plans are in development for towers 110 and 140 meters high. That’s between 360
to 459 feet — the length of 1 1/2 football fields.
The newer, taller constructions are estimated to be 1 1/2 times the height of
the Statue of Liberty and could be used onshore and offshore.
Bigger turbines in more places would mean more electricity per dollar and, the
department says, greater reduction in the price of wind energy.
From the U.S. Department of Energy
From the U.S. Department of Energy
“By producing the next generation of larger and more efficient wind turbines, we
can create thousands of new jobs and reduce greenhouse gas emissions, as we
fully unlock wind power as a critical national resource,” Moniz said in a
statement released by DOE May 19.
The report accompanying Moniz’s statement estimated if wind energy grows to meet
10 percent of the nation’s electricity demand by 2020 and 20 percent by 2030, it
would translate into annual benefits of $9 billion in 2020 and $30 billion in
2030. The benefits are based on reductions in air pollution and greenhouse gas
emissions.
Wind accounts for 4.4 percent of U.S. electricity generation, according to the
U.S. Energy Information Administration,
“We’ve proven out as an industry in Europe, with a fair number of turbines in
Europe at 120 meters,” Tom Kiernan, CEO of the American Wind Energy Association,
told the Washington Post. “So it’s tested out in Europe, we think we can deploy
it here in the U.S., and it’s an exciting evolution for the industry.”
But opponents say bigger blades and taller towers will kill more birds.
Parr said reports from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service used radar to show
that dense numbers of birds and bats migrate at night between 300 and 500 feet
above the ground — putting them in direct contact with larger wind turbines.
The conservancy already estimates 573,000 birds and 880,000 bats are killed each
year from hitting wind towers and blades that may appear to move slowly but can
reach speeds of more than 100 mph at their tips.
“It should also be noted that these estimates do not include deaths or
reproductive failure due to a loss of habitat, disturbance, or to collisions or
electrocutions at the transmission towers and lines associated with wind
facilities, which is likely substantial,” a conservancy report said.
Watchdog.org asked the Department of Energy to address the criticisms of bigger
turbines but did not receive a response by noon Eastern time Tuesday.
In DOE’s 45-page report, “Enabling Wind Power Nationwide,” the agency said it
makes every effort to avoid what’s euphemistically called “avian mortality” and
pays special attention to protected species such as the bald eagle.
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“Dedicated research is needed to understand the biological and
ecological factors related to potential interactions between bald
eagles and wind, improve the ability of regulators and developers to
predict risk to bald eagles at particular sites, and assess
potential mitigation measures,” the paper said.
“It’s not true to say that birds will not be affected by these large
turbines or to imply the vast majority of those birds fly higher
than the turbines,” Parr said in a telephone interview. “The science
does not support that, and I think you have to be more careful with
the large turbines than you are with the other turbines.”
George of Audubon California says his group’s members “are big
supporters of renewable energy,” but he wants the Department of
Energy to complete a thorough study of the impact of bigger wind
turbines.
“They haven’t been tested for safety for birds, so you can’t claim
that they’re safer for birds,” George told Watchdog.org. “We would
like to see the Department of Energy actually do that study to show
the impacts of those larger turbines.”
Defenders of wind turbines point out that more birds are killed by
other sources such as windows, buildings and even cats in a given
year.
Even by the American Bird Conservancy’s estimates, up to 1 billion
birds are killed each year striking glass, and 175 million are
killed by power lines.
Parr says ABC is concerned about those other sources of bird deaths,
too.
“If it’s a major factor, we’re on top of it,” Parr said. “But when
it comes to wind turbines, 500,000 (deaths a year) is not a small
number.”
But the American Wind Energy Association criticized the American
Bird Conservancy for what it said were suggestions that “entire
areas should be banned for wind development.”
“Simply barring any development in these areas is not compatible
with scaling up wind power enough to address climate change, which
is the biggest threat that wildlife will face this century,” John
Anderson, senior director of permitting policy and environmental
affairs at AWEA, wrote on the group’s website.
“We support wind, but let’s do it in a thoughtful way,” Parr said,
calling on the federal government and turbine manufacturers to be
careful where they place wind farms, especially in areas home to
threatened and endangered species or in the paths of migrating
birds.
“(Wind) is a new and growing industry and preventing bird deaths is
something we can do readily,” Parr said. “Now is the appropriate
time to affect change in the industry before it’s fully built out.”
DOE envisions bigger and taller wind turbines enabling areas of the
country that haven’t seen many wind farms to become contributors to
the industry.
“Regions primarily affected by this increased technical potential
include the Southeast, states bordering the Ohio River Valley, the
Great Lakes Region, the Northeast, and portions of the Interior West
and Pacific Northwest,” the DOE report said.
“Well, they may run into trouble,” George said. “It’s an experiment
and it would be great if (DOE) did the experiment before they
actually deployed” bigger wind turbines.
Click here to read the DOE report, “Enabling Wind Power Nationwide.”
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