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Tag Archives: green wind power

Canadian Nuclear Association: wind is not ‘green”

14 Tuesday Oct 2014

Posted by Ottawa Wind Concerns in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

air pollution Ontario, Canadian Nuclear Association, Canadian Wind Energy Association, GHGs, green wind power, Ontario, power sources Ontario, Southwestern Ontario, Wind Concerns Ontario, wind energy, wind farm, wind farms, wind power

Wind’s dirty little secret: fossil fuel back up essential

JOHN MINER | QMI AGENCY

October 13, 2014

LONDON, Ont. — I’m green, you’re not.The battle to be embraced as the best environmental choice for Ontario’s power supply is getting down and dirty.

Fed up with the wind-farm sector enjoying what it considers an undeserved reputation as a pristine energy supplier, Canada’s nuclear industry — it generates the lion’s share of electricity in Ontario — has launched a public relations assault against wind.

Both nuclear and wind are major players in the power mix of Southwestern Ontario, home to one of the world’s largest nuclear plants — Bruce Power, near Kincardine — and many of Ontario’s biggest wind farms.

“Wind power isn’t as clean as its supporters have claimed. It performs unreliably and needs backup from gas, which emits far more greenhouse gas than either wind or nuclear power,” said Dr. John Barrett, president and chief executive of the Canadian Nuclear Association, in an e-mail to QMI Agency.

The Canadian Nuclear Association hired Toronto-based Hatch Ltd., a global consulting and engineering firm, to compare wind farm and nuclear energy.

Hatch reviewed 246 studies, mostly from North America and Europe. Its 91-page report concludes wind energy over the lifetime of an installation produces slightly less greenhouse gas — implicated in climate change — than nuclear and both produce a lot less than gas-fired generating plants.

But Hatch says it’s an entirely different picture when wind energy’s reliance on other generating sources is considered.

The engineering firm calculates wind turbines only generate 20% of their electrical capacity because of down time when no wind blows.

When gas-fired generating stations are added into the equation to pick up the slack, nuclear produces much less greenhouse gases, the Hatch study concludes.

Its analysis is that for every kilowatt-hour of electricity produced, nuclear power emits 18.5 grams of greenhouse gases. Wind backed by natural gas produces more than 20 times more — 385 grams per kilowatt hour.

The nuclear industry attack on wind might not be a welcome message for the Ontario Liberal government that has justified its multibillion-dollar investment in Southwestern Ontario wind farms on the basis it’s providing green energy.

But its a position that resonates with Ontario’s anti-wind farm movement.

“We share their concerns on this issue and have been speaking about this for years. We have taken advice from engineers in the power industry, who say that wind power cannot fulfill any of the environmental benefit promises made for it, because it needs fossil-fuel backup.,” said Jane Wilson, president of Wind Concerns Ontario.

On the other side of the debate, the Canadian Wind Energy Association said it has had an opportunity to review the Hatch study.

It said there’s no surprise that when wind and natural gas generation are paired that the mix creates more greenhouse gases than nuclear. But when wind is paired with other potential electricity suppliers, the results are different.

“Unfortunately, by choosing to focus on only one scenario, the study failed to consider a broad range of equally or more plausible scenarios for the evolution of Canada’s electricity grid,” the Canadian Wind Energy Association said.
WHERE ONTARIO’S POWER COMES FROM

For the year 2013:
Nuclear: 59.2%
Hydro: 23.4%
Gas: 11.1%
Wind: 3.4%
Coal: 2.1%
Other: 0.8%

For one minute in time:
(Oct. 13, 2014, 8 a.m.)
Nuclear: 65.8%
Hydro: 24.6%
Wind: 5.9%
Gas: 2.7%”

Source: Ontario Independent Electricity System Operator

Read the original article and reader comments here.

Another danger: lightning strikes

19 Friday Apr 2013

Posted by Ottawa Wind Concerns in Health, Ottawa, Renewable energy, Wind power

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

cost benefit wind power, green wind power, wind farm North Gower, wind farm Richmond, wind farms, wind farms Ottawa, wind turbine safety, wind turbines

Lightning is a serious danger to wind turbines

 

With the tumultuous weather of the last few days, including a thunderstorm, one wonders, what happens to turbines in bad weather?

Answer: plenty.

Lightning strikes are commonplace and according to this article are responsible for 80% of the insurance claims for damage to turbine parts. They are also responsible for turbine equipment and blade fires. Read the article here: http://www.nachi.org/wind-turbines-lightning.htm

Note that the authors say the higher the turbine heights, the greater the risk of events. At 626 feet or 190 meters, the turbines proposed for North Gower-Richmond will be the tallest in North America. The turbines will be FOUR TIMES the height of the radio towers seen on prince of Wales Drive. (Why so high? Because there is NO WIND here on a regular basis, so they have to use taller equipment to catch what there is.)

A few weeks ago, a turbine caught fire near Goderich, Ontario. The wind power developer is now being criticized for a complete lack of safety controls (the supervisor drove around with his car window down to detect smoke) and for not notifying the municipality for more than 12 hours that a fire had occurred.

And of course, when equipment is on fire at that height, there is nothing you can do but let it burn and hope to control fires on the ground, caused by the flaming pieces. At Goderich, the debris was thrown 200 meters from the actual turbine tower.  Noxious smoke filled the air as the petrochemicals inside the nacelle burned.

But of course, wind power at this scale is “green” and “good” and helps the environment, says the industry lobby

Email us at ottawawindconcerns@gmail.com and donate please to help us cover legal costs and post box rental at PO Box 3, North Gower ON   K0A 2T0

How “green” is this?

14 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by Ottawa Wind Concerns in Renewable energy, Wind power

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

cost benefit wind power, devastation wind turbine construction, Great Spirit Island, green wind power, Manitoulin Island, MCSEA, Raymond Beaudry, Wind Concerns Ontario, wind power and environment, wind turbines and trees

Perhaps you are aware of the 60-megawatt wind power project proposed for Manitoulin Island. Northland Power recently got its approval and the latest development is that the citizens’ group there, Manitoulin Coalition for Safe Energy Alternatives or MCSEA, has withdrawn its application for an appeal. “The deck is stacked against us,” said leader Raymond Beaudry. He pointed to the dismissal of an appeal of the huge Samsung project in Chatham-Kent, saying that the “test” to prove irreversible harm to the environment was impossible.

Construction on the Manitoulin project is underway right now, with mature trees being felled like matchsticks to make way for the huge access roads needed to build and maintain the project.

This first phase is 60 MW or about 24 turbines but plans mean the island–known to native peoples as Great Spirit Island–could eventually have 600 turbines.

Here is a photo of the destruction going on this week. This type of impact on the environment is irreversible. In 20 years, when the whole wind “scam” will be over, and the profiteers long gone, the damage will live on.

Email us at ottawawindconcerns@yahoo.ca and donate, Please! to PO Box 3, North Gower ON K0A 2T0

Please look for news daily at http://www.windconcernsontario.ca

ManitoulinTreeRemoval

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