Mobile? Click HERE for m.isthmus.com
Connect with Isthmus on Twitter · Facebook · Flickr 

Tuesday, February 9, 2010 |  Madison, WI: 25.0° F  
The Paper
 

NEWS

The war over wind
Critics say green groups are too tight with industry

For entire cartoon, click gallery, above.
Gallery
For entire cartoon, click gallery, above.
Article Tools: Read moreRead more News items
Email this articleEmail this article
Print this articlePrint This Article
Email the authorEmail the author
Recommend This ArticleRecommend This Article Add to DiggShare this item

It was the strangest sensation Lynda Barry ever felt: a near-constant vibration within her body.

"You know how sometimes, around your eye, you'll get this little tic that kind of wiggles?" says Barry, of Footville, Wis., south of Janesville. "It was like having that in your ear and your chest. A pulsing. It's the weirdest feeling!"

Barry was standing in a house in Fond du Lac County, near a wind farm. The vibration she felt was created by wind-power turbines, one just 1,100 feet away. These were part of the Blue Sky Green Fields wind project, 88 wind towers owned and operated by We Energies. The owners of the house complained of ringing in their ears anytime the wind turbines and their 100-foot blades were spinning.

In all, Barry has visited more than 20 Wisconsin households located near wind-power projects, and spent many nights at various houses.

"A couple nights, it sounded like there was a washing machine or dishwasher running in the basement," she recalls. "A few times, it was like a jet coming through the house."

Barry became involved in wind-power issues a couple years back when a wind facility was proposed near her Rock County home. An author, playwright and cartoonist for alternative newspapers (her comic appeared in Isthmus from 1983 to 1995), Barry felt too little attention was being given to people actually living near Wisconsin wind farms. So she began visiting.

Admittedly, some people don't have any problems with the spinning turbines. Many others, though, think the noise, vibrations and flickering shadows created by the spinning turbine blades cause headaches, disorientation and sleep deprivation.

"What was really bothersome was just how distressed people were," says Barry. "You just see it over and over again."

What also troubles Barry is that various Wisconsin "green" groups have, in her opinion, downplayed environmental and human health concerns in their quest for renewable wind energy. They also seem far too willing to ride roughshod over the concerns of local communities.

"I don't doubt that their hearts are in it," says Barry of these groups, especially Clean Wisconsin and RENEW, which are supporting a wind-energy bill making its way through the Wisconsin Legislature. "They're paid lobbyists rather than environmental groups, though they don't go out of their way to let people know this," she says. "I'm so hoping that real environmental groups look more deeply into wind power."

Glenn Stoddard agrees. An environmental lawyer now operating from Eau Claire, Stoddard worked with Madison attorney Ed Garvey a decade ago. While in Madison, Stoddard represented a group of people who felt a wind farm near their homes greatly diminished their quality of life. Since then, Stoddard has helped a number of local governments create wind-power ordinances.

From that work, Stoddard has come to the same conclusions as Barry about "green" groups either not recognizing or choosing to ignore wind power's toll on people and the environment. He believes Clean Wisconsin and RENEW are, at the very least, fudging reality in the claims they make in support of wind power. He also thinks they've been too influenced by membership dues derived from wind developers and the energy industry, and by private foundation grants seeking to promote renewable energy.

"The utilities don't really reduce their use of fossil fuels, because when the wind isn't blowing or the turbines aren't functioning, they have to have backup power — it's always up and running," says Stoddard. "I didn't want to come to this conclusion, but it's almost, in my opinion, just a huge environmental Ponzi scheme."

Stoddard insists he's not opposed to alternative energy or even wind power. "Unfortunately," he says, "I think some environmental groups are not able or willing to look critically at these issues and, instead, have thrown in with the developers of these types of projects and technologies, who are really just in it for the money."

Representatives of Clean Wisconsin and RENEW vehemently deny any collusion, financial or otherwise, between themselves and the wind-power industry.

"We represent ourselves," says Michael Vickerman, RENEW's executive director. "It's true we have some wind companies as members. But a pretty small fraction of our revenue base comes from the wind developers — less than 5% of our annual revenues. I haven't received a dime from any wind company to lobby."

Ryan Schryver, an energy advocate with Clean Wisconsin, takes a similar stand.

"We certainly do receive a lot of [foundation] funding to promote renewable energy," he says. "It's what environmental advocacy organizations do. As far as I know, we've never received any funding specifically to promote wind power."

Clean Wisconsin and RENEW both have employees registered with the state as paid lobbyists — five and three, respectively, as of July 2009.

Schryver and Vickerman argue that wind power, whatever its problems, represents a much better alternative to Wisconsin's energy needs than electric generation power plants burning fossil fuels. As Schryver puts it, "Right now, wind power is the most cost-competitive form of renewable energy out there and the best way to wean ourselves off fossil fuels."

Wind power is rapidly becoming a big business in Wisconsin, with millions upon millions of dollars at stake. Developers are very eager to expand wind operations here.

That yen for expansion has taken a political form with Senate Bill 185, which would set certain standards for wind developers. The bill, in its current form, removes nearly all local regulatory power over wind-power development, putting it in the hands of the Wisconsin Public Service Commission (PSC).

If SB-185 passes, the PSC will be charged with considering human health and safety, as well as environmental issues, when setting development standards. The bill will make it much harder to actually stop a proposed project, by putting the onus on local communities to prove that a new wind facility will be a problem.

A few years back, a wind developer called EcoEnergy came to the town of Union, in Rock County just northwest of Janesville, and began signing landowners to wind-tower leases. Union had no wind regulations on the books, and, faced with untold numbers of the towers going up, it placed a moratorium on new construction. It then set out to draft a wind-power ordinance, at a cost of nearly $45,000.

"We had a lot of health and safety concerns," says Kendall Schneider, Union's town chairman.

Research done by a local law firm discovered that multi-tower operations generated not only electricity but also low-frequency sounds that move through the ground. Many reports, anecdotal and scientific, suggested that wind towers gave people headaches and disturbed their sleep patterns. Birds may be killed, while other wildlife are scared away. Placing towers in the town of Union would require blasting into the bedrock, which could fracture the rock and divert pollutants into the groundwater.

Wind towers have collapsed in the past, Schneider notes, in one case killing two wind-power workers in the state of Oregon. The turbines may also throw off the thick layers of ice that can form on the blades, sometimes hundreds of feet. And then there is the question of what happens to 400-foot towers when they reach the end of their useful lives.

"We might have these things standing around in disrepair in 20 years," says Schneider, making them a safety threat and eyesore that would hurt property values.

The town of Union's "Large Turbine" ordinance requires setbacks of a half-mile from existing homes — much farther than the 1,000-foot setback in a model ordinance for towns and municipalities on the PSC's website. And it lays out developer/owner responsibilities for removing the towers at the end of their useful lives.

The ordinance passed last November. Schneider says EcoEnergy never put in an application to build its towers, but he doesn't think it's lost interest. "Basically, they started lobbying at the Capitol and tried to get their foot in that way."

"That way" is SB-185 (its companion in the Assembly is AB-256), which has drawn opposition from local governments throughout Wisconsin.

"We've opposed the bill," says Rick Stadelman, executive director of the Wisconsin Towns Association. "We feel it takes away local control and turns it over to the PSC — which has not demonstrated a history of being impartial on this issue." He thinks that's clear from the PSC's support for the model ordinance, which he says was essentially drafted by the wind-power industry.

SB-185, says Stadelman, makes the PSC the final arbiter on any future conflicts between wind-power developers and local communities.

"PSC has a charge to come up with 25% alternative energy [use], according to the Governor's Task Force [on Global Warming], by 2025," says Stadelman. "Yet they're going to decide if a particular wind-power ordinance is reasonable or not? We think there's a basic conflict there."

Clean Wisconsin and RENEW also promote wind power as an economic boon for the state. For example, landowners receive leases of $5,000 to $8,000 per year for having wind towers on their lands. Local units of government receive money, too. Vickerman says the Blue Skies Green Field project pays out $580,000 annually, split between Fond du Lac County and the townships of Calumet and Marshfield. The project is also home to an operations center, employing 13 people full-time.

Local ordinances, like those in the town of Union, are such a stumbling block for wind development, says Vickerman, that Wisconsin utilities are loath to build here. He points to two wind projects the PSC recently green-lighted for Wisconsin utilities — in Iowa and Minnesota. The lost economic effects go far beyond the combined construction cost of $750 million.

Schryver, of Clean Wisconsin, sees wind power as a nice addition to Wisconsin's energy mix: "Especially when you look at it from a regional perspective, wind-power installations across the region are providing a lot of steady, predictable power for the grid."

Yet wind power is often misleadingly characterized as displacing the need for fossil fuels. Reading RENEW and Clean Wisconsin press releases and documents, for example, one can easily get the sense that energy-grid operators check to see how much wind power is forthcoming, and then call upon fossil-fuel-generating power plants to make up the difference. Yet, even as described by Schryver and Vickerman, that's not what happens at all.

Power companies have to provide enough electricity to meet their customers' daily needs and peak demands. That means coal and natural gas power plants are up and running at all times. Natural gas plants can run at reduced levels, as they can be jump-started rather quickly to make up for electricity shortfalls. But coal plants can't get going fast enough to contribute should wind energy fail on any given day. So power companies keep those plants churning, whether wind turbine blades are spinning or not.

Another sign that green groups may be going the extra mile in their support for wind power is Vickerman's dismissive response to the concerns about noise raised by those who live nearby.

"There's lots of things you can hear," he says. "This is the time of the year when you can hear crickets, all day and all night. Has there been an allegation stemming from that sound, that, you know, [we] can't live near crickets?"

Vickerman is equally dismissive of human health problems attributed to wind turbines.

"The opposition websites are brimming with these allegations, " he says. "But no causal relationship has been established. We don't think any health impacts have been established that are directly attributable to wind generation." He adds, "It's up to those who allege there are health impacts to document them. The burden of proof is on them."

A white paper published by the Minnesota Department of Health in May 2009 found that wind power indeed comes with human health consequences. The paper is a survey of other work and research, much of it done in Europe, which has a longer history with wind power. It concluded that the closer people live to wind towers, the more likely they are to have health problems.

The town of Union examined much of the same evidence. Its ordinance states: "Large wind turbines create a noise annoyance that can hinder physical and mental healing and can cause adverse health effects associated with sleep disturbance and deprivation, psychological distress, stress, anxiety, depression, headaches, fatigue, tinnitus and hypertension." And it refers to testimony from residents from communities with newly constructed turbines regarding "sleep deprivation and disturbance, headaches, nausea and dizziness."

Whether it comes from RENEW, Clean Wisconsin or wind developers, there's a clear assumption that wind power is good and green and very needed. So we must have more! Negative effects? Highly unlikely. And if there are problems...we'll deal with that later.

For instance, Alliant Energy sited some wind towers very close to Horicon Marsh, a major habitat for waterfowl, songbirds and raptors, plus a migratory stopover for millions of birds every year. Wind turbines do kill birds, though it's unclear how many. So when groups like Wisconsin Audubon voiced concerns, the Department of Natural Resources and Alliant agreed to a bird mortality research project — after the towers were up and spinning.

Senate Bill 185 takes the same "done deal" approach. As the bill clearly states, as long as a developer meets future guidelines, a community will have to accept said project whether it wants to or not.

"It's basically a preemption of local ordinances," says Stoddard. "The state knows best, the state knows what people need, and everything's going to be standardized."

Senate Bill 185 passed out of both the Assembly and Senate utility committees this summer, 10 to 2 in the Assembly, 6 to 1 in the Senate, and will likely see votes in both houses when the Legislature reconvenes Sept. 15-24. If the bill becomes law, Schryver expects several hundred new wind towers in the near future, with hundreds more to follow.

Lynda Barry has the same expectation — and dreads it.

"To meet the Governor's Task Force on Global Warming goals, they're going to have to site 14,000 new wind towers by 2024," says Barry. "That means all of rural Wisconsin, as far as I can tell."

Comments (10)

From Andy Olsen on 09/11/09 at 4:58 pm

Didn't Like the Editorial (oh, was that a news article?)

This is a very biased, factually flawed story. You can just start with the silly editorial cartoon which is based on (unbelievable) stories.

Then you publish false statements, like this, passed off as fact:

"The utilities don't really reduce their use of fossil fuels, because when the wind isn't blowing or the turbines aren't functioning, they have to have backup power — it's always up and running," says Stoddard.

And, the writer, with no attribution or obvious expertise, asserts this:

Power companies have to provide enough electricity to meet their customers' daily needs and peak demands. That means coal and natural gas power plants are up and running at all times. Natural gas plants can run at reduced levels, as they can be jump-started rather quickly to make up for electricity shortfalls. But coal plants can't get going fast enough to contribute should wind energy fail on any given day. So power companies keep those plants churning, whether wind turbine blades are spinning or not.

 

There is something called "spinning reserve" or "operating reserve." Spinning reserve predated wind power joining the grid at all. (So why do Glenn Stoddard and Brian McCombie and Isthmus imply to your readers that this only happens with wind power?)

Plants use much less fuel at spinning reserve versus full capacity. The fossil-fueled generation is backed off as wind resources engage. Power dispatchers pay closer attention to weather forecasts these days to plan for wind conditions and back off utility resources. 

Even fossil fuel generators need to be backed up! News flash: even fossil generators do not run 100% of the time. Where do these two  think power come from when fossil and nuclear plants are down for maintenance and outages? (If they know all this, this anti-wind argument is all the more disturbing. If they don't know this, why listen to them on the subject?)

As far as these claims of noise like jets or trains from wind turbines, I've been to many many wind farms and airports and trains. That's just not true. It's a ridiculous and easily disproven allegation. (In the video above they hilariously claim that is happening. I guess it just doesn't occur while recording devices are on so they could provide proof.)

Then you have the writer looking at money on one side, the pro-wind side, but holding a blind eye to the money on the anti-wind side. Who is paying for their pricey lobbyists? What other industry money has rallied to the anti-wind side? What about the anti-wind people who say they want suburban development, not wind towers? How about the farmers earning income from the tower leases?

None of that doesn't help the author's cause.

This is just absurd:

"To meet the Governor's Task Force on Global Warming goals, they're going to have to site 14,000 new wind towers by 2024," says Barry.

There is sooooo much wrong with that statement!

a) Wind power is not the only renewable electricity technology.

b) Wind turbine technology is rapidly advancing and the power out each tower is increasing. 

c) Energy efficiency is lowering demand.

d) etc, etc...

Please ask Lynda Barry to provide the backup to this claim that the Isthmus presents as fact. Whose demand projection is she using? What is the turbine capacity she assumes?

From Dave Kiedrowski on 09/11/09 at 9:05 pm

<!-- @page { margin: 0.79in } P { margin-bottom: 0.08in } -->

I have a few key problems with this article:


1. Bird kills: It has been long documented that, while some bird fatalities do occur at wind farms, the number of birds killed by wind turbines is exponentially smaller the number of those killed by cars, communication towers, windows and even HOUSECATS!


2. So called "Ice Throws" from wind turbines are a half-truth, at best.  A wind turbine rotates because of the lift generated by the wind over the airfoil of the blade, just as an aircraft uses the lift of its wings to fly through the air.  Does anyone know what happens when large sheets of ice accumulate on the  wings of an aircraft? The wings no longer produce enough lift to keep the aircraft in flight and the aircraft will stall and in some cases literally fall out of the sky.  This is also the case for a wind turbine's blade (wing). When the ice accumulates, the lift generated by the blades will not be enough to operate the turbine. How can a idle turbine (not turning) "throw" a piece of ice (small or large) "Several hundred feet." That claim just does NOT make sense.


3. "The utilities don't really reduce their use of fossil fuels, because when the wind isn't blowing or the turbines aren't functioning, they have to have backup power — it's always up and running,"--Not True, The load on the utility grid is CONTINOUSLY increasing and decreasing. The dynamic nature of the load means that power-plants must be continuously "throttled" up and down to match the load. While the fossil fueled power-plants may still be running while the windturbines generate, they do so with a decreased load and therefore with decreased fuel consumption. EVERY Kilowatt hour generated by a wind turbine, solar array, or hydro plant is a kilowatt hour that will NOT need to be generated fossil fuels and therefore a good thing.

4. Senate Bill 185 wouldn't be necessary if the governments in communities where wind energy projects have been proposed and stonewalled by outrageous ordinances, had made an honest attempt to write fair and sensible ordinances (Manitwoc and Calumet counties, the town of Stockbridge and a handful of other counties). To those opposed to Senate Bill 185, you have the governments of those communities to thank.


Wind turbines are safe, aside from one isolated incident in Germany in which a skydiver (Possibly intentionally) flew into a turbine, no member of the public has EVER been injured by a wind turbine. The opposition to renewable energy (in particular wind energy) has, since their inception, relied solely on nothing but half-truths, detestable scare tactics and testimony of who ever they can get (pay) to aid them in their propaganda campaign. I highly encourage everyone to do some research, even visit a windfarm, learn the REAL facts and find out for themselves how they feel about the clean, green, fossil-free electricity that flows from these beautiful machines that we are lucky enough to have dotting the landscape of Wisconsin. Why don't we all apply our state motto to the way we think about energy? Forward.

 

-Dav

From Ellie Stewart on 09/12/09 at 10:24 pm

Proponents of commercial wind can not handle the truth. 

DAVE:  Cats do not kill golden eagles and cats are not marched to court and fined for bird kills.  Wind Industry gets a free pass to kill birds and other energy companies (Exonmobil for example) have to pay $600,000 for killing 85 birds.  There should be no double standard.  WInd industry should pay for killing golden eagles and other protected birds. 

ICE THROW is real....as well as turbine failure from ice accumulation. 

Property values will decline when a wind plant is placed close by. 

Wind turbines make people sick.  Acciona (company wants to put in turbines in NC) is being investigated for the low frequency sounds emitted from their turbines  that are similar to the sounds used as TORTURE by the Germans in WWII. 

Dave do you think people "make up" that they are sick? 

Wind energy does not help slow gobal warming.  There is no benefit...it is a waste.

The wind industy abandons standards of objectivity and the their obligation to find the truth. 

Wind plants are land intensive and it is merely a highly subsidized destruction of our countryside. 

Thanks to the author for telling it like it REALLY is!  People should be VERY concerned about how massive windplants will affect their lives.

 

From Joan Lagerman on 09/13/09 at 12:29 am

Andy Olsen

You can just start with the silly editorial cartoon

which is based on (unbelievable) stories.

As the person depicted in the cartoon - Joan L.

All I can say is, come visit our house when the wind is blowing and I'll make a believer out of you.

From Jim Bembinster on 09/13/09 at 6:46 am

Before Wisconsin builds another wind turbine let's do an audit of the production from the existing turbines.  Is 20-25% capicity factor acceptable?  Is that all we expect from our renewable energy dollars?

All this revenue we are allegedly loosing.  Do turbines print money as they turn, I don't think so.  This money comes from us the taxpayers and rate payers.  We can get a better bang for our buck with other forms of renewable energy that will produce real dispatchable and reliable electricty.  Wind and solar are the two most heavily subsidized types of renewable energy paid for by you and me. 

Wind energy is not dispatchably so the more turbines your attach to the power grid the more unsatble it will become.  Google the Reuters article from Feb. 2008, The Texas Brownout for an example of what can happen when grid operators rely on wind energy without adequate coal power backup.

Ask the power providers and wind developers to identify the coal plants that will be permanently decommissioned as a result of wind turbines.  There will be none.  Until 2008 Germany was the world leader in installed capicity of turbines.  Not one coal plant has ever been shut down there or any place else in the world no matter how many turbines are built.  In Germany 26 coal plants are either proposed or under construction. 

The wind developer or power provider that tells you they are going to provide wind energy to you home is tha same as a your water utility saying they will provide tap water to you home when it is raining.

Wind is ancient stuff, it just doesn't work.

Jim Bembinster

From Andy Olsen on 09/14/09 at 2:23 pm

"Wind is ancient stuff, it just doesn't work."

That's rich. So if something has been used for centuries, we should stop using it.

Hey, Jim, even more ancient is planting crops! Should we stop? By your logic it doesn't work.

"Ask the power providers and wind developers to identify the coal plants that will be permanently decommissioned as a result of wind turbines.  There will be none. "

There have been about 100 coal plants turned down in the past few years. It's unlikely any single plant was turned down in favor of one other specific technology or even for one single reason. They are typically turned down for a number of reasons, including cost. And new wind power is cheaper (given a wind resource) than new coal.

As operating experience has grown we have found that the intermittent resources can be integrated in power pools at higher than levels. IEEE just had a paper on this recently.

 

 

From Andy Olsen on 09/14/09 at 2:36 pm Joan, I've been to wind farms before so I don't know what value there would be in visiting yours. I guess it would be good to have been to that particular one where the complaints come from (on a windy day, yes). I'll try to ring you up when I can make it. I just don't see where all the alleged noise would come from. Jets produce noise from fuel combustion. Trains from fuel combustion and steel wheels on rails and all those moving parts. Where do you suggest a wind tower generates noise like a jet or train? There is no combustion. The only friction is the rotor axle in the generator. I'm just not seeing it. I've been to wind farms on windy days and have not heard it. If you guys can't produce recordings of the alleged noise, then you might provide an explanation of how it is created to offer a plausible argument.
From Dave Kiedrowski on 09/14/09 at 8:36 pm

 

Ellie:

If wind turbine operators are forced to pay for killed birds, so should the owner of any large building, communication tower or picture window.

Ice throw, is NOT real. If you could find me a credible source that has ever documented the dreaded ice "Several hundred foot" ice throw, I would be very suprized.

I don't believe people are "making up that they are sick," infact, I think that alot of those people truly believe that they are sick.  All it takes is someone to plant the idea that wind turbines can somehow make you sick, in their heads and the imagination takes care of the rest.

Andy: I have spent a few hours total in varying wind conditions at BlueSkyGreenFields, Cedar Ridge, and the Forward Energy Center, and have failed to hear the Jet Engine/Train noise!

 

From Eric Grunwald on 09/17/09 at 9:09 am Would you like a big fat coal plant in your back yard instead of wind power? I doubt it! So how about some progressive talk and less poo-pooing when people propose good ideas? I am very concerned about the tremendous bias that was readily evident in Brian McCombie’s article. Furthermore I cannot believe the absolute inability of many recent commenters’ here to accept that no idea should be dismissed when we do not yet have a solution that works. It sounds as if you want to do nothing but wait for a solution to fall out of the sky (pun intended). It also sounds like Lynda Barry actually thinks there is some sort of conspiracy to make us live near wind turbines. You would think that presumably smart people would stop complaining and figure out how to combine the benefits of all ideas and arrive at a workable solution. But instead all I read about is complaining of high pitched noises, ice, and random bird collisions. People that do this are the reason why we as Americans are falling behind in the world. Is this the kind of person you want to be? Do want future generations to look at us with disdain because we had a chance to do something, but sat around arguing instead? The Chinese destroyed a major chunk of their archaeological history and put the lives of countless people in jeopardy when they built the Three Gorges Dam. Do you think their great grandchildren will say they did the wrong thing? Probably not. Will the anti-wind lobby now say that hydro is a bad idea? Well it is not. The dam has produced 320 terawatt hours of energy since 2003, all without burning a single lump of coal. Just like hydro, wind is not the only solution; it is one part of the solution, along with solar and others. And, I think that people should recognize that they cannot have everything just the way they want it. This is not a perfect world. And if you are able to read the words on this page, you are probably not a baby anymore. So quit making complaints and start making progress!
From John Houle on 09/22/09 at 1:28 pm

The shadow effect inside the house is annoying. I know, try closing the shades. How long does this effect really last? Depends on where the sun is shining, an hour or 2? I guess the wind turbine is too close to the house. Perhaps the wind plant operators can shut off that turbine doing certain times of the day to appease them.

The bird issue is blown out of proportion because of the Altamont Pass wind farm in California. There they have some very old wind turbines that should be torn down. They are only 60-80 feet tall, they have lattice towers that hawks and other birds like perch on and have faster moving blades. I used to work in the field and saw this many times. There is alot of ground squirrels for them to east there.  One theory is that the hawks are zeroed in on the food and do not avoid the blades. Newer trubines are much higher, are tube towers and the blades are more avoidable by birds.

Log in or register to comment

moviesmusiceats
Select a Movie
Select a Theater
PluggedcommentsViewedForum
Promotions Contact us Privacy Policy Jobs RSS
Collapse Photo Bar