October 9, 2007
Wildlife , U.K, Environment
Author: Dean, Dixie
Unrecognised Wind Turbine Threat
In haste to find sustainable energy we have missed crucial factors
casting long shadows over land based wind farms. World wide, no one
knows the potential impact of their mechanical, non-acoustic machinery
vibrations on crucial tiny things lying at very base of the universal
food chain.
Such vibrations are often transmitted large distances and may well
adversely impact peat and soil; invertebrates; arthropods; fungi;
bio-aerosols only seen under high magnification; even individual living
cells. Soil may lose fertility; peat disintegrate, collapse, rot, and
flow down waterways bringing potential problems to land owners, whiskey
distillers, water, tourism and other major industries, along with major
problems for local authorities — as a 2003 case in Ireland showed. Peat
degradation is already visible on many wind farms.
Snails and other arthropods have vibration receptors along the entire
body surface. Snakes, spiders, earth and slow worms, flies, ticks,
mites, these and many more tiny creatures depend on vibrations to live
and function, and significant change could devastate them.
We know these vibrations exist. The M.O.D. was so concerned about
Eskdalemuir wind farm interfering with equipment monitoring
Comprehensive (nuclear) Test Ban Treaty compliance an 80Km exclusion
zone was declared round their underground monitoring facility until the
Applied and Environmental Geophysics Research Group measured and found
them unlikely to interfere with that work.
However the British Energy Technology Support Unit say they can’t be
predicted in advance and ‘basic understanding is low’. In America too
Oregon University’s Prof. Robert Schofield’s seismic measurements at
the LIGO Stateline Wind Project produced worrying evidence and a high
degree of uncertainty showing not enough is known to produce detailed
prediction methods.
In 2003 at Derrybrien in County Galway, Ireland, vibrations caused half
a kilometer of peat bog to slide into the Abhainn Da Loilioch river and
two weeks later sludge pouring down killed 50,000 fish and affected
50,000 more.
So wind farms may not be as friendly as many claim they are. Facing
this significant lack of knowledge I have e-petitioned the Prime
Minister and Scottish Parliament to ensure appropriate research is
commissioned as a matter of urgency, and am seeking a Peer and MP to
help me Petition the Lords, Commons, and U.N.
The big picture should not be allowed to obscure the little one and we
know ‘The devil lies in the detail’. Focussed on the horizon it may
well be what’s right under our nose will undermine our sustainable
energy plans.
Yours faithfully,
~~~
Dixie Dean (Prof. Em.)
BSc, MIET, MBA, BIM, FRSA
Hon. Lect., European Ctre. for Prof. Ethics
9th October 2007
