I have
never been a fan of wind farms,
above Filson the
dog who works on a wind farm in Southern California, photograph Rogue Detection Teams, why am I down on windfarms? without government
subsidies and other cash breaks they just do not cut the mustard, take Hawaii with its trade winds one of the windiest places that wind farms could be placed, the record is not very good, did I mention that after 25 years the blades are worn out, but wait for it, they can not be recycled they have to go to landfill! never mind the
horrific cost to wildlife, and here is the problem, humans are terrible at finding bats and birds killed by wind
turbines, however dogs are great at it, the specific problem of bat deaths
at wind turbines first came to biologists’ attention in 2003, when 2,000
bats turned up dead on a West Virginia wind farm, most bat deaths
occur during autumn migrations, and that is just the tip of a very huge iceberg when it comes to wildlife deaths by windfarm, on wind
farms in the US a patchwork of federal, state, and local regulations might govern how
companies have to monitor wildlife deaths, but reporting requirements vary
widely. This means that reliable data on deaths are hard to come by, estimates
suggest that turbines
in North America kill 600,000 to 949,000 bats and 140,000 to 679,000
birds a year, and that is just in North America, strange how the greenies and tree huggers never mention unpleasant side effects like these, for the full low down have a look here, great that dogs can help us, just so sad it is is in finding dead wildlife that we have knowingly killed.
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