In a comment on my post Green Energy Kills Jobs stressdoc had this to say about his experience with wind power.
I am a mechanical engineer and quite knowledgeable about wind power and the reliability problems. They are many!
Wind power has a longer history in the EU, but the experience has been similar. Wind power has been subsidized in the EU for longer than it has here in the states. The results have been similar. Power from wind turbines is more expensive that the more traditional sources (coal, gas, hydroelectric, nuclear and oil). The only way that it viable is with government subsidies.
In the EU, turbines cannot be installed without monitoring system to watch their health. This is due to the many failures that have occurred. They cannot operate without insurance and the insurance is unavailable without monitoring. Here in the states, very few turbines are installed with monitoring.
Why? Simple. Turbines here are normally owned by investor groups that exist primarily to market the tax credits. The total cost of the turbine can be recouped in 3-5 years with these credits. The investor groups contract with the turbine manufacturers to install and operate the turbines for the 5 year warrantee period. By the time that the warrantee has expired, the turbines are paid for and any further running time is pure gravy. When they fail, shut them down and there is no loss.
Except, of course, to the tax payers that support this scam.
I have always thought that the subsidy for wind power ought to be phased out. I’m more convinced of that than ever. I am still in favor of wind power, where it makes unsubsidized economic sense.
Cross Posted at Power and Control
Comments
2 responses to “Wind Scam”
Wind power costs 3 to 4 times power generated from coal, is available only when the wind blows at sufficient force to turn the turbine, and has the added cost of high maintenance and recycle costs for phased out equipment.
Just east of San Francisco is the Altamont Pass wind farm. People always ask me, “Why are there so many windmills that aren’t turning?”
The answer is that it pays the owners to build them but not to run them. Once they have captured their 3.5 years of tax depreciation, it is no longer worth repairing them.