Friend to Wind Turbine Victims, French Senator Jean Germain, Dies Mysterious Death

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‘SUICIDE’ OF FRENCH SENATOR JEAN GERMAIN, FRIEND OF WINDFARM VICTIMS

Written by Mark Duchamp, World Council for Nature on 10 Apr 2015

French Senator Jean Germain, a friend of windfarm victims, has been found dead in what appears to be a suicide. He had made increasingly effective political opposition against ‘Big Green’ interests in recent times. His death may be considered suspicious. Jean Germain As UK national newspaper, The Guardiannoted:

“He is a martyr of the republic. He has been thrown to the dogs” said his lawyer (1).
Recently, Jean Germain had convinced his fellow Senators to propose an amendment doubling the setback between wind turbines and habitations to 1,000 meters. The French government, house of representatives and  wind industry are opposed to it.
In a country like France, a 1,000-meter buffer zone would make relatively few wind projects possible. But the majority of Senators thought the health of their constituents was more important.
Other French politicians who, according to the authorities, committed suicide:
 
 Pierre Bérégovoy in 1993, who “shot himself” – yet it turned out later that he had two bullets in his head (sic)  (2)
– Robert Boulin, who was found in a pond in 1979, with clear evidence of blows to the face – in other words, this Minister would have commited suicide by beating himself up (3).
– There may be more examples…
We are not implying that the death of Jean Germain is suspicious. We are just remembering that, in these matters, it may take years before the whole truth is known. Prudently, a number of media have been titling: French senator found dead in apparent suicide (4).
If you read French, see the moving letter from Pascale Hoffmeyer, WCFN’s Coordinator for Switzerland: “… the distress of giant turbines’ neighbours …” (5).
Contact:
Mark Duchamp      +34 693 643 736
Chairman
www.wcfn.org

Brilliant Aussies, Drag the Truth Out of the Windies, and Into the light of Day!

Senate’s Wind Farm Inquiry: Steven Cooper’s Evidence on his Groundbreaking Study

senate review

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The Australian Senate Inquiry into the great wind power fraud kicked off on 30 March.

And, fitting it was, that this band of merry men – Queensland National Senator, Matthew Canavan, WA Liberal, Chris Back, independents Nick Xenophon and John Madigan, Liberal Democrat, David Leyonhjelm, Family First Senator, Bob Day (and one, not-so-happy, Labor women, and wind power fraud apologist), Tasmanian ALP Senator, Anne Urquhart – set to work taking the lid off the wind industry’s “stinky pot”, at Portland, Victoria: the town next door to Pacific Hydro’s Cape Bridgewater disaster.

The hall was packed with people from threatened communities from all over Victoria and South Australia; and long-suffering wind farm neighbours from there – and from elsewhere – keen to hear Steven Cooper’s exposition on the findings of his groundbreaking study (see our posts here and here and here).

Set out below is the Hansard (transcript) of the evidence given by Steven Cooper. What he has to say is a study in how careful, skilled and methodical people, like Cooper, and all bar one of the Senators on the Inquiry, are out to help the wind industry’s countless and unnecessary victims; and how, on the other hand, the wind industry and its apologists, like Anne Urquhaut, are hell-bent on preventing that from ever happening.

Senate Select Committee on Wind Turbines:

Application of regulatory governance and economic impact of wind turbines COOPER, Mr Steven, Principal Engineer, The Acoustic Group Pty Ltd
HANSARD
30 March 2015

John Madigan

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CHAIR (Senator Madigan): Good morning. I declare open this first public hearing of the Senate Select Committee on Wind Turbines. Firstly I would like to acknowledge the traditional owners of the land on which we meet and pay respect to their elders past and present.

There are various matters I want to raise before we proceed with our first witness. I remind all present here today that in giving evidence to a parliamentary committee witnesses are protected by parliamentary privilege. Firstly, it is a contempt of the Senate for a witness to be threatened or disadvantaged on the basis of their evidence to a parliamentary committee. Privilege resolutions 611 and 612 clearly state that interference with or molestation of witnesses may constitute a criminal offence under section 12 of the Parliamentary Privileges Act.

Secondly, I want to repeat the following advice from the Clerk of the Senate that was provided to the Senate Committee Affairs References Committee inquiry into wind farms in 2011. If a person who is covered by a confidentiality provision in an agreement gives evidence to a parliamentary committee about the contents of that agreement, they cannot be sued for breaching that confidentiality agreement.

Thirdly, I remind everyone here today that a person who is adversely named in evidence to a parliamentary committee has a right of reply. A right of reply has been afforded to those people who have been adversely named in written submissions to this inquiry. For purposes of the public hearings where a witness adversely reflects on another person, I will interrupt the witness and may suspend proceedings. There will of course be a right of reply for individuals who have been adversely reflected upon in the Hansard transcript. It is the committee’s intention to gather evidence that is directly relevant to the terms of reference for this inquiry. While adverse reflections on third parties may be a matter of related interest, it does not assist the committee in responding directly and objectively to the terms of reference.

Fourthly, this is a sitting of the federal parliament, and it is my responsibility as chair of this committee to ensure that witnesses have the opportunity to speak without interjections. If members of the public here today do disrupt the committee’s proceedings, I will suspend the committee and ask the interjector to leave the room.

Fifthly, the following comments are directed to members of the media who are present here today. There are rules that govern the attendance of the meeting of federal parliamentary committee hearings. A copy of these rules is available from the secretariat. I ask that members of the media present here today do not film or photograph from behind the committee and do not get in between the committee and the witnesses. If you are unsure where you can film or photograph, please ask the committee secretariat for instructions.

There is an opportunity at 3:55 pm today for people who are not appearing as witnesses on the program to give a short statement to the committee. This session will run for 30 minutes. There will be a strict three-minute time limit on these statements. When three minutes are up, I will ask the next speaker to take the microphone. To participate in this session I ask that you register with the secretariat. The order for speaking will be on a first-come, first-served basis. The secretariat will write your name down and advise you of the time that you will be speaking.

Welcome. Information on parliamentary privilege and the protection of witnesses and evidence has been provided to you, and copies are available from the secretariat. I now invite you to make a short opening presentation and at the conclusion of your remarks I will invite members of the committee to put questions to you.

Steven Cooper giving evidence to the Senate Committee on wind farms

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Mr Cooper: I am an acoustical consulting and vibration engineer based in Lilyfield, a suburb in Sydney. I am here in the capacity of myself and my company, although I am the author of the Cape Bridgewater wind farm noise study, which was funded by Pacific Hydro. The study is a small telephone book, and I do not intend in terms of my submission to go through that study. It identifies problems, issues, measurements and results that occurred from the wind farm study. For simplicity one can go to the executive summary in the conclusion. The importance is that study has been hailed around the world as finding new information and material previously not put together or understood with regard to wind farms. It is such a point that I have been invited to a number of conferences in America to talk about this very study.

I have provided a submission to the committee, but it only went to the committee late on Friday, so it was not up on the website. It covers a brief outline of the study itself and then two specific parts of the terms of reference, of which there are some issues that I have raised of a technical nature. To go through the study itself will take some time, so I am basically here to answer any questions that the committee may wish to put to me in relation to the study.

CHAIR: Senator Leyonhjelm.

david leyonhjelm

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Senator LEYONHJELM: Good morning and thank you for coming along. I would like to know a little bit about you to begin with. How long have you been an acoustics engineer?

Mr Cooper: Thirty-seven years.

Senator LEYONHJELM: Have you been involved in standards committees?

Mr Cooper: Yes, I have been on a number of standards committees here in Australia in terms of noise and vibration. I was on the aircraft noise standards committee for 26 years, the railway noise subcommittee for about 10 years, the architectural acoustics standards in relation to laboratory testing for about 12 years, the whole-body vibration standards committee for 25 years and committees overseas in relation to helicopter and aircraft noise. I have been with the Helicopter Association International for acoustics fly neighbourly committee for about 23 years. I have been an observer to the American standards aircraft noise committee and I have advised the International Civil Aviation Organisation by way of the UK Department of Transport.

Senator LEYONHJELM: Have you been an expert witness based on your expertise as an acoustician?

Mr Cooper: Yes, I must do about 50 cases a year.

Senator LEYONHJELM: Fifty cases a year?

Mr Cooper: Yes. I appear regularly in the Land Environment Court of New South Wales and sometimes, in terms of licensing matters, local courts or what used to be a licensing court and occasionally district court, Supreme Court matters and two matters in the Federal Court.

Senator LEYONHJELM: All right. Let’s get on to some broad detail. Is it an established fact—is it scientifically proven—that wind turbines emit infrasound?

Mr Cooper: Yes it is.

Senator LEYONHJELM: What can you tell us about infrasound? I am only a senator, so I do not know anything much. Give me a run-through on what it means.

Mr Cooper: If we imagine in many cases considering noise as the same as light, if you pass light through a prism, it will break up into different colours of the rainbow. We go from the reds, which is a low frequency, up to the yellows and ultraviolet as a high frequency. So that covers the broad spectrum of noise that we can hear, from bass in music up to cymbals, but there is also energy, just as in light that is generated outside what you can see. People understand infrared exists and can be used for therapy, and there is ultraviolet, which contributes to sunburn. In terms of acoustics we have the same terminology. Infrasound are the low frequencies below the normal level of hearing, so they are normally considered as being below 20 hertz. Ultrasonics are the frequencies above what we can hear and are normally taken as above 24,000 hertz or thereabout. As we age we lose our level of hearing in terms of its dynamics of frequency range, so some people have trouble hearing high frequencies. Musicians who train themselves to listen to music can pick a lot of these frequencies. Bats are very good at picking the high frequencies they use as sonar. So infrasound covers the area below normal hearing. Infrasound therefore is normally confined to the region between zero hertz or DC and 20 hertz. Low frequency in terms of discussion of turbines and general industry is considered between 20 hertz and 200 hertz.

The ear responds in a non-linear manner to noise. What happens is that we do no respond or detect the noise in the same way as a sound level meter. Sound level meters simply measure pressure. As we get different levels of sound, so the hearing changes in its sensitivity. You can generate high levels of infrasound where people can hear it, so studies have been done to determine what is called the threshold of hearing just as you can do the threshold of hearing for sound. When we get down to a level that it is no longer heard, that becomes inaudibility. The thresholds of hearing are done with various subjects, and you get a mean level. What is typically taken is the threshold of inaudibility is one standard deviation or about 10 decibels below the levels. When we measure noise, the common concept is to use decibels—after Alexander Bell, the originator of Bell—and it is a logarithmic scale. So one talks about different levels by reference to decibels.

Below what you can hear for infrasound are levels much lower at which people can perceive the level, so we actually have a threshold of perception where people can be subject to infrasound and they can feel it. Then at a much higher level we get the level of infrasound where people can hear it. Then when it goes above certain levels it can be a level of pain. You can do the same thing with the audible noise. We can have satisfactory levels, we can have painful levels, we can have inaudible levels. We can still have levels lower than inaudibility. It is just that we cannot hear it.

Senator LEYONHJELM: Does infrasound travel further? Is it transmitted any differently from audible sound?

Mr Cooper: Yes. What happens is that one normally expresses the attenuation or loss of energy on a basis of distance. Typically, for normal noises—the noises that you are hearing at the moment, traffic noise or industry noise when you are outside—it is normally considered to fall off at six decibels per doubling of distance. If you have a noise of, say, 50 decibels and you are 20 metres from a noise source—imagine a pump or an air conditioner—when you then go to double the distance, it will go down six decibels. Double the entire distance again and it will go down another six. That is normal noise and a normal propagation.

When you are dealing with the low frequency down to infrasound, the wavelength—that is, the dimension from a positive to negative and back to a positive of a wavelength—is much longer. Infrasound propagates at a lower rate. For many people who have carried out the work, it is between three and four decibels per doubling of distance. On low frequency energy, if you are subject to monitoring a rock concert, what people hear is the boom, boom, boom and they can hear the noise; but as you go further away, the general noise disappears and they are left with the base. The base frequency travels longer distances and particularly with infrasound.

matt canavan

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Senator CANAVAN: How long is the distance?

Mr Cooper: I have measured infrasound from the Waterloo wind farm at eight kilometres. The University of Adelaide, during a shutdown of Waterloo, measured the Hallett wind farm, which was something in the order of 30 kilometres away. They are not hearing it, but they can see the data by the specific frequencies that are associated with the operation of turbines.

Senator LEYONHJELM: Does the ability to hear it or feel sensations from infrasound vary by individual?

Mr Cooper: Yes, different people will be subject differently. For an example, with sick sickness—going out on a boat—not everybody will get seasick. Certainly, not everybody will hear or perceived noise from various industrial operations. In terms of wind farms, not everybody detects the presence of the infrasound.

Senator LEYONHJELM: Can it penetrate insulated buildings and be felt in a built environment, so to speak, differently from outside?

Mr Cooper: If we take the first part of your question, all products that we have in building elements have a lower degree of the attenuation for low frequencies than high frequencies.

Senator LEYONHJELM: So they are more likely to be felt inside a building?

Mr Cooper: We will do the transmission part first. There is a lower degree of attenuation in the low frequency and infrasound. As to what happens with people perceiving low frequency or infrasound, firstly it is dependent on how loud or how much energy is there and secondly it depends as to whether the building interacts. In some cases, when you have energy such as infrasound that impinges upon buildings, it sets parts of the rooms, the walls and the floors into vibration so that it amplifies. If you go into an echoing room, everything sounds differently than if you go into a cinema, where it is designed to be dead. The room provides colouration of sound. You can understand that for normal sound. If you look at it or study acoustics, different materials in rooms change how a sound occurs once it is in the room. This same thing happens with infrasound. As a function of how big the room is or how small the room is, there can be natural modes or echoes that occur in the room.

URQUHART2

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Senator URQUHART: Given that we are not going to have a lot of time, are you happy to take questions on notice if I do not get through the number of questions I have got?

Mr Cooper: Yes, no problem.

Senator URQUHART: Thanks very much. Can I just confirm that you do not have any medical qualifications and that your experience is not of a medical background?

Mr Cooper: Correct.

Senator URQUHART: I understand that the study that you were involved in involved no medical professionals and also you did not gather any medical data about the participants. Is that correct?

Mr Cooper: That is correct.

Senator URQUHART: You and Pacific Hydro released a joint statement regarding the report that you talked about earlier. I would just like to go to some of the statements to see if you still agree with them. Firstly, the Acoustic Group and Pacific Hydro agreed that the study was not a scientific study. Do you still agree with that statement?

Mr Cooper: Yes.

Senator URQUHART: Secondly, the Acoustic Group and Pacific Hydro agreed that the report does not recommend or justify a change in regulations. Do you still agree with that statement?

Mr Cooper: Yes.

Senator URQUHART: Thirdly, the Acoustic Group and Pacific Hydro agreed that this was not a health study and did not seek or request any particulars as to health impacts. Do you agree with that?

Mr Cooper: Yes.

Senator URQUHART: Finally, on the statement that the study clearly states that no correlation had been found with standard acoustic parameters versus the wind farm, is that correct?

Mr Cooper: Yes.

Senator URQUHART: There are a number of experts that a very serious concerns about the methodology and the validity of your study. Among these are issues with the tiny sample size of six people and the fact that you only use subjects who already thought that wind turbines were the source of their health problems. Can I ask how you chose the participants of your study?

Mr Cooper: Yes. If you look specifically at the brief, the brief said that I was to undertake noise and vibration measurements to determine certain sound levels and certain wind speeds that related to specific local residents. The brief, which was issued by Pacific Hydro, said six residents. Those were the six residents, being the three houses that were looked at. Therefore, that was a restriction right from the start. The brief says that that is what I had to do. Some of the comments that have been made are from people who actually have not read the brief or looked at the report.

Senator URQUHART: The reason why there was not a larger sample size or a control group was that that is what the brief actually said from Pacific Hydro.

Mr Cooper: That is correct.

Senator URQUHART: Is it right that you have a history of appearing in court cases for wind opponents and casting aspersions on the academic research which shows that there is no evidence of the health impacts of wind turbines?

Senator LEYONHJELM: That is a bit loaded.

Senator URQUHART: I did not interrupt when you are talking, Senator Leyonhjelm. I am sure if Mr Cooper is uncomfortable with answering it, he will tell me.

Mr Cooper: I have appeared in one court case in South Australia and a VCAT hearing in Melbourne; I am not sure if you would classify it as a court as a strict technicality. I have been in no court cases in Sydney. I have only appeared in two matters in terms of providing evidence as to measurements that have occurred in wind farms. As to health impacts, I am not qualified so I have reported on the acoustic matters, that there is a wind turbine signature that is generated and that the dBA level which appears in permits, conditions and guidelines—so the New Zealand standard—do not cover infrasound and low-frequency noise. There is an issue there that they are inadequate to cover that specific spectrum of noises generated from wind turbines.

There is an issue in looking at saying this is what happens. Of the 11 wind farm that I have been to to conduct measurements, every one of them has exhibited this wind turbine signature. I am not the only person who has identified this. As my report sets out, the University of Adelaide has found this, the Shirley wind farm people identified this signature and Health Canada, in their major study, has identified the same signature. All of them have identified that that signature is not covered by the dBA method.

Senator URQUHART: With some of those groups that you talk about there—the Shirley wind farm and Health Canada, et cetera—do you have documentation supporting that?

Mr Cooper: Yes.

Senator URQUHART: Are you able to provide that to the committee?

Mr Cooper: Yes. I have made a reference in the submission to the material—

Senator URQUHART: As to all of those?

Mr Cooper: Yes. I have made reference to and I have included some data from the University of Adelaide, I have included the principal graph from the Shirley wind farm main report, I have included the spectrum information from Health Canada and I have made references to the primary source documents. For Health Canada, I have the two reports that have been issued by the group doing infrasound. I can give that to you. There are parts of it redacted in terms of it. I can certainly give you the entire Shirley wind farm report and also papers that have been issued by the University of Adelaide’s research group, who have got an Australian Research Council grant to look wind farms.

Senator URQUHART: Great. If you could provide that, that would be useful. On the one that has the redactions, why are there redactions in it?

Mr Cooper: It identifies locations in terms of it. It is the same thing in terms of the Cape Bridgewater study. None of the residents are identified by name. The numbers that are used are houses, which are not the same as any other studies. The numbers went way up. They became house 87, 88 and 89. I have not mentioned any names. The residents have provided their section and an appendix for their comments, but the report is specific about not identifying people. That is the same thing that has occurred in the Health Canada report, because they talked about some locations. That is what I assume is the basis of the reductions.

Senator URQUHART: I understand the South Australian Environment, Resources and Development Court dismissed your expert evidence against the Stony Gap Wind Farm, saying of your work:

At present, on the basis of his evidence before us, it seems that his approach to the task includes privileging the subjective experiences of those residents who have experienced problems, and their perceptions as to the cause of these experiences, over other contradictory data.

What would you say to that?

Mr Cooper: I would say two things: the court also, if you read the judgement, said that they are required to utilise the guidelines that are in existence at the time—and the South Australian EPA guidelines actually state that a well maintained wind farm does not produce infrasound, so it has a bit of a problem; and it uses DBA so it has a second problem. The evidence that was provided at the ERD court was actually during the early stages of doing the work there at Cape Bridgewater.

The fundamental problem that you have in looking at the issue of wind farms is that there have not been health studies so the health studies are not there to show either an impact or no impact. Therefore, you cannot answer the question about what is occurring. It is a concept that I presented in Portland 2½ years ago. To get into this area, we needed to find first a signature from an acoustic viewpoint and do a socio acoustic study to work out the impacts from the noise perspective. Then when we had that we could move into the full character in the medical studies.

You read out just earlier that Pacific Hydro have agreed that there is no correlation between the normal noise indices and the wind farm. What that means is that even the permit conditions are not correlated to wind farms whereas if you use what I call the wind turbine signature, that is correlated to the wind farm and it is that concept that now enables that to move forward in the medical study. So acousticians that have been researching wind farms on both sides of the fence have actually said this concept of WTS or DWTS—it is in my report—actually make sense because it fits up with all the graphs and now it gives a tool so that you can move into the medical phase.

There are a number of places in America that are already adopting the survey profile that was done here for Cape Bridgewater and are looking at that very exact tool with people looking forward to move forward into the medical studies. If you did not have a way of relating the wind farm to what was occurring in the houses then you could not do the medical studies. Therefore, what you have said in the ERD judgement is correct and that is the basis why it is correct.

Senator URQUHART: Is that the same process that you undertook with the Cape Bridgewater study?

Mr Cooper: The Cape Bridgewater study had a specific brief. The brief was to determine certain wind speeds and certain sound levels that related to disturbances. It was not looking at health. I did satisfy the brief on both of those components. Having satisfied the brief, we now have an index that says we can relate it to disturbance. That index allows those studies to proceed.

Chris Back

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Senator BACK: I go to the New Zealand standard 6808. You made the observation earlier that it does not measure infrasound; it is not mention infrasound in its particular assessment and measurement of sound.

Mr Cooper: Yes, it does not measure infrasound and it uses of a DBA parameter and that does not work for infrasound because the filter curve that appears has a very substantial amount of attenuation that it becomes insignificant in the DBA level.

Senator BACK: So the New Zealand standard is actually the one that has been used throughout Australia. Is that correct in satisfying local and state government requirements in planning?

Mr Cooper: That is incorrect. The New Zealand standard is used in Victoria and it is referenced in the permit for Cape Bridgewater Wind Farm and other wind farms in Victoria.

Senator BACK: What about in other states?

Mr Cooper: In other states, South Australia has a guideline and that guideline is also being used in New South Wales and sometimes it is being looked at in Queensland.

Senator BACK: And do those guidelines from South Australia and New South Wales also include infrasound in their particular assessments?

Mr Cooper: No they do not. The South Australian guidelines are DBA and they also make a point of saying well maintained wind farms do not produce infrasound.

Senator BACK: Can I conclude from the work here that any assessment process that does not incorporate infrasound is of little value?

Mr Cooper: That is correct.

Senator BACK: As an adjunct to that in the event that infrasound has not been considered by any sets of standards, then, by definition, they cannot have incorporated impacts on human health. Is that correct?

Mr Cooper: That is correct.

Senator BACK: The wind turbine signature concept that you have introduced in the Cape Bridgewater study, is that new to this whole world of acoustic interpretation of wind turbines around the world?

Mr Cooper: No, the use of ‘wind turbine signature’ is my use. I have been expressing it for a number of years because it was a way of describing what occurs from wind turbines. The fundamental of physics says that if you have a fan that rotates, it will produce a frequency that is called the blade pass frequency—the number of blades times the speed that the fan is doing—and it will produce harmonics. It is the law of physics. So all that happened was that does exist and it occurs from wind turbines.

If I go back to the late 1970s and early 1980s, a lot of work done in America including by organisations such as NASA, MIT et cetera identified that this signature exists. They were using a downwind turbine rather than an upwind turbine. All the other researchers had looked at narrow band—that is an important thing. So I have just used the term ‘WTS’.

Senator BACK: So the term ‘wind turbine signature’ is accepted. I have a question in relation to these sensations as you describe them. The sensations seem to be what people anecdotally record and they record them on the level of severity from zero to five, with zero being nothing and five being maximum. The value of any scientific research, of course, is that it can be replicated anywhere and one would expect then that, if replicated faithfully, the same results or similar results would be repeated in other locations. That is what I understand to be the value of a scientifically valid outcome.

Mr Cooper: That is correct. What I attempted in the first instance for Cape Bridgewater was to replicate the South Australian EPA survey questionnaire from Waterloo.

Senator BACK: Which you have now developed further?

Mr Cooper: That is correct. What happened was, when the residents tried it, they found that it had ambiguity but it did not describe what they were perceiving. The EPA study was on noise and noise did not fit into what was occurring because they were not hearing it; they were perceiving it. We added in vibration as a separate distinction because residents were reporting vibration that they could feel through the floor or just experience.

I had looked at the concept of sensation in Waterloo in 2013 when I had looked at the perception. I put it to them: would this be an answer for what you have had trouble describing? They agreed that was the case and many of their complaints that had been attributed to noise should have been attributed to sensation.

Senator BACK: Finally then, one would expect we could now take your Cape Bridgewater findings and they could be replicated in other locations in Australia and elsewhere using the same methodology, using controls as in this case, using a wider sample of the population, and we would hope or expect that we would actually find similar outcomes based on sensations as they relate to changing of the activities of the turbines themselves?

Mr Cooper: Yes, that is already happening overseas. There is one looking at happening in Australia. As to the similar results, we may be getting some lower levels of sensation because they will involve people in controls who do not have a sensitivity.

Senator CANAVAN: Thank you, Mr Cooper, for appearing. Your report is very interesting reading. You prepared the report for Pacific Hydro; have you had any discussions with Pacific Hydro about your evidence today?

Mr Cooper: No.

Senator CANAVAN: I was interested in Senator Back’s questioning before about the South Australian guideline. The guideline said that a well maintained wind farm would not produce infrasound. Is it possible in your view for a wind farm or wind turbine not to produce infrasound?

Mr Cooper: The laws of physics say a wind farm will produce infrasound for the speeds that we see. A windmill pumping on a farm has a small blade, has more blades and operates at a higher speed so it will produce a signature but there will not be any infrasound. What happens is as the blades get bigger, they have to reduce the speed. You get supersonic wind effects at the tips of the blades like helicopters. They are governed by the speed that the rotar can go by the number of blades and the size of them. So you have dynamic problems as you start getting bigger. What has occurred is the bigger turbines have started to reduce the speed

Senator CANAVAN: So it is physically possible to reduce infrasound but for practical purposes, it is not possible?

Mr Cooper: Yes and no.

Senator CANAVAN: I will phrase my question another way. Could a wind turbine operator change its operating guidelines to reduce or mitigate the production of infrasound, not necessarily to remove it but to moderate its generation?

Mr Cooper: I have not been permitted to talk to the wind farm turbine people to give you an answer. I found in terms of the data from the resident’s observations that there were four different scenarios in which there was a greater degree of sensation: when the turbines were trying to start up, when the turbines were at maximum power, when they started to depower the blades and when they were changing the power output by more than 20 per cent going up or down.

If you are a pilot and you fly a plane with a variable pitch propeller, you can change the pitch to be more efficient in its operations. So what happens is the angle of the blade changes with the wind to have a more efficient flow. It has been suggested that when that angle is not correctly aligned for efficiency then you get more disturbance across the blades and the infrasound component becomes greater. They seem to be the four scenarios that the residents came up with that had a heightened level of sensation. But I was not able to talk to the wind farm designers to actually ask: does this hypothesis fitting with what’s occurring—

Senator CANAVAN: Why were you not able?

Mr Cooper: Pacific Hydro said that they would handle it in-house.

Senator CANAVAN: Did you ask Pacific Hydro?

Mr Cooper: Yes I did.

Senator CANAVAN: And they said ‘no’?

Mr Cooper: They said they would ‘handle it in-house’ and I did not get a reply.

Senator CANAVAN: What does ‘handle it in-house’ mean?

Mr Cooper: They have people who govern and look after turbines and who can look at the answers.

Senator CANAVAN: Did they say they would look into what you have raised but do so in-house? Did they actually make a commitment to look into this issue of the design of the turbine blades?

Mr Cooper: It was not the design; it was finding out what was happening in my concept. I never got an answer.

Senator CANAVAN: In your study, you say at the end there is a potential need for further investigations—although you do say there would be significant costs involved. Could you outline what are the priorities for further investigations now, given the results of your work?

Mr Cooper: Statistically, if we start off with six people who are sensitised then we find the worst-case scenario. If you want to create a standard or look at it, you need a much larger database or you need to repeat the study to see how it occurs across a wider area with different turbines. Therefore, there is an automatic limitation of being just six people in this work. You would need to have a much larger database if you were looking at introducing a standard. You certainly could not change the regulations in Victoria based upon six people.

The second part is you need to look at the medical impacts. If you go back a couple of Senate inquiries, they talked about the need for medical research into it. So I believe that if we have this tool we could go to that step. That needs a multidisciplinary approach, because it is not just AGP; you need people that look at brainwave function, sleep disorder—all of these combinations. So, in effect, the acoustic side is very much the tail that is wagging the dog.

Senator CANAVAN: I take your point that we could not really change regulations on an existing operator based on six people, but what do we do for future wind developments? There is a well-established precautionary principle in regulation. Is there enough here to say we should be very precautionary about approving further wind developments until we can do these studies?

Mr Cooper: If you look at the material that is available from the University of Adelaide, the Shirley Wind Farm and Health Canada, it tells you what is happening with infrasound. They say it is easy to measure out to 10 kilometres. We have material from NASA talking about annoyance; we have perception. The question becomes, in infrasound: what is the level at which we should be protecting people? I certainly cannot give you that level; I am just a noise engineer. So it is that that you need to look at. That is where the research needs to occur. People in America, particularly Dr Paul Schomer, are looking at this work. That is why they want me to come to America in May and August—to be on panels to talk about research into wind farms and where we should go as the next step.

Senator CANAVAN: But there are questions that remain about the impacts of wind farms, in your view, after you have done your study?

Mr Cooper: There are certainly questions about wind farms, but infrasound is not just restricted to wind farms. You get infrasound from power stations and gas turbines. I have been doing work up in the Blue Mountains, west of Sydney, where I have found that a coal powered fire station is affecting hundreds of people 15 kilometres from the power station. I started by looking at infrasound from a ventilation fan on a coalmine. I found that the coalmine does produce infrasound, but it is not of the order of magnitude that is causing the problem for residents. But the residents are experiencing the same sorts of effects as residents around wind farms. I have shown, very conclusively, that the infrasound components are coming from a very large power station.

Senator Bob Day

*****

Senator DAY: On the same path here, I played in a rock’n’roll band for many years, so I am very familiar with noise complaints and decibel levels. Also, coming from Adelaide, we hosted the grand prix for many years, and that took the concept of noise to a whole new level. We could hear that high-pitched sound from the grand prix 10 or 15 kilometres away. So I am interested in the difference with this whole new province of infrasound. What calibration or measurement system would you envisage would be encompassed in this new area of subaudible sound called infrasound? This is a fascinating subject. We all know about the sound above the audible level; we all experience that. But how is this new province measured in layman’s terms?

Mr Cooper: I have an entire chapter in this report, chapter 10, that talks about instrumentation problems. Not everybody puts forward reports and says, ‘These are the problems that we have,’ but it is there for other researchers, because you require special equipment and knowledge in terms of doing this work. So it has cost me a lot of money in instrumentation to be able to do the job. I lost hundreds of thousands of dollars doing this Cape Bridgewater study in terms of time and money that I had to expend to be able to do it. So the report gives an entire chapter to help others. We got a special calibrator to measure down to infrasound for our microphones, because we could not rely upon manufacturers’ work. So there are a whole pile of different protocols. I and other acousticians in America have been researching using microbarometers, pressure detectors, to measure what is occurring from wind farms, as a much cheaper alternative than special microphones. That seems to be the way that it is occurring. There is a draft American standard that is also including this in the mix for doing measurements. The Health Canada report on infrasound shows that they are using microbarometers, because this becomes a relatively simple way of doing it.

This is quite a new area, although it is not so new if people were doing it 30 years ago. It has just been forgotten about. But infrasound affects things like sick building syndrome. A former Prime Minister of New Zealand moved into an office and had an infrasound problem from the air conditioning. So it is a matter of understanding it and having the specialised knowledge to look at it. I have the advantage of having carried out for years machine vibration measurements looking at rotating equipment, so I automatically think about frequencies and dynamics. I have done a lot of work at concerts and nightclubs, and that is about controlling low frequency.

Senator DAY: I remember you. You shut us down once.

Mr Cooper: The laws shut them down. My job is to keep them going.

Senator BACK: A wise move, I think.

Mr Cooper: I did a lot of work with F111s and the Joint Strike Fighter for the Department of Defence. We were doing tests out in the middle of the desert on full afterburner, and we could tell when the pilot turned off the afterburner at 18,000 feet. So we understand how it travels, but actually there is not that much infrasound. It is noise frequency.

But it is very new, interesting work and a lot of people, if they do not have the right gear or they have not spent thousands of hours checking it to see what is going on, have problems. So I have worked closely with Adelaide university on calibration and we have exchanged ideas to help one another, to make sure we have the right microphones, the right settings, the right preamps.

Senator DAY: Those who are familiar with the movie This is Spinal Tap know they covered that by taking the dial up to 11 from 10. So you cannot just take it into minus when you are measuring the decibel level, because it is not decibels, is it?

Mr Cooper: Correct. It changes. We do a little bit more sophisticated limiting in nightclubs. Unfortunately, I have those very bad hours doing nightclubs and concerts at night—

Senator DAY: I am pleased to hear that.

Mr Cooper: sorting out those problems. So I understand where you are coming from and it is different. Infrasound is a completely new area and it is challenging to get the right results—that is for sure. That is where we have problems. A lot of the instruments that are available are measuring the wrong thing. We found two instruments from the same manufacturer that had different curves electronically and we had to unweight all those curves to get the right answers.

Senator DAY: I have a science background, so I know what you are talking about. That is very interesting. Thank you very much.

CHAIR: Senator Xenophon, are you there?

Nick Xenophon

*****

Senator XENOPHON: Yes, I am. I can barely hear you, Chair, and the irony is that a jackhammer has just started up outside my office in Adelaide. So there you go. There is no infrasound with that one, I think. Mr Cooper, I want to ask you some general questions about whether you have ever been gagged, silenced or limited in your ability to comment by anyone who has retained you as a consultant to investigate and remedy noise pollution. Bear in mind you are covered by parliamentary privilege in what you say, so any confidentiality clauses you may have signed would not be valid in the context of anything you say before this inquiry.

Mr Cooper: I have had a number of gag clauses in relation to contracts, in terms of legal engagements. Specifically I had one on providing an opinion with respect to the Uranquinty gas fired installation, which had a significant infrasound problem.

Senator XENOPHON: Where is Uranquinty?

Mr Cooper: Uranquinty is near Wagga, in New South Wales.

Senator XENOPHON: And there is a gas fired power station there?

Mr Cooper: That is correct. It was new one that presented problems on a particular mode of operation, basically the start-up of the power station. It affected houses out to about two kilometres.

Senator XENOPHON: And you were prevented from speaking out on that?

Mr Cooper: Yes. Well, I was retained and had significant clauses on disclosure of any material on it. I was representing the Australian supplier and the German manufacturer in various court proceedings. In relation to—

Senator XENOPHON: So if the committee were minded to ask you for a copy of that, if there were a formal request—that is a matter for the committee and I will go through the chair and the committee generally—is it the sort of material that you still have?

Mr Cooper: Yes, I still have some files and information on it.

Senator XENOPHON: Sorry, I interrupted you then. What else were you going to say?

Mr Cooper: In relation to this Cape Bridgewater service, I have a contract which has limitations in terms of confidential information that is provided to me from Pacific Hydro, which is a standard sort of format. The intellectual property material that is associated with this study has four components. There is confidential material provided by the company. There is principal intellectual property, which is material relating to the wind farm data which was supplied to me by Pacific Hydro. There is background IP, which is material I brought to the study, being my wind turbine signature—my graphical presentation of the noise level versus the wind and the power outputs et cetera. I hold that, so I do not have a restriction on that. Then there is the project IP, which is whatever is developed through the project.

So the dB(WTS) developed in the project is the property of Pacific Hydro. The observations that have been recorded and presented on graphs that show the output is the property of Pacific Hydro under the terms of the contract. Therefore, under copyright, I am not permitted to reproduce those graphs out of the report. So people around the world can have the report and look at it, but I am not permitted to take these graphs and present them. I have a number of peer reviewed papers that have been done for the purpose of identifying sections of this report and what has happened, and under the copyright laws I am not permitted to use those and I do not have a licence from Pacific Hydro to use even dB(WTS).

We have now proposed, with some other academics around the world, to use the terms LS-WT for wind turbines, LSW-AC for air conditioning or LSW-PS for power stations. So other researchers who were thrilled about the concept of dB(WTS) have now looked to use this terminology. Of course, if I have copyright problems, it is a bit hard to go to a conference and say, ‘Here’s the work,’ if I cannot show any of the graphs. Most of the graphs refer to the wind speed, because that is a very important part of the Cape Bridgewater study. So that has presented a problem for me. Further than that, I still have what I will call gag clauses in the contract.

Senator XENOPHON: I just want to understand this. I think appropriate peer review is important for the robustness of any reports such as this, but you are saying that there are limitations on the level of peer review that can be carried out by virtue of the copyright limitations placed upon you?

Mr Cooper: No, I am not saying that about peer review. There was no peer review from my side of the equation before the report was done. There have been peer reviews done since the report was issued and people are using that work. What I am saying is that I am not permitted under copyright to provide any papers or publications that have graphs directly out of the report. My lawyers have confirmed that is the property of Pacific Hydro. I have requested a licence and permission for some peer reviews. In the submission that I have uploaded to the Senate committee’s website, I have two of my peer reviewed papers where all the graphs have been removed, as required by Pacific Hydro. It shows that two of the papers to be published are completely useless. I could not present them to any conference.

Senator XENOPHON: To summarise, would it be fair to say that the absence of this copyright licence from Pacific Hydro restricts further public debate and discussion in respect of wind turbine noise?

Mr Cooper: It does not restrict people overseas or anywhere else in Australia discussing it; it restricts me from entering into those discussions and showing the material. So it just restricts me.

Senator XENOPHON: But the effect of restricting you as the author of this report would be presumably to restrict some robust debate and discussion about this whole issue.

Mr Cooper: I am having difficulty as to how I prepare a paper in May. That says I cannot use the material in the report—the Cape Bridgewater study the causal links. It is correct that I cannot use the data I have got and reanalyse it. I am okay about that, but there is a published report and it has a wealth of information. For example, chapter 9 identifies the problems in using the South Australian EPA methodology and it shows quite clearly how if you go a little bit finer in the resolution the answers are all there but if you restrict it you cannot do it. That is one of the papers that have been refused to be issued.

Senator XENOPHON: Before I go to the South Australian EPA methodology, have you raised your concerns with Pacific Hydro? To give credit to them, they did give you access to Cape Bridgewater. It was groundbreaking in that sense—that there was a level of cooperation—and I congratulate them for that. Have you raised with them your concerns about the lack of access or the copyright constraints placed on you?

Mr Cooper: Yes, in December last year I requested this very matter in terms of the licence because under the contract every time I want to use DWTS I have to write to them to get their permission. So I did raise it and there were discussions about a licence. I provided them papers earlier this year and raised it again. I have been told that a licence is coming about DWTS but I have been instructed that there is copyright over the reproduction of the report.

Senator XENOPHON: Could you please provide to the committee copies of all of your correspondence, including emails, any documents exchanged and any notes of conversations you may have had with Pacific Hydro or between your company and Pacific Hydro in respect of this. I would be quite interested to see that chain of correspondence.

Mr Cooper: I can but I point out that I am a little bit reluctant. But, yes, I can provide it.

Senator XENOPHON: Perhaps we can get advice from the secretariat and even the Clerk of the Senate as to your legal protections to provide such information. If there is a concern about that, you may want that to be considered in camera by the committee in the first instance. That is something we can perhaps ask Pacific Hydro shortly. Are there any other reports you have written in relation to environmental noise pollution where you have been constrained, gagged or in anyway fettered in terms of what you can discuss about those reports?

Mr Cooper: There are a couple but they are related to the Department of Defence where I used to have top secret clearance so that is involving matters of military concern. If I exclude that, no, I have not had any other restrictions.

Senator XENOPHON: Thank you. Finally, you refer in chapter 9 of your report to the South Australian EPA methodology. In a short summary—and you may want to elaborate on this on notice given the time constraints—are you saying that the South Australian EPA guidelines are fundamentally flawed in considering these types of applications?

Mr Cooper: Yes, I have detailed in my submission as to where the flaws are. What I was saying in chapter 9 is if you go into one-third octave resolution you will not find any difference between a natural environment and a windfarm affected environment. If you put the narrow band in you see straight away that there are differences. That is what chapter 9 is all about—to show that if you use the right tools you can actually measure what is going on. If you restrict yourself to a dBA or a dBG, you will not find any difference between a natural environment and a windfarm affected environment. That is actually the critical aspect.

There is an acknowledgement that this study, which had the cooperation of the windfarm and the residents and did on-off testing, had never been done before in the world. We have the likes of Dr Paul Schomer praising this work. He was one of the authors on the Shirley windfarm report. They were very critical that the energy company would not assist in the work. They have said this is exactly what they needed. So when they did see the report—and they could not see the report before it was issued—every one of those authors of the report congratulated me. There is dialogue. I have in appendix B to my submission their comments about it. They think it is a major step forward as well as the threshold work that I have done.

Senator XENOPHON: Thank you.

Senator CANAVAN: I would like to follow up on Senator Xenophon’s questioning. I find it extraordinary that you cannot use your own charts. Can I just clarify, if you are doing a PowerPoint presentation overseas, you cannot copy and paste a chart out of your report and put it on a slide?

Mr Cooper: If it is in this published document, I have been advised that I cannot. I prepared two peer reviewed papers and they are attached in my submission. I have a copy of it here, but I have cut out all of the charts on that specific instruction of Pacific Hydro about 10 days ago. My lawyer has confirmed that I cannot do it.

Senator CANAVAN: Ten days ago, they advised you that you could not do that.

Mr Cooper: That is correct.

Senator CANAVAN: That advice related to your submission to this Senate hearing?

Mr Cooper: I was in the process of doing my submission. It related to papers that I had given to them for the purpose of publication. I had a paper on infrasound, I had a paper on the narrow band and I had a paper on sensation.

Senator CANAVAN: I find it unbelievable that you cannot do that. These are all public documents too; that is, the charts in this document that you are not allowed to use. But you can google that, can’t you, and find that on the internet?

Mr Cooper: That is correct. But my lawyer said under copyright law they are correct and I cannot do anything about it.

Senator CANAVAN: I will leave it there. I have some other questions, but I will put them on notice.

Senator LEYONHJELM: It is just straight copyright law that your lawyers are working off, isn’t it, and it is not a specific laws that you had in the contract you had with Pacific Hydro?

Mr Cooper: There is a contract at the IP. It is their IP and the project IP is Pacific Hydro’s IP. I cannot use it without their permission.

Senator LEYONHJELM: That is actually normal.

Senator CANAVAN: But you have asked their permission and they have not given it yet?

Mr Cooper: That is correct.

CHAIR: On my examination of the material in your report and in particular a reference to the Shirley wind farm, it would appear that the noise or the infrasound levels in house 87 are significantly greater than those obtained in the Shirley wind farm investigation. Is that correct?

Mr Cooper: Yes.

CHAIR: As I understand it, at the Shirley wind farm a lesser level that was recorded there was considered a public health risk. Is that right?

Mr Cooper: That is what the report says, yes.

CHAIR: Thank you for your testimony today before the committee.

Hansard, 30 March 2015.

Steven Cooper’s submission to the Senate Inquiry is available as a pdf by clicking on the link here: sub254_Cooper

Facts

Letter to Physicians, about the health Effects Caused by Wind Turbines.

Letter to physicians

Dear Doctor,

For more than 30 years, the promoters of wind turbines know that they are harmful for the health. The president of VESTAS himself admitted to the Danish State…
Nevertheless, the opponents are named foolish, legal actions against them are taken!

Claude Brasseur
Claude Brasseur, mathematician

A statistical, simple and little expensive analysis can demonstrate objectively what is now known by “subjective” inquiries in Denmark, in Portugal, in the USA, in Australia, in the Netherlands, etc…

The following text presents a working proposal for which I suggest you to ask an official authorisation. This authorisation is necessary to be able to gather the essential data. These data, I may, as a mathematician – statistician, treat.
No name of person or institution will be known or be useful. That means that a bailiff will be necessary to certify their authenticity.

With my thanks, please accept, dear Doctor, the expression of my very high consideration.

Claude Brasseur

Claude BrasseurApril 12, 2015BelgiumBelgique

Infrasonic vibrations of wind turbines: a statistical test of sanitary harmfulness

This method excludes – for the first time – any subjectivity.
The subjectivity is systematically exploited by the wind lobby for 30 years!

Personne agée et éolienne
Infrasonic vibrations seem to be particularly harmful to the elderly.

By Claude Brasseur, mathematician, researcher, and founder of a research centre for renewable energy

Perturbed children who work badly on the school, the deformed feet of horses, minks who have a miscarriage or the dysfunction of human menstruations… all the people whose health degrades (1) in the environment of huge wind turbines, still prove nothing as for the direct link of cause to effect. It is necessary and it is possible to make an objective statistical study of the harmfulness for the health of the infrasonic vibrations of wind turbines by excluding any other sanitary risk factor. Here is a method proposed to compare the length of stay of the people of the 3rd age in institutions before the installation of wind turbines and later. This method excludes – for the first time – any subjectivity. The subjectivity is systematically exploited by the wind lobby for 30 years!

Introduction

The more we shall gather measures of stay ended with death, the more the results will be significant. We shall watch to make sure that the study is not biased, that there are no other changes in the environment or the management of old people’s homes concerned. We shall avoid the biases in particular thanks to institutions of the 3rd age not concerned by the wind industrial estates which have to be the object of similar statistical studies. These tests will show if these institutions have to have a distance of 5, 10 or 15 km to prevent the effects of the industrial wind turbines (IWT for Industrial Wind Turbine).

It is a hunch that if the average of length of stay before the installation of the industrial wind turbines is clearly longer than the average of the stays after the installation of the IWT, the demonstration will be clear. We suppose – but it must be verified – that the average lengths of stay in homes shielded from wind turbines do not vary statistically in time.

The IWT will obviously not much influence on the length of stay of old people of which the death will be noticed just after the starting up of wind turbines. Therefore, the average of lengths of stay observed after the starting up of the IWT will not reveal completely their role on the health of the concerned people. If it is possible to have – by making observations for numerous institutions – a large number of deaths every year after the installation of IWT, it will be possible to see if the rhythm of the deaths accelerates, that means that the stays in the institutions of the 3rd age shorten statistically…

In practice

  1. We note the length of stay of the elderly in one or several institutions before the installation of wind turbines (in a 4 km circle following the NASA).
    We go back up to 10 years behind for the deaths if the institution already existed in past.
  2. We note lengths of stay before deaths after the installation of the IWT.
  3. We do the same for several institutions far from the IWT (5, 10 or 15 km?).
    We can separate the samples of measures relative to the deaths before and after the installation of the IWT of the cases 1. and 2.
  4. The samples of measures which we have are supposed extracted statistically from a “normal” population. We calculate the diverse arithmetic means and the corresponding standard deviations.
  5. We return these values in reduced centered units which allow to compare samples between them.
  6. We remind the central theorem of the limit which demonstrates that the validity of the approximation increases here as the number of measures of available deaths.
  7. We compare the means and their standard deviations by the method of “unilateral no worthless test of hypothesis” because it is a question of considering if the life expectancy of people decreased after the installation of the IWT.

Statistical treatment of the data

The purpose of what follows is to show – through an example of imaginary measures- a procedure to be followed to process statistically the collected data.

Data: 10 lengths of stay before the installation of wind turbines: 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 year and 10 durations after their installation: 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0 year.
We suppose that we introduced all the available data. The stays “later” often began before the installation of wind turbines.

The average of the stays before wind turbines:
M1 = 5.5 = (10 + 9 + 8 + 7 + 6 + 5 + 4 + 3 + 2 + 1) / 10
The average of the stays after the putting into service of wind turbines:
M2 = 4.5 = (9 + 8 + 7 + 6 + 5 + 4 + 3 + 2 + 1 + 0) / 10
Standard deviation concerning M1: S1
S1² = {(10² + 9² + 8² + 7² + 6² + 5² + 4² + 3² + 2² + 1²) / 10} – {M1²} = 8.25
S1 = 2.9

Standard deviation concerning M2: S2
S2² = {(9² + 8² + 7² + 6² + 5² + 4² + 3² + 2² + 1² + 0²) / 10} – {M2²} = 8.25
S2 = 2.9

Then we suppose that 2 samples go out of the same population, that means that wind turbines have no effect on the health of the senior citizens. In statistics it is called the null hypothesis.

Standard deviation of the difference of average M1 and M2:

S of M1–M2 = {(8.25/10) + (8.25/10)}1/2 = 1.3

To be able to compare distributions of data between them, we calculate the reduced centered variable: z = (5.5 – 4.5) / 1.3 = 0.77

With an unilateral level test of meaning 0.05 (5% of chances to make a mistake), we adopt the worthless hypothesis because z is smaller than 1.645 supplied by the normal law).
Both samples can come from the same population. No observable effect of wind turbines with our data.
Let us suppose that our 2 samples multiply tenfold as for the number of measures while having the same averages and the standard deviations of the same values.
What changes, is the value of S:

S of M1–M2 = {(8.25/100) + (8.25/100)}1/2 = 0.4

Then z = (5.5 – 4.5) / 0.4 = 1 / 0.4 = 2.5

Even with an unilateral level test of meaning 0.01 (1 chance on 100 to make a mistake) we see that z is more tall than 2.33. The hypothesis is refused, 2 samples are not extracted from the same population. Wind turbines are harmful and we can then be interested to know which hurts would create the exposure in the infrasonic vibrations chopped by the IWT named “Wind Turbine Signatures”.

(1) Some references:

1. NASA Technical Memorandum 83288, Guide to the evaluation of human exposure to noise from large wind turbines, March 1982

2. NASA Contractor Report 172482 Response measurements for two building structures excited by noise from a large horizontal axis wind turbine generator, November 1984

3. D.S.Nussbaum, S.REINIS, Some individual differences in human response to infrasound, Insitute for Aerospace Studies, University of Toronto, January 1985

4. Acoustic Noise Associated with the MOD-1 Wind Turbine : its Source, Impact and Control, Prepared for the U.S. Department of Energy, February 1985

5. J.Chatillon, Limites d’exposition aux infrasons et aux ultrasons, INRS, 2006

6. Nina Pierpont, MD, PhD, Le Syndrome Eolien : un rapport sur une expérimentation naturelle, décembre 2009 (traduction autorisée et approuvée par l’auteur)

7. Shepherd Daniel & alter. Evaluating the impact of wind turbine noise on health related quality of life – Noise & Health – 7-10-2011

8. Carl V. Phillips, Properly Interpreting the Epidemiologic Evidence About the Health Effects of Industrial Wind Turbines on Nearby Residents, Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2011

9. Nissenbaum Michael A & alter, Effects of industrial wind turbine noise on sleep and health – noise & health. 7-10-2012, vol.14, p.243

10. Rand Acoustics, Brunswick, ME, A Cooperative Measurement Survey and Analysis of Low Frequency and Infrasound at the Shirley Wind Farm in Brown County, Wisconsin, decembre, 2012

11. Steven Cooper, Cape Bridgewater Wind Farm Acoustic Study, january, 2014

12. Steltenrich Nate. Wind Turbines. A different Breed of Noise ? Environmental Health Perspectives, vol. 122 – number 1, 1-2014

13. Dr.Mariana Alves Pereira, How to test for the effects of low-frequency turbine noise, Lusofona University, Portugal, February 2014

14. Robert Y McMurtry, Carmen ME Krogh, Diagnostic criteria for adverse health effects in the environs of wind turbines, JRSM Open, October 2014

15. Denise Wolfe, Review of the Health Canada Wind Turbine Noise and Health Study, November 2014

By Claude Brasseur | April 12, 2015

Wind Industry Fights To Deny Accountability, at the Expense of the Victims…

Health Impacts of Waterloo Wind Farm

Wind farm amplitude-modulation

****

In the recent review (not study) of the health impacts of wind farms, the NH&MRC renewed their call for a precautionary approach and emphasised the need for more research. This recommendation echoed their earlier Rapid review, as well as the Senate enquiry in 2011 – that more research was needed as there was a paucity of  high quality studies available.

This most recent review from the NH&MRC  contained only one Australian study – where a farmer’s wife, STT pin-up girl, Mary Morris, put in the hard yards and got something  decent done to survey the residents around the Waterloo Wind farm in South Australia (see our posts here,here and here).

The South Australian EPA promised big, but delivered a pitiful effort in their study of the noise impact on the Waterloo wind farm (see our posthere).

They put their microphones in places that violated their own guidelines  – such as near trees and reflective surfaces – to hide the low frequency noise and infrasound from the turbines.

epa gear under tree at Quast place

****

But once bitten – twice shy – the Waterloo residents also brought in acousticians from the University of Adelaide to run the sound studies at Waterloo in parallel with the disgraceful EPA work. This Channel Seven news story covers it.

Transcript

JOHN RIDDELL: Locals in the Mid-North are banking on independent research to confirm their claims about the health impacts of living near wind farms. They want to stop future projects in the area. Earlier results back their concerns.

MARIJA JOVANOVIC: Waterloo residents have long complained of health effects from constant noise and vibration.

COLIN SCHAEFER: We spend days and hours trying to fight these wind farms and we’ll continue to.

KRISTY HANSEN: The complaints are world wide so it’s hard to believe that these complaints don’t have some element of truth to them.

MARIJA JOVANOVIC: Adelaide Uni researchers are using microphones to analyse low frequency noise from turbines up to 10 km away. Early results show rumbling sounds at 46 Hz which are just audible to the human ear.

KRISTY HANSEN: When the wind farm is shut down those peaks just don’t exist.
A two month investigation by the State’s environmental watchdog found no evidence linking wind farms to adverse health impacts. But critics say that study was flawed as just one microphone was used instead of several to average out sound in different parts of a room. Microphones close to trees outside also skewed the data.
KRISTY HANSEN: This can cause the noise levels to be higher than they actually are when the wind farm is shut down.

MARIJA JOVANOVIC: For the locals it is acknowledgement at long last of their complaints. And while it may be too late for those living near existing turbines, it is hoped that the findings will stop those proposed elsewhere. Marija Jovanovic, Seven News.
Channel 7

Cape Bridgewater Wind Facility- Acoustic Engineering Investigation

Acoustic Engineering Investigation at Cape Bridgewater Wind Facility

Acoustic Engineering Investigation into Airborne and Ground-Borne Pressure Pulses from Pacific Hydro’s Wind Turbines at Cape Bridgewater

Waubra Foundation Definitive Document
1 February, 2015

A Simplified Explanation of the Findings, Previous Research, and the Consequences

1. Background

  • Turbines create “waste energy” in the form of airborne pressure waves (sound) and ground-borne pressure waves (vibration).
  • Noise is that part of the sound frequency spectrum which is audible, but “noise” is also defined by psychoacousticians as “unwanted sound”.
  • The strength (sometimes expressed as a loudness in the case of noise) of the sound is measured in decibels (“dB”).
  • The wavelength of individual sound waves is a measure of the distance between the peaks of the pressure waves. The speed of sound divided by the wavelength gives the frequency of the sound and is expressed in hertz (Hz).
  • Where the frequency of the sound waves is below 20 Hz, the distance between the waves is relatively long, and the general term for this portion of the frequency spectrum is known as infrasound. Infrasound is only audible at very high levels (dB). However it can be damaging to the human body at levels well below audibility.
  • Impulsive infrasound from a variety of industrial sources has long been known to have the potential to be harmful to humans, especially with chronic exposure. For example, human and animal studies have shown infrasound directly causes both physiological stress, and collagen thickening in a variety of tissues including cardiac valves, arteries, and pericardium which themselves lead to a variety of cardiovascular diseases.
  • Infrasound persists for much greater distances than audible sound and, unlike audible sound, penetrates well insulated building structures (including double glazing) with ease; and often increases the impact by resonating within the house, like a drum. This occurs, regardless of the source of sound & vibration energy. Penetration of buildings and amplification via resonance can also occur from sound and vibration from natural sources such as earthquakes and thunder.
  • Standards for wind turbine noise pollution in Australia are set in audible decibels (“dBA”) outside houses. Use of dBA excludes accurate measurement of frequencies below 200 Hz, including both infrasound (0 – 20 Hz) and low frequency noise (20 – 200 Hz). These Standards do not require infrasound (either within or outside homes) to be predicted in planning submissions nor to be measured in the required compliance testing to the planning permit noise conditions. Most jurisdictions do not require wind turbine generated low frequency noise to be predicted or measured either (unlike other sources of industrial noise). In fact most noise measuring instruments and microphones are unable to measure accurately in the infrasound range, especially below 8 Hz., and some Standards explicitly specify the use of equipment which cannot measure infrasound.
  • Wind turbines produce infrasound along with audible noise. The more powerful the wind turbine the greater the proportion of infrasound and low frequency noise emitted, which then increases significantly if the turbines are sited too close together, now common practice in Australia. Most newer wind turbines are now 3 MW or 3.5 MW, compared to2MW at Cape Bridgewater.
  • By the use of different sound meters and microphones, and in narrow (frequency) bands it is quite possible to identify and measure infrasound specifically from wind turbines, in the field. This unique “wind turbine signature” has now been demonstrated by the acoustic consultants involved in the Health Canada Study, and by Professor Colin Hansen’s team at Waterloo, in addition to Mr Cooper’s measurements at a number of locations in Australia prior to, and including, the Cape Bridgewater Acoustic Investigation.
  • Increasing numbers of residents living within 10km of wind turbines have suffered, and are still suffering, severe adverse health impacts since the wind turbines started operating. Many have left their homes repeatedly, and eventually permanently, to live in greatly diminished financial circumstances, as their homes are no longer habitable or saleable. Some residents become too unwell to work. Wind turbines are not the only source of impulsive infrasound and low frequency noise causing severe health damage. The same pattern of identical serious adverse health effects, sleep deprivation and home abandonments, sometimes out to similar distances are being reported by neighbours to other known sources of infrasound and low frequency noise, at open cut coal mining (e.g. Hunter Valley in New South Wales), underground mines with large extractor fans (eg Lithgow, in New South Wales), gas turbine power stations (e.g. Uranquinty, in New South Wales, Port Campbell in Victoria) and numerous other sources (eg Tara gas field in Queensland).
  • Wind power projects and other energy generating noise polluting industrial developments involve very large sums of money in construction, in revenues and in the case of industrial wind turbines — public subsidies. It is not uncommon to find companies with large investments and large cash flows going to great and improper lengths to maintain their cash flows.
  • The wind industry has never been asked to prove that their machines are safe, unlike other products on the market. When queries are raised about impacts on neighbours, the industry and its supporters trigger the “Four Ds” of denial, dissemble, delay and destroy the messenger, despite the wind industry being well aware of the seminal research by Dr Neil Kelley and NASA which established direct causation of symptoms from impulsive infrasound and low frequency noise from wind turbines and other sources in the 1980s, by both field and laboratory research.

2. The Purpose of the Cape Bridgewater Acoustic Investigation

The purpose of the investigation was simply to find out what was causing the symptoms and sensations, resulting in sleep disturbance and health damage, reported to Pacific Hydro between 2009 and 2014 by the residents of three homes sited between 600 – 1600 metres from wind turbines sited at the Cape Bridgewater Wind Project in Victoria, Australia.

3. What Are the Key Findings of the Cooper Acoustic Investigation?

The findings include:

  • By using sound meters and microphones that can accurately measure infrasound and recording the infrasound levels in narrow frequency bands (rather than dBA or 1/3 octave bands) it was clear that infrasound generated specifically by the wind turbines was present in the three homes.
  • Wind turbines emit a recognisable and repeatable sound “signature” (or profile), being the relationship between the blade pass frequency and multiple harmonics of that frequency. At times the acoustic signature included audible characteristics and modulation across the full frequency spectrum. Further, this signature, whilst it contains significant energy in the infrasound range, is in no way comparable to other sources of infrasound such as waves on the beach, other fast rotating machinery, i.e. refrigerators, trains, road traffic, as claimed by wind industry “experts” and supporters.

This discovered profile ”wind turbine signature” does not need further research, and has been independently documented by other acousticians and researchers around the world.

  • Wind turbine infrasound is present inside each of the three homes investigated (when the turbines are operating), at levels known thirty years ago to directly cause the same symptoms and sensations including sleep disturbance and body vibrations. The intensity of the infrasound levels inside the houses varied between and within rooms (probably due to resonances and different outlooks to the wind farm).

A potentially causative energy problem was identified in each of the three houses.

  • It was determined from early testing by Steven Cooper and the residents that recording of impacts solely by the previously used parameters of noise and vibration was not enough. A third impact being “sensation” was added to cover, as it transpired, the reaction of the body to infrasound.

Diaries used by the SA EPA at the Waterloo project were not designed to investigate the reported impacts from “sensations”. The SA EPA’s conclusions in that study were wrong, and are therefore now irrelevant.

  • The residents’ impact diaries (based on the South Australian EPA Waterloo Acoustic Survey diary format) were substantially modified to improve their ease of use, reliability and differentiation between perceptions of noise, vibration (external to the body), and “sensations” (determined in this study to be reactions to infrasound).

The form of these diaries must be the minimum standard for future multidisciplinary investigations.

  • Since measurements and predictive noise models for wind turbines being expressed in dBA exclude accurate measurement of infrasound and low frequency noise, it follows that dBA is useless as a proxy for predicting damage to neighbours, or for setting Standards to protect them from harm. Even before Steven Cooper’s investigation, the wind turbine noise Standards were known to be dangerously inadequate. Responsible authorities should have altered the Standards to include sound as a whole and infrasound in particular, especially after Dr Neil Kelley’s work establishing direct causation from infrasound and low frequency noise resurfaced in mid 2013. Steven Cooper’s work at Cape Bridgewater reinforces the need for urgent revision of existing Australian standards and regulations, and to develop a standard for “sensation”.

These current Standards are now known to be dangerous, clearly do not protect people, and must not ever be used again.

  • Methods of measuring sound must: utilise instruments able to monitor the whole spectrum of sound; be conducted inside as well as outside homes; produce results in narrow bands not one third octaves or dBA as is currently standard, and must continue over sufficient periods of time, to cover most if not all environmental conditions (wind speed and direction etc.).

No other acoustic investigations have been so inclusive of a range of environmental conditions, apart from Dr Neil Kelley and NASA’s work, funded by the US Department of Energy in the 1980’s which originally identified the direct causal relationship between symptoms and sensations and impulsive ILFN from the various sound sources which included wind turbines, gas turbines and military aircraft.

  • Changes in wind speed, wind direction, turbine start up, and operating at near shutdown speed coincided with sensations being at the highest level (characterised as equivalent to a compulsive need to flee the house).

Causality of intolerable symptoms and sensations from infrasound has been established, repeatedly and predictably. This means it is now indefensible for any public authority or official to rely on the nocebo nonsense to explain residents’ symptoms and sensations.

  • Without any argument the investigation showed that the six residents in the three houses were regularly subject to wind turbine derived infrasound, inside their homes particularly in the 4 to 5 hertz range of infrasound frequencies, at levels known thirty years ago to be dangerous to health. The residents’ own diaries and personal health histories demonstrate that all of the residents have been severely impacted.

4. Commentary

With better instruments, more reliable and useful diaries, plus eight weeks of data and the opportunity to measure sound and vibration when the turbines were shut down, this thorough acoustic investigation by a highly regarded, ethical acoustic engineer was established to find the truth whatever it may be.

A number of lesser studies previously conducted by other acousticians, show signs of intellectual corruption and/or ineptitude, and of being designed to find no problems; thereby shielding the flow of cash to wind project owners; whilst holding off the liability for supposedly expert but incorrect opinions delivered by a group of acousticians on behalf of project operators and of companies seeking planning permits.

Predictably, the wind turbine product defence team are still trying to fault the Cooper investigation.

A guide to understanding the key claims follows.

a) Misrepresenting an Engineering Investigation as an all embracing academic research project, and then criticizing it because it was not.

The brief was very specific — to determine whether certain wind speeds and certain sound levels related to disturbances related to specific local residents. This was a thorough, independent, acoustic investigation into why these three houses were virtually uninhabitable. The answer was found and the cause established. Evidence of court quality has been established. It was not a generously funded academic research project.

b) No Peer Review

It is correct that this report was not peer reviewed prior to public release.

Pacific Hydro did not allow peer review to occur, prior to its publication. However, peer reviews by acoustic consultants are occurring now, and preliminary peer reviews from acousticians with first hand knowledge of the reported health problems and the challenges of conducting research inside the homes of impacted residents have acknowledged the quality and usefulness of this acoustic investigation.

Engineers seek a repeatable result. The way a repeatable result is sought includes checking the suitability and location of the instruments, then painstakingly calibrating them before measurements start. The calibration and measurement processes are repeated ad nauseumuntil it is clear, without out any doubt, that the results are repeatable. This is precisely what Steven Cooper has done. It is also of great value that the methodology of the study, and the problems he encountered, have been so clearly described in detail in the report, for the benefit of future researchers.

c) No Control Group

Some non epidemiologists and wind industry employees and supporters who have commented publicly on this research have said it is meaningless because there is no “control” group for comparison. The brief from Pacific Hydro prohibited a separate control group of separate non exposed “controls”. In fact, the residents were their own controls in this acoustic investigation, which in epidemiological terms is a “prospective case (series) crossover” design, also used in pharmacological research to assess the individual responses to differing doses of drugs over time.

In other words this particular study design gives detailed information about a number of individuals’ responses to specific doses (in this instance “exposure doses at specific sound frequencies”) over time, and also the human responses when no drug (wind turbine infrasound) is present. Prospective case (series) crossover studies are well known to epidemiologists as a powerful epidemiological study design, and help to establish causation, as well as therapeutic and safety thresholds, depending on those varied individual responses.

d) Small Sample Size

This was a detailed investigation into three houses, over eight weeks, with six residents who had reported serious adverse health impacts for many years. The sample size limits were established by Pacific Hydro, who commissioned the study, and are to be commended for doing so. This level of detailed direct investigation of acoustic exposures and human impacts has not been seen for thirty years, since the US Department of Energy funded acoustic field research conducted by Dr Neil Kelley and NASA in 1985.

The results are consistent with Kelley’s research, which established direct causation between infrasound and low frequency noise emissions and reported sensations. Predictably the wind industry and its supporters have denied the current relevance of the Kelley research, despite it being instrumental in forcing a significant design change of wind turbines to reduce the generation of impulsive infrasound and low frequency noise, in order to prevent health damage.

e) Can the Results be Extrapolated to Other Locations?

To answer this question it is necessary to consider probabilities. The relevant inputs are:

  • modern wind turbines produce impulsive infrasound, in increasing proportions as the turbine power increases;
  • impulsive infrasound can and does cause serious impacts on humans, known for thirty years;
  • impulsive infrasound from wind turbines penetrates homes, and the characteristic symptoms are being reported by residents at distances of at least 8km –10km from wind turbines, and correlate directly with exposure to operating wind turbines;
  • multiple home abandonments at multiple wind projects have taken place because the owners are suffering symptoms associated with turbine proximity, and their medical practitioners are increasingly advising them to move, in order to prevent further serious health damage;
  • in Australia nearly every wind project with turbines of 1.5MW or more has generated public complaints from residents who live nearby, unless those residents have been silenced with non disclosure clauses in various agreements – the use of which have been denied by the industry despite documented evidence to the contrary.

The answer to the question posed is:

“where there are or have been multiple complaints of the characteristic symptoms and “sensations” by residents, there is a very high probability of infrasound at health damaging levels being present inside those homes, and that being the cause of the complaints and serious adverse health effects reported by residents.”

The research protocol and tools developed by Steven Cooper and the residents are easily reproducible at other locations where similar adverse health impacts are being reported, regardless of the source of the sound and vibration.

This study can be easily extended to include concurrent physiological data collection with the full spectrum acoustic measurements inside and outside homes. There is no reason why information about specific indicators of health status cannot also be collected from study participants, such as those used by Dr Bob Thorne , Dr Daniel Shepherd and Dr Michael Nissenbaum in their respective studies, which have established adverse health effects in different wind turbine noise affected study populations previously.

The realization that this acoustic investigation study design is also a prospective case (series) cross over design increases the power of this specific study design to provide important answers as to causation and safety thresholds, when replicated at any site where these characteristic symptom and sensation complaints have been reported by residents living within ten km. As one of the acoustic peer reviewers said, “may the medical testing begin”.

5. Finally – the Consequences

The operator at Cape Bridgewater and the responsible authorities now have to deal fairly and equitably with these three families.

More broadly, the various public authorities involved in regulating the wind industry (and indeed noise pollution regulation in Australia from any source) need to take notice.

Steven Cooper’s study design can now be used to investigate the acoustic impacts at any wind power or other noise emitting development where the characteristic health problems have been reported by nearby residents. When combined with the concurrent physiological data collection (e.g. heart rate, sleep EEG, non invasive blood pressure, and stress hormones) the results will demonstrate both direct causation of the physiological impacts the residents are clearly describing, and also reliable and consistent thresholds of perception for those chronically exposed, from which new and much safer “noise” pollution guidelines can be implemented and properly enforced, to prevent further serious harm to physical and mental health.

The relevant politicians, public authorities and officials need to ensure that the requisite research is adequately funded, and properly conducted, as a matter of urgency. Research directly investigating the sound frequencies inside people’s homes was recommended “as a priority” in June 2011, by the Senate Committee Report into the Social and Economic Impacts of Rural Wind Farms, chaired by Greens Senator Rachel Siewert and has since been endorsed by both houses of Australian Federal Parliament. This multidisciplinary research was also a pre election promise of the current Federal Government.

The conduct of such research must be undertaken in a transparent manner adhering to the highest ethical standards and must involve the community in such investigations and vetting the investigation team. It cannot be conducted in laboratories but must use operational wind farms and existing residents (for both affected and control groups). The wind development operators and owners must be required to provide all necessary operational data, and to cooperate without restriction with “on off testing”.

If this Cape Bridgewater research, commissioned by a wind developer, conducted by an ethical independent acoustician with the cooperation of both the wind developer and the affected residents, is not acted upon immediately to prevent further harm, the public authorities and politicians who choose not to act are then in a position of knowingly allowing the serious damage to physical and mental health from impulsive infrasound and low frequency noise from wind turbines to continue.

Given that the most serious and common complaint around the world from neighbours to industrial wind turbines and other sources of impulsive infrasound and low frequency noise is repeatedly disturbed and interrupted sleep, (resulting in prolonged and chronic sleep deprivation, which itself is acknowledged as a method of torture by the UN Committee against Torture ), the individual public officials are risking future charges against them of either committing or acquiescing to torture, which if proven could lead to custodial sentences. The maximum penalty under the Criminal Code Act 1995 as amended in 2010 for torture or acquiescence to torture is a twenty year jail sentence.

Immediate action is required from public officials at every level of government who are responsible for the current situation. This is not only to prevent further serious damage to human health, but also to reduce officials’ personal risk of future successful prosecution against them by severely impacted rural residents, for torture or acquiescence to torture, or for ignoring ongoing cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment, about which officials have been repeatedly personally advised.

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[i] For example the 1985 study from the University of Toronto by Nussbaum and Reinishttps://www.wind-watch.org/documents/some-individual-differences-in-human-response-to-infrasound/ , the Chinese study from 2004 http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/an-investigation-physiological-and-psychological-effects-infrasound-persons/ , the work cited in the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Literature Review in 2001http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/infrasound-brief-review-toxicological-literature/

[ii] the extensive body of work by the Portuguese research team into Vibroacoustic disease and collagen thickening is summarised in this review article:http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/vibroacoustic-disease-biological-effects-infrasound-alves-periera-castelo-branco/

[iii] see for example the Falmouth acoustic survey by Rand and Ambrose, December 2012http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/bruce-mcpherson-infrasound-low-frequency-noise-study/

[iv] Also Mr William Palmer’s research measuring infrasound from wind turbines inside rural farmhouses in Ontario https://www.wind-watch.org/documents/wind-turbine-annoyance-a-clue-from-acoustic-room-modes/

[v] for a discussion about the origins of the various Australian Standards by two acousticians who helped write the South Australian Wind Turbine Noise guidelines see Chris Turnbull and Jason Turner’s paper delivered in Denver, Colorado in 2013http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/turnbull-c-turner-j-recent-developments-wind-farm-noise-australia/

[vi] The Danish research which established this was by Professors Moller and Pedersen in 2011http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/moller-pedersen-low-frequency-noise-from-large-wind-turbines/

[vii] see the exchanges between Dr Malcolm Swinbanks and Mr Les Huson about the distances between wind turbines at AGL’s Macarthur Wind Development in Western Victoria, at the end of the Waubra Foundation submission to the RET reviewhttp://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/renewable-energy-target-review-waubra-foundation-submission-2014/

[viii] MG Acoustics, Ottowa and Ontario, Canada, “Wind Turbine Noise Propagation” report for Health Canada Study, 2014, Figure 3 https://www.wind-watch.org/documents/wind-turbine-noise-propagation-below-100-hz/

[ix] https://www.wind-watch.org/documents/comparison-of-the-noise-levels-measured-in-the-vicinity-of-a-wind-farm-for-shutdown-and-operational-conditions/

[x] Please see the noise impact surveys on the Waubra Foundation website for further details of the systematically gathered data by Morris (2012, Waterloo, South Australia), Schneider (2012 &2013, Cullerin, New South Wales) and Schafer (2013, Macarthur, Victoria) which concur with what the Waubra Foundation has been told directly by individuals living near wind developments in Australia, out to distances of ten km and in some locations even further under some weather (temperature inversion) and wind (downwind) conditions:http://waubrafoundation.org.au/library/community-noise-impact-surveys/

[xi] For adverse health effects confirmed in residents at Waubra and Cape Bridgewater wind developments, see Dr Bob Thorne’s study from 2012, reissued in 2014http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/thorne-r-victorian-wind-farm-review-updated-june-2014/

[xii] For other details see the references at the bottom of the document “Environmental Noise, Sleep Deprivation, and Torture” http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/environmental-noise-sleep-deprivation-torture-september-2014/

[xiii] Dr Neil Kelley’s research is summarised in the Waubra Foundation’s Explicit Warning Notice, November 2013. http://waubrafoundation.org.au/2013/explicit-warning-notice/

[xiv] the Cape Bridgewater Acoustic Survey can be accessed on the Pacific Hydro website:http://www.pacifichydro.com.au/english/our-communities/communities/cape-bridgewater-acoustic-study-report/?language=en and the resident’s statement can be found here:http://waubrafoundation.org.au/2015/steven-coopers-cape-bridgewater-acoustic-research-commissioned-by-pacific-hydro-released/

[xv] Further information about the SA EPA Acoustic survey is here:http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/open-letter-premier-south-australia-clean-energy-regulator-concerning-sa-epa-acoustic-survey-2/ and Professor Colin Hansen’s team’s report of their acoustic survey (concurrent with the SA EPA is here:http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/hansen-zajamsek-hansen-noise-monitoring-waterloo-wind-farm/

[xvi] The pro forma of the diaries used by the residents can be downloaded here (scroll down to the bottom of the webpage): http://waubrafoundation.org.au/information/residents/journals/

[xvii] The research in the USA into military aircraft noise perception by Harvey Hubbard in 1982 is here: http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/hubbard-h-1982-noise-induced-house-vibrations-human-perception/ , and the early research into gas and wind turbines from 1982 is here:http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/kelley-et-al-methodology-for-assessment-wind-turbine-noise-generation-1982/

[xviii] For a simple explanation of a case cross over designed study, see this description:https://onlinecourses.science.psu.edu/stat507/node/51 and for an example of how it can be used in pharmaceutical and clinical epidemiological research please seehttp://smm.sagepub.com/content/18/1/53.abstract

[xix] The 1985 Kelley / NASA acoustic field research report:http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/kelley-et-al-1985-acoustic-noise-associated-with-mod-1-wind-turbine/

[xx] Senator Chris Back’s speech to Federal Parliament in October 2012 contains extracts from a number of contracts which contain non disclosure clauses (also known as “gag” clauses)http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/senator-back-reveals-gag-clauses-wind-developer-contracts/

[xxi] Thorne’s research at Cape Bridgewater and Waubra in Victoria, Australia, first submitted to the Senate Inquiry in 2012, and reissued in 2014 :http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/thorne-r-victorian-wind-farm-review-updated-june-2014/

[xxii] Shepherd et al’s research at Makara in New Zealand, published in Noise and Health in 2011http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/evaluating-impact-wind-turbine-noise-health-related-quality-life/

[xiii] Nissenbaum et al’s research at Maine and Vinalhaven, USA, published in Noise and Health in October 2012 http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/effects-industrial-wind-turbine-noise-sleep-and-health/

[xxiv] Mr Rob Rand, acoustician from the USA http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/rand-r-congratulations-cape-bridgewater-acoustic-study-report/

[xxv] other acoustic peer reviewers include Mr Steven Ambrosehttp://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/ambrose-se-congratulations-steven-cooper-cape-bridgewater-report/ and Dr Bob Thorne http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/thorne-r-congratulation-cape-bridgewater-investigation/

[xxvi] Justice Muse, in Falmouth USA issued an injunction in December 2013 to prevent wind turbines operating at night time in order to “prevent irreparable harm to physical and psychological health” http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/falmouth-mass-judge-muse-decision-shut-down-wind-turbines-causing-irreparable-harm/

[xxvii] The Australian Senate inquiry recommendations from 2011 are here:http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/australian-federal-senate-inquiry-into-wind-farms-health-report/

[xxviii] the text of the UN Convention, and the words of the UN Committee Against Torture concerning sleep deprivation are here: http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/un-convention-against-torture/

[xxix] More detailed information about “Environmental Noise, Sleep Deprivation and Torture” is here: http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/environmental-noise-sleep-deprivation-torture-september-2014/ , and the risks for public officials who acquiesce to acts of torture is here:http://waubrafoundation.org.au/resources/public-officials-at-risk-criminal-charges-for-torture-public-statement/

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Legislators Finally Realizing That Wind Power is Useless! Pull the Subsidy Plug!

US “Wind Power States” Pull the Plug on Massive Wind Power Subsidy Schemes

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This time last year, we took a look at the States in the US where $billions filched from power consumers and taxpayers have been thrown at wind power outfits, as a massive, and seemingly endless, stream of subsidies; and the skyrocketing power prices that have been the result:

Want skyrocketing power prices? Just add Wind Power

In that post, James M Taylor laid out the wind power driven blowout in power prices, noting that:

Skyrocketing Costs in Wind Power States

The 11 states that AWEA identifies as deriving more than 7 percent of their electricity from wind power are Colorado, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Texas, and Wyoming. AWEA says these 11 states have had slightly falling electricity prices since 2008, but official U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) data show nine of the 11 have dramatically rising prices. Here are EIA’s data on changes in electricity prices for each of the 11 states since 2008:

Colorado – up 14%

Idaho – up 33%

Iowa – up 17%

Kansas – up 29%

Minnesota – up 22%

North Dakota – up 24%

Oklahoma – down 1%

Oregon – up 15%

South Dakota – up 26%

Texas – down 19%

Wyoming – up 33%

The objective U.S. Energy Information Administration data show nine of the 11 largest wind power states are experiencing skyrocketing electricity prices, rising more than four times the national average. Moreover, prices in eight of the 11 states are rising more than twice as fast as in the 39 states with less than 7 percent wind power generation.

James goes on to explain the two outliers, Texas and Oklahoma:

The Two Outliers Explained

Other important factors further rebut AWEA’s claims in the two heavy wind power states where electricity prices are not skyrocketing.

In Oklahoma, where electricity prices remained essentially flat, there is no renewable power mandate. To the extent wind power is produced in Oklahoma, market forces, rather than state government, determine its generation. AWEA curiously argues relatively stable electricity prices in a state without renewable power mandates justify AWEA’s call for renewable power mandates.

In Texas, economists agree, electricity prices have been falling in recent years as a result of the state’s deregulation efforts during the past decade. Texas coal power, natural gas power, nuclear power, and wind power are all experiencing declining prices due to deregulation. Yet AWEA falsely ascribes the state’s declining electricity prices to wind power.

AWEA’s self-serving formula uses Texas’ deregulation to hide the cumulatively skyrocketing electricity prices in the 10 other states that generate the most wind power.

Now, in a cry of “enough is enough”, numerous States, including Ohio, Kansas, New Mexico and West Virginia have either pulled the plug on their “Renewable Energy Mandates” (State based subsidy schemes) or are set on the path to do so. What’s spooked them into action is the fact that:

“Electricity prices in states with mandates are 40 percent higher than in non-REM states.”

Remember, as Ross McKitrick puts it: “wind turbines don’t run on wind, they run on subsidies” (see our post here).

With States chopping the massive and endless subsidies on which the wind industry critically depends, the wind industry will finally be put to proof on its wild claims about about being “competitive” with conventional generators (see this nonsense from ruin-economy and our post here). As the Americans say to the foolish and/or brave: “well, good luck with that!”

Here’s the Washington Times on the beginning of the end for BIG WIND in the US.

Pulling the plug on renewable energy: States with mandates suffer exploding electricity prices
The Washington Times
Sterling Burnett
29 March 2015

There is never a good time for bad public policy. For few policies is this more evident than renewable energy mandates (REM), variously known as renewable portfolio standards, alternative energy standards and renewable energy standards.

The first renewable energy mandate was adopted in 1983, but most states did not impose these mandates until the 2000s. Though the details vary from state to state, in general, renewable energy mandates require utilities to provide a certain percentage of the electric power they supply from “renewable” sources, notably wind and solar, with the required percentages rising over time.

At the height of the renewable-energy mania, 30 states and the District of Columbia had imposed REMs and another seven had established voluntary standards.

Renewable energy mandate proponents included environmental lobbyists with a hatred for capitalism and fossil fuels that make modern society possible, crony socialists who saw the mandates as way of strong-arming exorbitant payments from government and ratepayers alike, and paternalistic politicians who look down on people’s choices in the marketplace, believing they know best what sources of energy people ought to choose.

Green-energy advocates, crony socialists and government elitists have seen their fortunes wax and wane over five decades. Government subsidies for unreliable, expensive renewable fuels had risen, fallen, been scrapped and begun anew since the 1970s. The existence and amount of subsidies tended to rise in fall with various energy crises — crises often created by the same government that then proposed subsidies for renewable energy as the solution for the problems it created.

For 50 years, green-energy gurus in industry and the environmental movement have sold the snake oil that renewable power would soon be as cheap and reliable as coal, oil, nuclear and natural gas. The nation has been told the turning point has always been just around the corner, always requiring a little more public funding and tax breaks before we have abundant, cheap, clean, reliable energy materializing from thin air.

All these promises were false, and the public and more-honest politicians have seen through the sales pitch. Now, support for renewables is as unreliable as the energy it provides.

To guarantee a market for renewables, green lobbyists fought successfully for mandates ensuring green-energy producers a slice of the electricity market regardless of the price and quality of the energy they produced.

Energy prices skyrocketed, as predicted by numerous energy analysts.

Though cost is an important concern, it is not the only problem with renewable power sources.

Renewable energy is not environmentally friendly. Renewable energy mandates have turned millions of acres of wild lands and wildlife habitats into a vast wasteland of wind and solar industrial energy facilities. In the process, renewable energy facilities have condemned to death hundreds of thousands of animals, including endangered birds, bats and tortoises. Finally, the construction and maintenance of these facilities have polluted the air and water. There is nothing green about all this. Still, continuing high costs, not environmental concerns, may finally spell doom for the mandates.

Citing high costs, Ohio became the first state to freeze its renewable energy mandate. Under Ohio’s mandate, utilities would have been required to provide 25 percent of the state’s electricity from qualified renewable sources by 2025. Under a law signed by Republican Gov. John Kasich in June 2014, Ohio froze its mandate at the current level of 12.5 percent, halving the mandated level.

In January, West Virginia repealed its renewable energy mandate entirely, and the New Mexico House of Representatives passed a bill freezing the state’s renewable standards in March.

Kansas has also recently held hearings on repealing its renewable energy mandate, spurred on in part by a new report from Utah State University reporting Kansas ratepayers are paying $171 million more than they would without the mandate. These additional costs have resulted in a loss of $4,367 each year in household disposable income.

What’s true for Kansas is true for other states with renewable energy mandates. States with mandates experienced 10 percent greater unemployment, due to higher energy prices resulting from the REM, than states without mandates. In addition, the U.S. Department of Energy has found electricity prices in states with renewable energy mandates have risen twice as fast as in states with no renewable requirement. Electricity prices in states with mandates are 40 percent higher than in non-REM states.

With these facts, it is little wonder that states are doing a slow walk back from their previous support of costly, environmentally harmful renewable energy mandates. It’s a classic case of legislate in haste, repent in leisure.

H. Sterling Burnett is a research fellow on energy and the environment at the Heartland Institute.
The Washington Times

subsidies

If any further proof were needed for Ross McKitrick’s “wind turbines don’t run on wind, they run on subsidies” adage, this little piece from Associated Press should do the trick.

Plans pulled for 223-turbine wind farm in Central Oregon
The Associated Press
27 March 2015

BEND — Plans for a big wind farm in north-central Oregon have been scrapped, state regulators say.

The Brush Canyon Wind Power Facility would have had as many as 223 turbines in Sherman and Wasco counties, The Bend Bulletin reported Friday.

It would have been in an area of 76,000 acres, or 119 square miles.

The turbines that have spread across the windy Columbia plateau in recent decades have benefited from two government initiatives: requirements by West Coast states that utilities include alternative energy among their energy sources and a federal tax credit based on turbine production.

But in December, Congress let lapse the federal tax break enacted in 1992 to nurture the fledgling wind industry.

The Brush Canyon proposal had its origin like many in the Northwest, proposed by the North American arm of a European or Scandinavian utility company, in this case the German firm E.ON (EE’-ahn) AG.

“We don’t know why they pulled out, but it’s not unusual,” said spokesman Rachel Wray of the state Department of Energy. “We’ve had a number of projects pulled over the last couple of years. Some that had gone a ways through the process . and others that were a lot less far along. It really varies.”

Calls and messages from The Associated Press to the company’s Chicago office and German headquarters were not immediately returned.

In Central Oregon, some were happy and relieved at the decision, saying the project was far too big and disruptive.

Residents of the high-desert town Antelope were anticipating that construction traffic would increase traffic by 600 percent, Mayor John Silvertooth said.

“It’s like a doctor telling a patient he’s in remission, or waking up from brain surgery and hearing everything was a success,” he said.

Antelope’s population is now about 50. It was larger in the 1980s, and got a lot of attention, when thousands of followers of the Indian guru Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh tried to establish a political power base on a commune that was eventually forced out.
The Associated Press

dirtyrottenscoundrelsoriginal

Sign a Wind Turbine Contract in Haste? Repent at Your Leisure!

Turbine Hosts’ Lament: Hammered by Wind Power Outfits; Hated by Former Friends, Relatives & Neighbours

She's had a few

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After years of being shunned by former friends and neighbours for introducing turbines into their communities (or signing up for that to happen in future), many turbine hosts are keen to wind the clock back and make amends. Community division, angry former friends and hostile neighbours are just one aspect of what’s causing actual and potential turbine hosts to regret their decisions; and, in Australia, encouraging them to present their cases to the Senate Inquiry:

Unwilling Turbine Hosts Set to Revolt, as NSW Planning Minister – Pru Goward – Slams Spanish Fan Plans at Yass

Turbine Hosts Line Up to Tip a Bucket on Wind Power Outfits, as Senate Submissions Deadline Extended to 4 May 2015

For Australian turbine hosts, the Senate Inquiry into the great wind power fraud provides a golden opportunity to take the lid off the wind industry’s ‘stinky pot’, by exposing the goons and hucksters employed by wind power outfits for what they are: a bunch of liars and chancers. Your chance to tip a bucket by making submissions; to present documents; and to make it known that you’d like to give evidence, has been extended to 4 May. For details on what to do and who to contact see the posts above.

In the posts above we covered the grab-bag of lies and subterfuge used by the goons that stitch up land holder contracts for their masters.

One of the well-worn favourites was to convince a potential target farming family that they were the ONLY farmers who had NOT signed a contract to host turbines for the project concerned.

The development being scoped out might involve a dozen separate farming properties, say; all of which needed to be stitched up in contracts to make the project stack-up in terms of REC subsidies and/or infrastructure layout and associated engineering costs.

The developer’s goons would lob up at each and every one of them – on a one-on-one basis – telling them the very same story: “that all of their neighbours had already signed up”. These words were usually uttered at a point in time when the developer had not signed ANY contracts in relation to its proposed development at all. Pressure was often added by telling the targets that they needed to sign up quickly, because if they didn’t they would be holding up hundreds of $millions in investment, hundreds of jobs etc, etc.

Working on the adage of “loose lips sink ships”, on each occasion, the farmers being targeted were told that they mustn’t breathe a word about the contract being offered to any living soul: so much easier to perpetuate a lie when it can’t be tested by your target with a quick phone call to their neighbours.

In order to add a little more pressure to their targets – and to get their monikers on the contract being offered – the developer’s goons would tell the target farming family that, because everyone else had signed up, they would end up with turbines right up to the boundaries of their properties (sometimes within a few hundred metres of their homes); so they “may as well sign up anyway”, because that way they would at least get paid for hosting some turbines on their own property.

The thrust of the developer’s pitch being that: your life is going to be ruined by dozens of turbines on your neighbour’s property, so you may as well receive a few grand a year for your pending troubles.

The same set of lies would be told repeatedly; until such time as ink appeared on all of the contracts needed to get the wind farm project off the ground, and on its way to a dodgy-development approval.

So far, so insidious. And that particular ruse is one that’s been used around the world, as is made plain from the stories below, one of which reports a turbine host from Wisconsin saying that:

[W]e were also told that we were the ones holding up the project. That all of our neighbors had signed, and we were the last hold-outs. It persuaded us.

What we didn’t know then was the developer was not being truthful. We were not the ‘last hold-out’ at all. In later discussions with our neighbors we found out that in fact we were the very first farmers to sign up. I have since found out this kind of falsehood is a common tactic of wind developers.

But, it’s not just being duped that has turbine hosts wringing their hands.

Oh no.

It’s the fact that wind power outfits couldn’t care less about their farming operations; and being the subjects of social ostracism from former friends, relatives and neighbours that has really hit home.

Over the years, STT has been in contact with a number of disgruntled turbine hosts, from all over the country; and more of them have come forward in the last few months; particularly those who are in contracts where the turbines planned are yet to go up.

One of the facts that tends to rub salt into the turbine hosts’ wounds is just how derisory is the “compensation” they receive in exchange for their personal grief and the hatred of former friends and neighbours.

wind turbine host

In Australia, turbine hosts receive a piddling $10,000-$15,000 a year, for a turbine that will receive upwards of $800,000 a year in REC subsidies, alone.

A REC is issued for each MWh of wind power delivered to the grid. A 3 MW turbine – if it operated 24 hours a day, 365 days a year – would receive 26,280 RECs (24 x 365 x 3). Assuming, generously, a capacity factor of 35% (the cowboys from wind power outfits often wildly claim more than that) that single turbine will receive 9,198 RECs annually.

At $94 – the expected price for RECs once the shortfall penalty bites this year – that single turbine will rake in $864,612 in Commonwealth mandated subsidy, which is drawn from all Australian power consumers as a tax on their power bills. But wait, there’s more: that subsidy doesn’t last for a single year.

A turbine operating now will continue to receive the REC subsidy for 16 years, until 2031 – such that a single 3 MW turbine can pocket a further $13,833,792 over the remaining life of the LRET.

In the meantime, the host gets a nominal $160,000 over the same period (with no index for inflation, the real value falling over time) and will end up with a pile of rusting turbines that they will have to pay to remove when the things fall apart, fling their blades to the four-winds, burst into flame or the subsidy scam inevitably gets scrapped – whichever occurs first.

Hawaii rusting turbines

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The themes outlined above and detailed below are common, tragic and perfectly avoidable.

The pieces below dealing with the laments of turbine hosts popped up in Wisconsin, but the narratives could have come from anywhere.

“By signing that contract, I signed away the control of the family farm, and it’s the biggest regret I have ever experienced and will ever experience.”

Gary Steinich, Cambria, Wisconsin. June 2011.

Here’s the tale of Gary’s great regret from Better Plan, Wisconsin.

Sometime in late 2001 or early 2002, a wind developer working for Florida Power and Light showed up near the Wisconsin Town of Cambria looking to get in touch with someone at the Steinich family farm.

He wanted to talk to the landowner about leasing a bit of land for the installation of a met tower. He needed to measure the winds in the area for a possible windfarm and Walter Steinich’s land looked like a good place to do it.

The wind developer seemed like a good guy to Mr. Steinich who was in his early 70’s at the time. The money seemed good. A met tower didn’t seem like a big deal. It was just a tall pole with some guy wires, and it was temporary. Mr. Steinich signed the contract.

That was nearly ten years ago. Mr. Steinich has since passed away and now his son, Gary, runs the farm. He’s written an open letter to Wisconsin farmers about his experience with the wind company since then.

From One Wisconsin Farmer to Another:

This is an open letter to Wisconsin farmers who are considering signing a wind lease to host turbines on your land. Before you sign, I’d like to tell you about what happened to our family farm after we signed a contract with a wind developer.

glacier hills aerial 2

In 2002, a wind developer approached my father about signing a lease agreement to place a MET tower on our land. My father was in his 70’s at the time. The developer did a good job of befriending him and gaining his trust.

He assured my father that the project wasn’t a done deal and was a long way off. They first had to put up the MET tower to measure the wind for awhile.

He told my father that if the project went forward there would be plenty of time to decide if we wanted to host turbines on our farm. There would be lots of details to work out and paperwork to sign well before the turbines would be built. The developer said my father could decide later on if he wanted to stay in the contract.

glacier hills aerial 1

In 2003 the developer contacted us again. This time he wanted us to sign a contract to host turbines on our land. We were unsure about it, so we visited the closest wind project we knew of at the time. It was in Montfort, WI.

The Monfort project consists of 20 turbines that are about 300 feet tall and arranged in a straight line, taking up very little farmland with the turbine bases and access roads. The landowners seemed very satisfied with the turbines. But we were still unsure about making the commitment.

glacier hills detail 3

We were soon contacted again by the developer, and we told him we were undecided. Then he really started to put pressure on us to sign.

This was in March of 2004, a time of $1.60 corn and $1200 an acre land. It seemed worth it have to work around a couple of turbines for the extra cash. We were told the turbines would be in a straight line and only take up a little bit of land like the ones in Monfort.

And we were also told that we were the ones holding up the project. That all of our neighbors had signed, and we were the last hold-outs. It persuaded us.

What we didn’t know then was the developer was not being truthful. We were not the ‘last hold-out’ at all. In later discussions with our neighbors we found out that in fact we were the very first farmers to sign up. I have since found out this kind of falsehood is a common tactic of wind developers.

My father read through the contract. He said he thought it was ok. I briefly skimmed through it, found the language confusing, but trusted my father’s judgment. We didn’t hire a lawyer to read it through with us. We didn’t feel the need to. The developer had explained what was in it.

The wind contract and easement on our farm was for 20 years. By then my dad was 75. He figured time was against him for dealing with this contract in the future so we agreed I should sign it. A few months later, my father died suddenly on Father’s Day, June 20th, 2004

After that, we didn’t hear a whole lot about the wind farm for a couple years. There was talk that the project was dead. And then in 2007 we were told the developer sold the rights to the project. A Wisconsin utility bought it.

After that everything changed. The contract I signed had an option that allowed it to be extended for an additional 10 years. The utility used it.

The turbines planned for the project wouldn’t be like the ones in Monfort. They were going to be much larger, 400 feet tall. And there were going to be 90 of them.

They weren’t going to be in a straight row. They’d be sited in the spots the developer felt were best for his needs, including in middle of fields, with access roads sometimes cutting diagonally across good farm land. Landowners could have an opinion about turbine placement but they would not have final say as to where the turbines and access roads would be placed. It was all in the contract.

Nothing was the way we thought it was going to be. We didn’t know how much land would be taken out of production by the access roads alone. And we didn’t understand how much the wind company could do to our land because of what was in the contract.

In 2008 I had the first of many disputes with the utility, and soon realized that according to the contract I had little to no say about anything. This became painfully clear to me once the actual construction phase began in 2010 and the trucks and equipment came to our farm and started tearing up the field.

In October of 2010 a representative of the utility contacted me to ask if a pile of soil could be removed from my farm. It was near the base of one of the turbines they were putting on my land. I said no, that no soil is to be removed from my farm.

The rep said that the pile was actually my neighbor’s soil, that the company was storing it on my land with plans to move it to another property.

Shortly afterwards I noticed the pile of subsoil was gone.

In November of 2011 I saw several trucks loading up a second pile of soil on my land and watched them exiting down the road. I followed them and then called the Columbia County Sheriff. Reps from the company were called out. I wanted my soil back.

A few days later the rep admitted they couldn’t give it back to me because my soil was gone. It had been taken and already dispersed on someone else’s land. I was offered 32 truck loads of soil from a stockpile they had. I was not guaranteed that the soil would be of the same quality and composition as the truck loads of soil they took from my farm.

I was informed by the lawyer for the utility that I had until April 30, 2011 to decide to take the soil. There would be no other offer. Take it or leave it.

I contacted the Public Service Commission for help. The PSC approved the terms of project and I believed the utility was violating those terms. The PSC responded by telling me they could do nothing because the issue involved a private contract between myself and the utility.

They told me my only option was to sue the utility.

My father and I both worked those fields. Watching the way they’ve been ripped apart would sicken any farmer. But what farmer has the time and money it would take to sue a Wisconsin utility?

By signing that contract I signed away the control of the family farm, and it’s the biggest regret I have ever experienced and will ever experience. I have only myself to blame for not paying close enough attention to what I was signing.

We had a peaceful community here before the developer showed up, but no more. Now it’s neighbor against neighbor, family members not speaking to one another and there is no ease in conversation like in the old days. Everyone is afraid to talk for fear the subject of the wind turbines will come up. The kind of life we enjoyed in our community is gone forever.

I spend a lot of sleepless nights wishing I could turn back the clock and apply what I’ve learned from this experience. Now corn and bean prices are up. The money from the turbines doesn’t balance out our crop loss from land taken out of production. The kind of life we enjoyed on our family farm is gone forever too.

I would not sign that contract today. As I write this, the utility is putting up the towers all around us. In a few months the turbines will be turned on and we’ll have noise and shadow flicker to deal with. If I have trouble with these things, too bad. I’ve signed away my right to complain. These are some of the many problems I knew nothing about when I signed onto the project.

If you are considering signing a wind lease, take the contract to a lawyer. Go over every detail. Find out exactly what can happen to your fields, find out all the developer will be allowed to do to your land. Go through that contract completely, and think hard before make your decision.

I can tell you from first hand experience, once you sign that contract, you will not have a chance to turn back.

Gary Steinich
Steinich Farms, Inc.
Cambria, WI
June, 2011

head slap

A Fond Du Lac Farmer has regrets about agreeing to host a wind turbine – Why can’t he speak openly about it?

When you sign a 20 to 30 year contract to host a wind turbine on your property you may be signing away many rights you’re unaware of. A confidentiality agreement in the contract may mean legal action can be taken against you if you complain publicly about the project. A Fond Du Lac farmer signed away his rights. He was interviewed by Don Bangart who wrote the following on behalf of the farmer, whose contract with the wind company prevents him from speaking openly about any problems.

WHAT HAVE I DONE?

Now each morning when I awake, I pray and then ask myself, “What have I done?”

I am involved with the BlueSky/Greenfield wind turbine project in N.E. Fond du Lac County. I am also a successful farmer who cherishes his land. My father taught me how to farm, to be a steward of my fields, and by doing so, produce far better crop production. As I view this year’s crops, my eyes feast on a most bountiful supply of corn and soybeans. And then my eyes focus again on the trenches and road scars leading to the turbine foundations. What have I done?

In 2003, the wind energy company made their first contacts with us. A $2,000 “incentive” started the process of winning us over, a few of us at a time. The city salesmen would throw out their nets, like fishermen trawling for fish. Their incentive “gift” first lured some of us in. Then the salesmen would leave and let us talk with other farmers. When the corporate salesmen returned, there would be more of us ready to sign up; farmers had heard about the money to be made. Perhaps because we were successful farmers, we were the leaders and their best salesmen.

Sometime in 2004 or 2005, we signed $4,000 turbine contracts allowing them to “lease” our land for their needs. Our leases favored the company, but what did we know back then? Nobody knew what we were doing. Nobody realized all the changes that would occur, over which we would have no control. How often my friends and I have made that statement: What have I done?!

I watched stakes being driven in the fields and men using GPS monitors to place markers here and there. When the cats and graders started tearing 22-foot-wide roads into my fields, the physical changes started to impact not only me and my family, but, unfortunately, also my dear friends and neighbors. Later, a 4-foot-deep by 2-foot-wide trench was started diagonally across my field. A field already divided by their road was now being divided again by the cables running to a substation. It was now making one large field into 4 smaller irregularly shaped plots. Other turbine hosts also complained about their fields being subdivided or multiple cable trenches requiring more of their land. Roads were cut in using anywhere from 1,000 feet to over half a mile of land to connect the locations. We soon realized that the company places roads and trenches where they will benefit the company most, not the landowner. One neighbor’s access road is right next to some of his outbuildings. Another’s is right next to his fence line.

At a wind company dinner presented for the farmers hosting the turbines, we were repeatedly told — nicely and indirectly — to stay away from the company work sites once they start. I watched as my friends faces showed the same concern I had, but none of us spoke out. Months later, when I approached a crew putting in lines where they promised me they definitely would not go, a representative told me I could not be there. He insisted that I leave. The line went in. The company had the right. I had signed the lease.

Grumbling started almost immediately after we agreed to 2% yearly increases on our 30-year lease contracts. Some felt we should have held out for 10%. What farmer would lock in the price of corn over the next 5 years, yet alone lock one in at 2% yearly for 30 years? Then rumors emerged that other farmers had received higher yearly rates, so now contracts varied. The fast-talking city sales folk had successfully delivered their plan. Without regard for our land, we were allowing them to come in and spoil it. All of the rocks we labored so hard to pick in our youth were replaced in a few hours by miles of roads packed hard with 10 inches of large breaker rock. Costly tiling that we installed to improve drainage had now been cut into pieces by company trenching machines.

Each night, a security team rides down our roads checking the foundation sites. They are checking for vandals and thieves. Once, when I had ventured with guests to show them foundation work, security stopped us and asked me, standing on my own property, what I was doing there. What have I done?

Now, at social functions, we can clearly see the huge division this has created among community members. Suddenly, there are strong-sided discussions and heated words between friends and, yes, between relatives about wind turbines. Perhaps this is a greater consequence than the harm caused to my land — life is short, and friendships are precious.

I tried, as did some of the other farmers, to get out of our contracts, but we had signed a binding contract. If you are considering placing wind turbines on your property, I strongly recommend that you please reconsider. Study the issues. Think of all the harm to your land, and, in the future, to your children’s land, versus the benefits from allowing companies to lease your land for turbines.

WHAT HAVE I DONE?

PLEASE DO NOT DO WHAT I HAVE DONE!

whathaveidone-350

This was printed as a full page ad in the Chilton, Wisc., Times-Journal, October 25, 2007.

Why A Wisconsin Farmer is Having Regrets

As told in a recent ad, a Johnsburg farmer who will host wind turbines now has many regrets.

He regrets having been the “lure” to draw in other unsuspecting landowners. He regrets that he has allowed fields to be subdivided, road base to be spread on land once picked bare of rocks, costly tiling to be cut up. He regrets that he’s no longer the person who controls his own land and is now told where to go by security guards. He regrets the divide he has created between friends, between neighbors and between family members.

He regrets not having looked into all the ramifications first. That farmer is now locked in to a binding contract. But there are many landowners who have not yet suffered this fate.

Calumet County Citizens for Responsible Energy asks that landowners considering a contract first step back and study the issues. As with any financial transaction, don’t put a lot of trust in those who stand to gain financially.

Look for Web sites and information from those experiencing the effects of this worldwide “gold” rush for wind power. People across world are rebelling. They’re finding that they’ve lost control of their land and their lives. And they’re in danger of financial hardship if these companies dissolve.

Our irresponsible government representatives are forcing this “windfall” for wind investors on us. Their knee-jerk reaction to the global climate change alarms will cause billions of dollars to be wasted, lives to be ruined, and environments degraded for what is, in actuality, a very inefficient energy source.

With a declining tax base and state and U.S. legislators driving us further into massive debt, taxpayer subsidies for wind will be impossible to maintain.

And with the subsidies gone, what will you be left hosting?

Don Bangert,
Chilton, Wisconsin

Ashamed head-in-hands

Stop Blowing Our Money Into the Wind!

PSST! Want to Kill Prosperous Economies & Crush the Poorest? Then Keep Throwing $Billions at Wind Power

Josef Stalin

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The so-called “Greens” are not just delusional, they’re dangerous. Full of hate for human beings, especially the poorest of them, their “policies” – if they can be called that? – are more like malign manifestos, of the kind that would have made the Generalissimo proud.

In a brilliant essay, first published in the Wall Street Journal, Matt Ridley lays “green” ideology to waste; and gives the nonsense of wind power special attention, observing that:

Wind power, for all the public money spent on its expansion, has inched up to — wait for it — 1 per cent of world energy consumption in 2013. Solar, for all the hype, has not even managed that: If we round to the nearest whole number, it accounts for 0 per cent of world energy consumption.

Matt goes on to dissect the greens’ favourite myth that economies can, somehow, rely on “hope and promises”; and ditch fossil fuels altogether.

Fossil fuels are here to stay
The Wall Street Journal
Matt Ridley
23 March 2015

THE environmental movement has advanced three arguments in recent years for giving up fossil fuels: (1) that we will soon run out of them anyway; (2) that alternative sources of energy will price them out of the marketplace; and (3) that we cannot afford the climate consequences of burning them.

These days, not one of the three arguments is looking very healthy. In fact, a more realistic assessment of our energy and environmental situation suggests that, for decades to come, we will continue to rely overwhelmingly on the fossil fuels that have contributed so dramatically to the world’s prosperity and progress.

In 2013, about 87 per cent of the energy that the world consumed came from fossil fuels, a figure that — remarkably — was unchanged from 10 years before. This roughly divides into three categories of fuel and three categories of use: oil used mainly for transport, gas used mainly for heating, and coal used mainly for electricity.

Over this period, the overall volume of fossil-fuel consumption has increased dramatically, but with an encouraging environmental trend: a diminishing amount of carbon-dioxide emissions per unit of energy produced. The biggest contribution to decarbonising the system has been the switch from high-carbon coal to lower-carbon gas in electricity generation.

On a global level, renewable energy sources such as wind and solar have contributed hardly at all to the drop in carbon emissions, and their modest growth has merely made up for a decline in the fortunes of zero-carbon nuclear energy. (The reader should know that I have an indirect interest in coal through the ownership of land in Northern England on which it is mined, but I nonetheless applaud the displacement of coal by gas in recent years.)

The argument that fossil fuels will soon run out is dead, at least for a while. The collapse of the price of oil over the past six months is the result of abundance: an inevitable consequence of the high oil prices of recent years, which stimulated innovation in hydraulic fracturing, horizontal drilling, seismology and information technology. The US — the country with the oldest and most developed hydrocarbon fields — has found itself once again, surprisingly, at the top of the energy-producing league, rivalling Saudi Arabia in oil and Russia in gas.

The shale genie is now out of the bottle. Even if the current low price drives out some high-cost oil producers — in the North Sea, Canada, Russia, Iran and offshore, as well as in America — shale drillers can step back in whenever the price rebounds. As Mark Hill of Allegro Development Corporation argued last week, the frackers are currently experiencing their own version of Moore’s law: a rapid fall in the cost and time it takes to drill a well, along with a rapid rise in the volume of hydrocarbons they are able to extract.

And the shale revolution has yet to go global. When it does, oil and gas in tight rock formations will give the world ample supplies of hydrocarbons for decades, if not centuries. Lurking in the wings for later technological breakthroughs is methane hydrate, a sea floor source of gas that exceeds in quantity all the world’s coal, oil and gas put together.

So those who predict the imminent exhaustion of fossil fuels are merely repeating the mistakes of the US presidential commission that opined in 1922 that “already the output of gas has begun to wane. Production of oil cannot long maintain its present rate.” Or president Jimmy Carter when he announced on television in 1977 that “we could use up all the proven reserves of oil in the entire world by the end of the next decade.”

That fossil fuels are finite is a red herring. The Atlantic Ocean is finite, but that does not mean that you risk bumping into France if you row out of a harbour in Maine. The buffalo of the American West were infinite, in the sense that they could breed, yet they came close to extinction. It is an ironic truth that no non-renewable resource has ever run dry, while renewable resources — whales, cod, forests, passenger pigeons — have frequently done so.

The second argument for giving up fossil fuels is that new rivals will shortly price them out of the market. But it is not happening. The great hope has long been nuclear energy, but even if there is a rush to build new nuclear power stations over the next few years, most will simply replace old ones due to close.

The world’s nuclear output is down from 6 per cent of world energy consumption in 2003 to 4 per cent today. It is forecast to inch back up to just 6.7 per cent by 2035, according the Energy Information Administration.

Nuclear’s problem is cost. In meeting the safety concerns of environmentalists, politicians and regulators added requirements for extra concrete, steel and pipework, and even more for extra lawyers, paperwork and time.

The effect was to make nuclear plants into huge boondoggles with no competition or experimentation to drive down costs. Nuclear is now able to compete with fossil fuels only when it is subsidised.

As for renewable energy, hydro-electric is the biggest and cheapest supplier, but it has the least capacity for expansion. Technologies that tap the energy of waves and tides remain unaffordable and impractical.

Geothermal is a minor player for now. And bioenergy — that is, wood, ethanol made from corn or sugar cane, or diesel made from palm oil — is proving an ecological disaster: It encourages deforestation and food-price hikes that cause devastation among the world’s poor, and per unit of energy produced, it creates even more carbon dioxide than coal.

Wind power, for all the public money spent on its expansion, has inched up to — wait for it — 1 per cent of world energy consumption in 2013. Solar, for all the hype, has not even managed that: If we round to the nearest whole number, it accounts for 0 per cent of world energy consumption.

Both wind and solar are entirely reliant on subsidies for such economic viability as they have. Worldwide, the subsidies given to renewable energy currently amount to roughly $10 per gigajoule: These sums are paid by consumers to producers, so they tend to go from the poor to the rich, often to landowners.

It is true that some countries subsidise the use of fossil fuels, but they do so at a much lower rate — the world average is about $1.20 per gigajoule — and these are mostly subsidies for consumers (not producers), so they tend to help the poor, for whom energy costs are a disproportionate share of spending.

The costs of renewable energy are coming down, especially in the case of solar. But even if solar panels were free, the power they produce would still struggle to compete with fossil fuel — except in some very sunny locations — because of all the capital equipment required to concentrate and deliver the energy.

This is to say nothing of the great expanses of land on which solar facilities must be built and the cost of retaining sufficient conventional generator capacity to guarantee supply on a dark, cold, windless evening.

The two fundamental problems that renewables face are that they take up too much space and produce too little energy.

To run the US economy entirely on wind would require a wind farm the size of Texas, California and New Mexico combined — backed up by gas on windless days. To power it on wood would require a forest covering two-thirds of the U.S., heavily and continually harvested.

John Constable, who will head a new Energy Institute at the University of Buckingham in Britain, points out that the trickle of energy that human beings managed to extract from wind, water and wood before the Industrial Revolution placed a great limit on development and progress.

The incessant toil of farm labourers generated so little surplus energy in the form of food for men and draft animals that the accumulation of capital, such as machinery, was painfully slow. Even as late as the 18th century, this energy-deprived economy was sufficient to enrich daily life for only a fraction of the population.

Our old enemy, the second law of thermodynamics, is the problem here. As a teenager’s bedroom generally illustrates, left to its own devices, everything in the world becomes less ordered, more chaotic, tending toward “entropy,” or thermodynamic equilibrium. To reverse this tendency and make something complex, ordered and functional requires work. It requires energy.

The more energy you have, the more intricate, powerful and complex you can make a system. Just as human bodies need energy to be ordered and functional, so do societies. In that sense, fossil fuels were a unique advance because they allowed human beings to create extraordinary patterns of order and complexity — machines and buildings — with which to improve their lives.

The result of this great boost in energy is what economic historian and philosopher Deirdre McCloskey calls the Great Enrichment. In the case of the US, there has been a roughly 9000 per cent increase in the value of goods and services available to the average American since 1800, almost all of which are made with, made of, powered by or propelled by fossil fuels.

Still, more than a billion people on the planet have yet to get access to electricity and to experience the leap in living standards that abundant energy brings. This is not just an inconvenience for them: Indoor air pollution from wood fires kills four million people a year. The next time that somebody at a rally against fossil fuels lectures you about her concern for the fate of her grandchildren, show her a picture of an African child dying today from inhaling the dense muck of a smoky fire.

Notice, too, the ways in which fossil fuels have contributed to preserving the planet. As the American author and fossil-fuels advocate Alex Epstein points out in a bravely unfashionable book, The Moral Case for Fossil Fuels, the use of coal halted and then reversed the deforestation of Europe and North America.

The turn to oil halted the slaughter of the world’s whales and seals for their blubber. Fertiliser manufactured with gas halved the amount of land needed to produce a given amount of food, thus feeding a growing population while sparing land for wild nature.

To throw away these immense economic, environmental and moral benefits, you would have to have a very good reason. The one most often invoked today is that we are wrecking the planet’s climate. But are we?

Although the world has certainly warmed since the 19th century, the rate of warming has been slow and erratic. There has been no increase in the frequency or severity of storms or droughts, no acceleration of sea-level rise. Arctic sea ice has decreased, but Antarctic sea ice has increased.

At the same time, scientists are agreed that the extra carbon dioxide in the air has contributed to an improvement in crop yields and a roughly 14 per cent increase in the amount of all types of green vegetation on the planet since 1980.

That carbon-dioxide emissions should cause warming is not a new idea. In 1938, the British scientist Guy Callender thought that he could already detect warming as a result of carbon-dioxide emissions. He reckoned, however, that this was “likely to prove beneficial to mankind” by shifting northward the climate where cultivation was possible.

Only in the 1970s and 80s did scientists begin to say that the mild warming expected as a direct result of burning fossil fuels — roughly a degree Celsius per doubling of carbon-dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere — might be greatly amplified by water vapour and result in dangerous warming of two to four degrees a century or more.

That “feedback” assumption of high “sensitivity” remains in virtually all of the mathematical models used to this day by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or IPCC.

And yet it is increasingly possible that it is wrong. As Patrick Michaels of the libertarian Cato Institute has written, since 2000, 14 peer-reviewed papers, published by 42 authors, many of whom are key contributors to the reports of the IPCC, have concluded that climate sensitivity is low because net feedbacks are modest.

They arrive at this conclusion based on observed temperature changes, ocean-heat uptake and the balance between warming and cooling emissions (mainly sulfate aerosols). On average, they find sensitivity to be 40 per cent lower than the models on which the IPCC relies.

If these conclusions are right, they would explain the failure of the Earth’s surface to warm nearly as fast as predicted over the past 35 years, a time when — despite carbon-dioxide levels rising faster than expected — the warming rate has never reached even two-tenths of a degree per decade and has slowed down to virtually nothing in the past 15 to 20 years. This is one reason the latest IPCC report did not give a “best estimate” of sensitivity and why it lowered its estimate of near-term warming.

Most climate scientists remain reluctant to abandon the models and take the view that the current “hiatus” has merely delayed rapid warming. A turning point to dangerously rapid warming could be around the corner, even though it should have shown up by now. So it would be wise to do something to cut our emissions, so long as that something does not hurt the poor and those struggling to reach a modern standard of living.

We should encourage the switch from coal to gas in the generation of electricity, provide incentives for energy efficiency, get nuclear power back on track and keep developing solar power and electricity storage. We should also invest in research on ways to absorb carbon dioxide from the air, by fertilising the ocean or fixing it through carbon capture and storage. Those measures all make sense. And there is every reason to promote open-ended research to find some unexpected new energy technology.

The one thing that will not work is the one thing that the environmental movement insists upon: subsidising wealthy crony capitalists to build low-density, low-output, capital-intensive, land-hungry renewable energy schemes, while telling the poor to give up the dream of getting richer through fossil fuels.

Matt Ridley is the author of The Rational Optimist: How Prosperity Evolves, and a member of the British House of Lords.
The Wall Street Journal

Matt Ridley

Please sign this petition to save Loch Ness from Wind Turbine Infestation! http://www.scottish.parliament.uk/GettingInvolved/Petitions/PE01564

Lyndsey Ward  Mar 31/ 2015
Please everyone I want this to go viral. It has taken blood, sweat and tears and I want to sincerely thank Malcolm Kirk for putting up with me.
Please share and ask people to sign the petition to save Loch Ness
Thank youhttp://www.scottish.parliament.uk/GettingInvolved/Petitions/PE01564

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jMMUY07Gj18

Loch Ness

This video is about Loch Ness

Australian “Unknown Soldier’s Gravesite” Receives No Respect From Wind Industry, in France!

The Wind Industry Knows No Shame: Turbines to Desecrate the Unknown Graves of Thousands of Australian Soldiers in France

13thBattalionAIF_Le_Verguier

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This coming Anzac Day, 25 April 2015, looms large in Australia’s history, and collective consciousness, marking the Centenary of Australia’s bloody entry to the War to end all Wars, on the beaches of Gallipoli.

Not so much a celebration, as a reflection on the honour, courage and spirit of Australia’s fighting men and women, Anzac Day causes even the hardest heart to melt in awe at the extreme sacrifice offered, and made, by the finest young men this country had to offer.

Consider a country, remote from the rest of the world, barely a “Nation”, with a little over 4 million people, largely clinging to the south-eastern cities and coasts of its wide brown land, that saw some 420,000 men, from all over it, and from all walks of life – farmers, bankers, lawyers, doctors, teachers, Aboriginal stockmen, and everything in between – enlist for service in the First World War; representing 38.7 per cent of the male population aged between 18 and 44. The whole country missed them all at the time; and far too many of them were missed forever after.

Of that number, some 330,000 joined the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) and saw action overseas: at Gallipoli, in the Middle East, Belgium and France.

In France, the AIF often saw the thickest of the fighting; took the most ground, artillery and prisoners; and suffered more than their fair share of casualties: by 1918, Lieut.-General Sir John Monash had honed his skills as a commander, and those of his troops, to be without equal.

Of the more than 295,000 members of the AIF who served in France and Belgium – at places like Fromelles, the Somme, Bullecourt, Messines, Passchendaele and Villers-Bretonneux – over 46,000 lost their lives, and 132,000 were wounded. Of those who were killed in action, some 11,000 have no known grave.

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For Australians, that ground is our most hallowed. The contribution made by these men was Second to None: in valour, life and limb.

In the fearless recapture of towns like Villers-Bretonneux – an action involving a counter-attack at night, without artillery support – described by those that witnessed it as “the Most Brilliant Feat of Arms in the War” – the AIF earned the enduring respect of an embattled French people who, as this sign above the playground in their school declares, will never forget what was done by so many fine young men, so far from home.

Ecole Villers Brittenaux

Not only did Australian Diggers save many a French Town and Village, as they waited for the scarce shipping needed to bring them home after the Armistice on 11 November 1918, many remained in France and helped to rebuild their schools; and, on their return, rallied and raised funds back home to help with that fine and noble task.

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The deep ancestral connection between many Australians and those who fought to save the French, and who endured indescribable suffering in doing so, brings with it a mixture of pride in the sacrifices made, and a sense of collective grief for the tragic loss of so many promising young lives; lives of precisely the kind needed to fulfill the hopes of a young Nation.

One of those is Peter Norton, whose great uncle, Private Alfred William King, from Port Melbourne, was killed on 12 May 1917 at the second battle of Bullecourt. In two battles, the AIF suffered horrendous casualties: more than 10,000 killed, wounded or captured (for a moving understanding of what these men suffered see this article).

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Peter Norton, is rightly incensed at plans to spear wind turbines all over the Bullecourt battlefield; an act which can only be described as a monstrous affront to both the Australians who fought and died there; and to the French people, who still honour them on that sacred ground.

If we didn’t know the wind industry better, STT would be shocked. But these people know no bounds, moral decency or shame. To STT, this outrage is just the latest example of their callous disregard for their human victims; whether trying to live peaceful prosperous lives; or, having made the supreme sacrifice, to rest in peace.

Here’s the Sydney Morning Herald on the wind industry’s latest disgrace.

Battle to stop wind turbines being built on WWI battlefield
Bridie Smith
Sydney Morning Herald
22 March 2015

The Australian government has been asked to intervene to stop wind turbines being built on a former World War I battlefield in northern France, where 10,000 Australians became casualties of the Great War.

Six wind turbines have been proposed for the former Bullecourt battlefield, including two on the German trench lines where intense fighting took place during two battles in 1917.

Now farming land abutting the French towns of Bullecourt and Riencourt, the flat clay soil was the site of a flashpoint between the Germans attempting to move south and the Australians pushing north in their attempt to break through the Hindenburg Line.

Peter Norton, a battlefield guide of seven years, has written to Veterans’ Affairs Minister Michael Ronaldson asking for the government to “protest and prevent the desecration” of the former battlefield.

Mr Norton argues that, while the former battlefield has long been worked for farming, the ploughs used did not go further than 300 millimetres deep. They did not disturb graves because the German army had a minimum grave depth of 600 millimetres. It meant many remains of Australian and German soldiers had been left untouched for almost a century. They were now at risk, he said.

“Now we are talking heavy engineering, not just a farmer’s plough,” he said.

Mr Norton said the foundations for each of the six proposed turbines would go deep underground. Existing farmers’ tracks would need to be widened to support heavy haulage equipment and the cable runs connecting the turbines underground would involve digging trenches more than a metre underground.

Of greatest concern, he said, were turbines number one and two. They are planned for one of the most sensitive parts of the battlefield, where there was heavy fighting in April and May 1917.

“I’m in no doubt that there are quite a number of Australian dead still lying in and around turbine number one … it was a hot spot of the battlefield,” he said.

At the end of the second battle in May 1917, the Australians did what no one else had managed to do, breaking and holding the Hindenburg Line.

Breaking the German defences and capturing the village of Bullecourt, while a significant strategic advantage, came at a cost. The two battles resulted in 10,000 Australian casualties.

Among them was Mr Norton’s great uncle, Alfred William King. Private King, from Port Melbourne, was killed on May 12 when a shell landed near the foxhole he was sheltering in with five others. All were killed and buried nearby, but the location was lost in the chaos of war. The grave was re-located in 1955, and Private King and Charles Edgar Strachan from Albert Park were the only ones identified.

Mr Norton said his concerns were echoed by French locals, particularly in Riencourt, 2.5 kilometres east of Bullecourt, where they had formed a lobby group to stop the turbines being built.

“There is a hardcore number of locals who say we must never forget … that the Australians must never be forgotten,” he said.

The wind turbine project proposed by French group Maia Eolis is now before the local government, which will decide if it can go ahead.

A spokesman for the group said the proposed wind farm was part of a French government commitment for 23% of energy to be renewable by 2020, and that the Riencourt area had been defined as favourable for windfarms. He said the project was at feasibility stage, and there were ongoing landscape, heritage, ecological and acoustic studies.

“We know the past of this territory and we will be very vigilant on this issue. Thus, the necessary precautions will be taken to ensure an implantation respectful of the site of Bullecourt,” the spokesman said.

A spokesman for Veterans’ Affairs Minister Michael Ronaldson said the government was keen for the project to be handled appropriately.

He noted French authorities had well established protocols to ensure any disturbed remains were recovered and reinterred within a Commonwealth War Graves cemetery.

The response failed to impress Mr Norton.

“I’ve called on the Australian government to be active and what they’ve come back and said is that we’re going to stand by and watch. I’m not happy about that. I am extremely concerned.”
Sydney Morning Herald

STT notes the plea made to Michael Ronaldson to intervene on behalf of those Australians who hold the memory of what was achieved, and what was lost, in those French fields.

The Victorian Senator is one of very few Liberals who has thrown any kind of public support behind the disgrace that is the wind industry in Australia – a position based more on mercenary opportunism, and family ties, than on anything worthy of note or merit (see our post here). So, his pathetic response is of no surprise.

How decent Australians respond will be another matter.

Now “Ronno” can count among the victims of his wind industry mates, the final resting places of thousands of young men who perished at Bullecourt; and those who, like Peter Norton, live to keep the memory of their timeless sacrifice alive.

uncle WW1