Whirling triffids are now invading our seashores

I saw them now with a disgust that they had never roused in me before. 
Horrible alien things which some of us had somehow created, 
and which the rest of us, in our careless greed, had cultured all over the world. 
One could not even blame nature for them.

—Bill Masen in The Day of the Triffids

Wind turbines need a huge area to generate significant electricity.  An area the size of Wales would need to be covered in wind turbines just to meet one sixth of the U.K.'s daily energy needs.

So, for years now, subsidized wind energy investors have been razing ridgelines; felling forests; and slicing birds, bats, and insects.  They trash the landscape to benefit a few landowners and speculators in a vain attempt to produce cheap reliable electricity from a low-density, unpredictable, intermittent energy source.  This is all driven by a blurry green vision that humans can change the climate by manipulating the atmosphere.

But neighbors and nature-lovers are fighting back.  So now the wind speculators race for offshore space in shallow seas.

"The Day of the Triffids" is coming for coastal communities as these towers of whirling knives accelerate their invasion of shallow coastal waters.  They pose lethal danger to sea birds — beheading or de-winging pelicans and petrels, seagulls and sea eagles, gannets and grebes, kites and gliders.  They also endanger coastal shipping, barges, helicopters, fishermen, and tourists.  And the noise pollution from pile driving and turbine whine is affecting whales and seals.

"Net Zero" targets and subsidies threaten to drive a ninefold increase in demand for wind turbine ocean space — estimated to cover an area the size of Italy well before green energy nirvana is reached.

These turbines need energy to mine and manufacture the rare metals, steel, concrete, and plastics needed to build and erect the towers and transmission lines in offshore waters.  A careful analysis will show an energy deficit over their short lifetimes.  And after every cyclone or tsunami, mangled turbine trash will pollute coastal waters and beaches.  Most of this trash cannot be recycled and will become toxic landfill.

Mining operations have to lodge financial bonds to cover decommissioning, waste disposal, and land rehabilitation at the end of the mine life.  Why are wind and solar "farms" exempt from these liabilities?

And imagine the defense vulnerability of scattered towers and transmission lines to sabotage from hostile submarines or drones.


Offshore wind turbines.  (Photo credit: Lars PlougannCC BY-SA 2.0 license.)

Proven electricity generators driven by coal, gas, hydro or nuclear with a small land footprint are far less damaging to the environment of land and sea than the Whirling Triffids.

Where are the Green objectors now?

Food for Thought: 

The Day of the Triffids (a novel) touches on mankind's advances in science and technology as a possible contributor to the collapse of society.

A Press release from DNV:

"Ocean's Future to 2050 report: Rapid growth of offshore wind will trigger an unprecedented race for ocean space."
Høvik, Norway, 16 December 2021 – The exponential growth of offshore wind power will be the main driver of a nine-fold increase in demand for ocean space by the middle of the century, according to DNV's Ocean's Future to 2050 report. The report forecasts that by mid-century, offshore wind will require ocean space which is the equivalent to the landmass of Italy. The growth will be particularly pronounced in regions with long coastlines and presently have low penetration of offshore wind. Demand for ocean space is set to grow 50-fold in the Indian Subcontinent and 30-fold in North America."

"[A]s the world decarbonizes and the need for renewable energy grows, countries not able to be part of the age of fossil fuel can be part of the age of wind."

Are Wind Turbines killing Whales?
https://www.cfact.org/2016/03/04/are-wind-turbines-killing-whales/

The Subsidised Green Energy Disaster in Texas:
https://www.instagram.com/prageru/tv/CXxIRFhBiES/?utm_medium=share_sheet

Who Cleans up When a Wind Farm Dies?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mBsuN0uFfc8
https://www.npr.org/2019/09/10/759376113/unfurling-the-waste-problem-caused-by-wind-energy
https://www.wind-watch.org/news/2021/03/16/the-tragedy-of-wind-turbine-blade-disposal/

14,000 Abandoned Wind Turbines Litter the USA:
https://www.riteon.org.au/14000-abandoned-wind-turbines-litter-the-united-states/

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