Search Results for: "wind health effects"
Relevance | DateWindaction News Issue: August 1, 2013
By Lisa Linowes -- August 1, 2013 No CommentsWindaction.org’s periodic newsletter keeps readers updated on the latest news in the wind energy industry!
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by Ariel Wittenberg in South Coast Today – Massachusetts
The Incompatibility of Wind and Crop ‘Farming’
By Lisa Linowes -- July 1, 2013 15 Comments“Absentee landowners may be gaining financially from [wind power] development, but the idea that ‘wind farming’ is a compatible agriculture use is more myth than reality in Illinois…. In fact, those Illinois farmers who have leveraged their operations conservatively tell us that they’re not interested in the ‘windfall’ of wind farming.”
The wind industry continues to claim that wind “farming” and agriculture are compatible land uses. Here it is again in a recent letter in the Wall Street Journal by the American Wind Energy Association defending the economics of wind power.
For years, politicians and urban/suburbanites have been treated to heaping doses of win-win business tales of family farmers leasing sections of their crop land for wind development, while working the soil right up to the towers and earning extra revenue to keep the land open.…
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By Lisa Linowes -- June 15, 2013 1 CommentWindaction.org’s periodic newsletter keeps readers updated on the latest news in the wind energy industry!
facts, analysis, exposure of wind energy’s real impacts
Issue: 2013-06-15
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Ontario’s Green Energy Act: Ill Wind All Around
By Kenneth P. Green -- May 9, 2013 5 CommentsThe Fraser Institute recently published a study examining the impacts of green energy policies inOntario,Canada. The summary of the study, which was written by Fraser Institute Senior Fellow Ross McKitrick, is below.
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The Ontario Green Energy and Green Economy Act (herein the GEA) was passed in May 2009 with the purpose of addressing environmental concerns and promoting economic growth inOntario. Its centerpiece is a schedule of subsidized electricity purchase contracts called Feed-in-Tariffs (FITs) that provide long-term guarantees of above-market rates for power generated by wind turbine farms, solar panel installations, bio-energy plants and small hydroelectric generators. Development of these power sources was motivated in part by a stated goal of closing the Lambton and Nanticoke coal-fired power plants.
This report investigates the effect of the GEA on economic competitiveness in Ontario.…
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