Sunday, May 24, 2009

Lies, Spin, Connivance, B/S, Total Bollocks and Wind Farms

The opening this week of the Whitelee wind farm outside Glasgow exposes the lying and deceitfulness of both the wind farm industry and Alex Salmond.

Hurrah they all trumpeted! The 322-megawatt wind farm is going to be able to power the whole of Glasgow. Except it isn't. Government figures show that it will likely operate at a capacity of 28% which means it will be far from effective but just as expensive. It will do little more than keep half of Glasgow’s lights on, and not do anything to power TVs, dishwashers, tumble dryers et al.

Of course it will make a lot of people a lot of money because of the subsidies that are paid. Especially the Spanish owned company that built it and the landowners on whose land it's built. We will be paying massive subsidies so that these ultimate examples of gesture politics can keep turning.

Meanwhile, according to Jason Ormiston the former PR windbag for Scottish Renewables, which represents the wind industry, the vast majority of wind farms were sited out with highly sensitive landscape areas. What utter bollocks. Try coming to the Lammermuir Hills where most of the wind farms are built on AGLVs (officially designated Areas of Great Landscape Vale) and a SSSI in the case of the Aikengall wind farm. He also said, "One of the biggest threats to wild land is climate change and one of the most effective responses to it is the sensible development of renewable energy." He said this in his capacity of Chief Executive of Scottish Renewables, having been promoted from PR spokesman.

He went on to say, "The industry will continue to work with a rigorous planning system so that the building of productive renewable energy projects in the right places continues to follow good practice." He, and his organization, cares not a jot where they are built, just as long as they are. The wind farm planned by that defender of the Scottish Borders landscape, the Duke of Roxburghe on land he owns in the Lammermuir Hills at Fallago Ridge is case in point. It s on peat bogs that will be forever ruined by the concrete bases that are the size of football pitches that will be needed if the wind farm gets approval. It has been awaiting a decision by the Scottish Government's reporter following a public inquiry for over a year now. The reason that none has been forthcoming is nothing to do with the fact that it will complete the decimation of these remote hills, but because the MOD objected. Their radar will not work properly, creating 'holes' in its effectiveness. Ironically it would not be able to 'see' if an aircraft was approaching the Torness Nuclear Power station.

So desperate is the Duke’s company to develop this wind farm that they have got the former Conservative minister and now MP for Kensington and Chelsea, Sir Malcolm Rifkind, to write to Des Browne and another Labour Minister pointing out that they are acting contrary to the Prime Minster’s stated aims.
"As you know, the Prime Minister has indicated very recently the importance the government attaches to the development of alternative energy projects, and clearly wind farms must be a very important part of this overall strategy. It would be unfortunate if one arm of the government was pursuing a policy with such rigidity that it conflicted with the broader arms of the government."
Now that’s a first. A Tory helping the Prime Minister!

Then we have the downright untruths spouted by the great leader who opened the Whitelee wind farm. According to Alex Salmond, "Whitelee in its current form is already flying the flag for onshore wind power in Europe. The benefits of this investment go beyond South Lanarkshire and beyond our real economy. It is an investment in Scotland's potential and ambition to lead the clean, green energy revolution."

Back in January 2007 Alex Salmond was unequivocal. "There is a real difficulty with public acceptance of onshore wind. There should be a cap on future developments. We should concentrate the development of onshore wind into suitable areas.”
He went to say that financial support for onshore wind farms should be looked at again as he believed there was a danger onshore wind developers were getting too much financial support. Of course all that was done in order to help the SNP get elected and gain votes in areas where there was rising opposition to wind farms being built against public opinion.

This volte-face from Mr. Salmond is not totally unexpected; he is after all a politician. But such is the courting of the Scottish government by the renewables industry that even I’m staggered by the complete change in attitude. Does he not understand that wind turbines are inefficient, make little money for Scotland – other than for the landowners and the renewable companies, which are often foreign owned?

Are there any wind farms in Mr. Salmond’s constituencies? In fact how many wind farms have been approved in SNP constituencies as opposed to opposition constituencies? It might make for interesting analysis.

5 comments:

Richard T said...

As you say, to talk of the output from wind power is a delusion. Although the load factor is 28%, this is actually worse than it appears because for generation of electricity, you need plant to be available. Wind power falls over on 3 counts, you don't know when it will be capable of generating, you don't know how long it will run for and you can't rely on it producing the power needed. Argument over as far as I am concerned. The question of the cost whilst serious is ancillary to the basic objection that it can't deliver reliable power.

Richard Havers said...

Richard, you are of course spot on. I left those out because they are so obvious; yet the argument moved on from there a long time ago. No one in a position of power seems top accept that they are useless; Those that are just need to make grand gestures to show that they're doing something.

Richard T said...

The problem seems to me symptomatic of both British politics and economic management - privatisation of electricity left planning to the market hence the dash for gas as off the shelf plants producing cheaper power were available. No thought was given to the morrow by the city driven urge for maximisation of profit. If anything exemplifies Cameron's allegation of failing to fix the roof while times were good this does. Add to this the willingness of City institutions to sell off the power companies, we now have an unholy mess outwith the control of the government. Nevertheless this is the logic of the privatised electricity industry driven by the market.

With the push to greener policies, wind power is a short term easy win and so the system goes for it and claims kudos for tis far-sightedness. Add to that the authoritarianism of the green movement (which is we know what's best for you and this involves your living standards falling) there's a double whammy pushing the country down the wrong path.

The solution now being painfully reached is nuclear and clean coal. Because clever folk bought foreign there is a very limited UK capacity for design, construction and manufacture so the benefits of the programme go abroad. In addition, the demands for subsidy from the EdK subsidiary who will build the nuclear plants, are already loud.

There's no credit to anyone here. The Tories created the situation, Labour have neglected finding a remedy and the market ha snot provided.

Richard T said...

Sorry quick corrrectio of a typo in the last but one paragraph EdK should be EdF.

Richard T said...

Sorry quick corrrectio of a typo in the last but one paragraph EdK should be EdF.