SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : The *NEW* Frank Coluccio Technology Forum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (21310)5/9/2007 12:35:11 PM
From: Frank A. Coluccio  Respond to of 46821
 
Wind-Energy Use Growing in U.S., But Guidelines Lacking

May 3 -- Although use of wind energy to generate electricity is increasing rapidly, government guidance to help communities and developers plan wind-energy projects is lacking, says a new report from the National Research Council. The report, which assesses environmental benefits and drawbacks, estimates that by 2020, wind energy will offset about 4.5 percent of the CO2 that would otherwise be emitted by other electricity sources.

nationalacademies.org

Press Release: The National Academies
--

Use of Wind Energy in U.S. Growing, But Planning and Guidelines Are Lacking;

New Report Examines Wind Energy's Impacts on Emissions, Wildlife, and Humans

WASHINGTON -- Although the use of wind energy to generate electricity is increasing rapidly in the United States, government guidance to help communities and developers evaluate and plan proposed wind-energy projects is lacking, says a new congressionally mandated report from the National Research Council. To inform the development of guidelines, the report offers an analysis of the environmental benefits and drawbacks of wind energy, along with an evaluation guide to aid decision-making about projects. As a case study, the committee that wrote the report looked at the mid-Atlantic highlands, a mountainous area that spans parts of West Virginia, Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania. The report does not examine the impact of offshore wind-energy projects.

Currently, federal regulation of wind projects on private land is minimal, the report observes. And although some states have developed guidelines, wind energy is such a recent addition to the energy mix in most areas -- the nation's wind-energy capacity more than quadrupled between 2000 and 2006 -- that most states are relatively inexperienced at planning and regulation. Despite the growth in its use, wind energy still generates less than 1 percent of the nation's electricity. Some national-level policies to enhance the benefits of wind energy and minimize its harms would help guide state and local regulatory efforts, the report says.

Impacts on CO2 and Other Pollutants

A primary benefit of using wind to generate electricity is that it produces no carbon dioxide (CO2), a major greenhouse gas, or any other air pollutant. Based on U.S. Department of Energy projections for wind-energy development in the United States, the committee estimated that by 2020, wind energy will offset approximately 4.5 percent of the carbon dioxide that would otherwise be emitted by other electricity sources. In 2005, electricity generation accounted for 39 percent of the nation's total CO2 emissions.

The committee concluded that use of wind energy to generate electricity probably would not significantly reduce emissions of two other pollutants, sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides, because current and expected regulations of these are largely based on cap-and-trade programs. The degree to which emissions would be further reduced through special provisions to encourage wind-energy use -- such as set-asides, in which a percentage of emissions allowed under the cap are retired to the extent they can be offset by wind energy -- is uncertain, the committee added.

In the mid-Atlantic region, wind energy will likely contribute a lower proportion of electricity generation than it will in the United States overall, the report says; compared to other areas, a smaller portion of the region has strong, relatively steady winds.

Effects on Wildlife

Wind facilities can have certain adverse environmental effects on a local or regional level, by damaging habitat and killing birds and bats that fly into turbines. Among birds, the most frequent turbine fatalities are nocturnal, migrating songbirds, probably because of their abundance, the report says. However, the committee saw no evidence that fatalities from existing wind facilities are causing measurable changes in bird populations in the United States. A possible exception is deaths among birds of prey, such as eagles and hawks, near Altamont Pass, Calif. -- a facility with older, smaller turbines that appear more apt to kill such birds than newer turbines are.

Too little information is available to reliably predict how proposed new wind projects in the mid-Atlantic highlands would affect bird populations, the report says. As for bats, turbines placed on ridges -- as many are in the mid-Atlantic region -- appear more likely to kill them than turbines sited elsewhere. In fact, preliminary information indicates that in the mid-Atlantic highlands more bats are killed than expected based on experience with other regions, the committee said. Although scarce data make it hard to say how these deaths affect overall bat populations, the possibility of population effects is significant, especially if more turbines are added, given a general decline in several species of bats in the eastern United States.

Studies to evaluate possible ecological impacts should be conducted prior to choosing sites for wind facilities, the committee said, and follow-up studies should be conducted to measure actual effects. Additional basic research also is needed to help assess the short- and long-term impacts of these facilities on species at risk.

Impacts on Humans

A common objection to proposed wind projects is that they will have a negative aesthetic impact. The report outlines a process to help communities and developers assess a project's likely aesthetic effects, and suggests ways to minimize them -- for example, by using uniform types and sizes of turbines, and by ensuring that each region retains some undeveloped scenic vistas. The report also offers questions to ask, to help determine whether the aesthetic impact might be great enough to render a project unacceptable.

Wind projects also can be disruptive because of noise and shadow flicker, a strobelike effect caused by rotating turbine blades. The report recommends that noise surveys be conducted before a project is sited, and that processes be set up to respond to noise complaints. Shadow flicker has generally not been a problem at wind facilities in North America, the report says; new turbines can be located so that their shadow paths avoid residences, or operations can be halted during times when troublesome flicker occurs.

The report also considers beneficial and adverse economic effects on local areas -- such as effects on landowners, the regional economy, and local government revenues -- and recommends measures to anticipate and mitigate potential problems. In addition, the report discusses possible electromagnetic interference with local installations such as radar.

Improving Planning and Regulation

Governments at the state and local levels should provide developers and the public with guidance to help them plan for wind-energy development, including guidance on procedures and information needs for assessing projects, the report says. It also recommends that regulatory agencies adopt an evaluation guide to review proposed projects, and that governments work with each other and with organizations and developers to create guidelines for weighing projects' costs and benefits at scales ranging from local to national.

The report was sponsored by the White House Council on Environmental Quality. The National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, Institute of Medicine, and National Research Council make up the National Academies. They are private, nonprofit institutions that provide science, technology, and health policy advice under a congressional charter. The Research Council is the principal operating agency of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering. A committee roster follows.

Copies of Environmental Impacts of Wind Energy Projects will be available from the National Academies Press; tel. 202-334-3313 or 1-800-624-6242 or on the Internet at nap.edu. Reporters may obtain a pre-publication copy from the Office of News and Public Information (contacts listed above).

------



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (21310)5/9/2007 9:16:50 PM
From: axial  Respond to of 46821
 
Frank, one aspect of my job enatiled a detailed review of insurance outlooks on warming, and consequent catastrophic weather.

I haven't time to pull up the reference material; perhaps this weekend.

But I can state this: the outlook of those whose business it is to understand such trends is directly at odds with Christopher Landsea's view.

What's more, you'll see no daylight between the insurers. From any standpoint one could choose, their view looking forward is negative, and has been for many years.

Long before anyone heard the phrase "Inconvenient Truth" the insurers had it down to dollars and cents.

Jim



To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (21310)2/17/2011 12:11:57 AM
From: axial  Respond to of 46821
 
Humans play role in increasing fury of storms, floods

"It has long been suspected greenhouse gases are playing a role in the increasing intensity of storms and floods, but scientists have had trouble pinning it down. Both Zwiers' team and another group in Europe say they have now come up with incriminating evidence.

In a study published in the scientific journal Nature on Thursday, Zwiers and his colleagues report that there has been a "substantial" increase in the intensity of heavy-precipitation events over large parts of the Northern Hemisphere due to greenhouse gas generated by the burning of fossil fuels and other human activities. Storms that drop more than 100 millimetres of precipitation in 24 hours qualify as heavy-precipitation events.

Meanwhile, the European team, also reporting in Nature, zeroed in on the rain storms that caused widespread flooding in the United Kingdom in October and November 2000 — the wettest autumn in England and Wales on record since 1766.

Pardeep Pall, at the University of Oxford, led the research comparing what happened in the real world with what climate models predict would have happened in a "parallel world" — one without human-created greenhouse gases.

Pall found that greenhouse-gas emissions substantially increased the odds of the 2000 flooding "with a likely increase in odds of about a doubling or more."

canada.com

Jim