Documents
Category:
Safety and USA
Also filed under [
Structural Failure]
Here is a reprint of an email about ice throw at Green Mountain Power's Searsburg wind energy facility in Searsburg Vermont. The email was written by John Zimmerman to an American Wind Energy Association listserv in 2000. Mr. Zimmerman managed the development of the Searsburg facility
Also filed under [
Icing]
This short GE Energy document explains the risk in the event of extreme wind conditions including hurricane or tornado and any mitigation. Note, the document acknowledges the risk of blade throws and tower collapse.
Also filed under [
Structural Failure]
Some elements to consider in policy, planning, and public relations
Also filed under [
General|
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on People|
Impact on Economy|
Zoning/Planning]
This chapter provides guidelines for the marking and lighting of wind turbine farms. For the purposes of this advisory circular, wind turbine farms are defined as a wind turbine development that contains more than three (3) turbines of heights over 200 feet above ground level. The recommended marking and lighting of these structures is intended to provide day and night conspicuity and to assist pilots in identifying and avoiding these obstacles.
Turbine Accidents: Update from Caithness Wind Farms Information Forum
October, 2006
by David Craig, Caithness Windfarms Information Forum
A compilation as of November 1, 2006 of turbine accidents in the USA and abroad by accident type, date, site, state/country and turbine model.
This report focuses on the effects of wind farms on air defense and missile warning radars and the resulting potential impact on military readiness. Its scope is limited to these specific subjects and is based on the current level of understanding regarding interactions between such defense systems and state-of-the-art wind turbines.........
The results from those flight trials documented that state-of-the-art utility-class wind turbines can have a significant impact on the operational capabilities of military air defense radar systems. The results demonstrated that the large radar cross section of a wind turbine combined with the Doppler frequency shift produced by its rotating blades can impact the ability of a radar to discriminate the wind turbine from an aircraft. Those tests also demonstrated that the wind farms have the potential to degrade target tracking capabilities as a result of shadowing and clutter effects.
A Review of the Science, Literature and Recommendations Concerning Public Safety and Ice Throws from Wind Turbines
May, 2006
by Kenneth Jaffe, MD, Meredith (NY)
During a recent roundtable discussion concerning wind power projects at the Delaware County Historical Society a participant affiliated with two local wind development companies stated that there were three issues where the health and safety impacts were predictable and avoidable---- ice throws, noise, and flicker. Since the statement was made in the presence of planners who are advising towns in the process of writing regulations to protect the health and safety of residents, I felt that a fuller discussion of the known science of these issues was important, and have prepared this report to that end.
Editor's Note: Dr. Jaffe's presentation to the Town of Meredith Planning Board on the proposed industrial wind plant vis-a-vis Meredith's 'vision' is available via the link below.
Editor's Note: Dr. Jaffe's presentation to the Town of Meredith Planning Board on the proposed industrial wind plant vis-a-vis Meredith's 'vision' is available via the link below.
BBC Research & Consulting's 2005 report for the National Wind Coordinating Committee that studies 9 wind plant sitings in an effort to identify circumstances that distinguish welcomed projects from projects that were not accepted by communities.
Also filed under [
General|
Technology|
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Birds|
Impact on Bats|
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on Views|
Erosion|
Pollution|
Impact on Space|
Impact on People|
Noise|
Lighting|
Impact on Economy|
Property Values|
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
Tourism|
Icing|
Injury|
Structural Failure|
Energy Policy]
Wind Farms and Their Effects on Public Safety Radio Systems
February 24, 2005
by Leonard J. Koehnen, and Associates, Inc.
In many parts of the country, wind farms are being installed to alleviate the need to build more
electrical generating plants. These wind farms can have a profound effect on your public safety, utility,
and governmental microwave systems by chopping and reflecting the microwave beam.
Also filed under [
Impact on People|
Zoning/Planning]