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Here in this northwest Missouri farm town, 27 industrial wind turbines have been generating more than electricity -- health concerns, a federal lawsuit and a family feud, for starters.
The wind industry, which produces about 1 percent of the nation's energy, has gained considerable purchase in the U.S, growing by 45 percent last year. ...Now come claims that industrial windmills cause what one researcher calls "wind turbine syndrome," a range of symptoms that include headaches, anxiety, sleep problems and dizziness in some people who live close by.
"It's like someone swinging a rope over your head," says Gentry County horse breeder Charlie Porter of the several wind turbines within about 2,000 feet of his home near King City.
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Noise Pollution: The Sound Behind Heart Effects
October, 2007 by M. Nathaniel Mead in Environmental Health Perspectives
October, 2007 by M. Nathaniel Mead in Environmental Health Perspectives
More than 15 million Americans currently have some form of coronary heart disease (CHD), which involves a narrowing of the small blood vessels that supply blood and oxygen to the heart. Risk factors for CHD include diabetes, high blood pressure, altered blood lipids, obesity, smoking, menopause, and inactivity. To this list we can now add noise, thanks to a recent study and assessment of the evidence by the WHO Noise Environmental Burden on Disease working group. The findings, first presented at the Internoise 2007 conference in August 2007, will be published in December.
"The new data indicate that noise pollution is causing more deaths from heart disease than was previously thought," says working group member Deepak Prasher, a professor of audiology at University College in London-perhaps hundreds of thousands around the world. "Until now, the burden of disease related to the general population's exposure to environmental noise has rarely been estimated in nonoccupational settings at the international level." ..."Noise pollution contributes not only to cardiovascular disease, but also to hearing loss, sleep disruption, social handicaps, diminished productivity, impaired teaching and learning, absenteeism, increased drug use, and accidents," says physician Louis Hagler, who coauthored a review on noise pollution in the March 2007 Southern Medical Journal. "The public health repercussions of increasing noise pollution for future generations could be immense."
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That backyard windmill may be more trouble than it's worth
May 29, 2007 by Paul Weber in Associated Press
May 29, 2007 by Paul Weber in Associated Press
Fearing noise and bad looks, some communities are banning them.
Noise Complaints On Rise with New Industrial Wind Power Projects
April 2, 2007 by National Wind Watch Press Release
April 2, 2007 by National Wind Watch Press Release
Noise created by commercial-scale wind turbines has become a major concern around the world as wind power development continues to proliferate. Although the industry claims that modern turbines are quieter - even as they grow ever larger - complaints are increasing from people who live near new projects............National Wind Watch calls on the commercial wind industry to respect the people who reside in targeted development regions, to honor their right to healthy lives and peaceful enjoyment of their homes, by adopting meaningful setbacks - measured in miles, not in feet.
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Nimby-ism (Notin My Back) is almost understandable when talking about a gas pipeline or an ugly McMansion. But when it comes to environmentally friendly, quiet and- some say- beautiful windmills, an astonishing number of people are saying "no". Melanie Wold asks, "Why? Is it all the dead seagulls?"
Editor's Note: This article appeared in the October 2006 issue of Shattered Magazine. The pdf version is available via the link below.
Editor's Note: This article appeared in the October 2006 issue of Shattered Magazine. The pdf version is available via the link below.
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UK Noise Association - Wind Farms are Causing Noise Problems
August 2, 2006 by UK Noise Association Press Release in IWA
August 2, 2006 by UK Noise Association Press Release in IWA
Within weeks of the Government's Energy Review (1) proposing that planning controls be relaxed to speed up the introduction of wind farms, a new report (2) reveals that badly-sited wind turbines can cause real noise problems for local communities.
Neighbors complain of wind farm nuisances
April 28, 2006 by Scripps Howard News Service in The Albuquerque Tribune
April 28, 2006 by Scripps Howard News Service in The Albuquerque Tribune
While the industry portrays electricity-generating windmills as a benign and natural source of power, community opposition to new windmill farms is cropping up across the country - particularly in Eastern states, where there are more people fleeing urban blight to live in idyllic rural towns.
A group of Grant County landowners has filed a lawsuit seeking to block construction of a Mount Storm area wind-power project.
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