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Impact on Birds and Asia
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Bird strikes lead to delays in wind turbine projects
January 7, 2009 by Midoriko Nagasaki in Asahi Shimbun
January 7, 2009 by Midoriko Nagasaki in Asahi Shimbun
Operators of wind turbines are already under pressure to improve the structures' quake-resistance strength. Now, they face another problem with nature: endangered birds flying into the turbines' blades.
The bird strike problem has become so serious that measures to protect the fowl are slowing the spread of wind power as a source of electricity generation. ...
A total of 14 birds designated by the government as national treasures, including white-tailed sea eagles, have died at different sites by flying into completed wind turbines.
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Impact on Wildlife]
Kutch used to have 10 to 15 nests of the white backed vultures till a couple of years ago. This year, just a lone nest has been found. Where once there were more than 70 birds, now only 10 to 15 remain. When birdwatchers got together to look for a possible reason for the sudden drop in number of these birds, they attributed it to the wind farms that have come up in the area in the last one year.
Yet when the National Planning Committee (NPC) approved plans for building a wind turbine farm directly on the path of the migration flyway, SPNI came out in strong opposition..."Of the 90,000 birds migrating over, the flight path of roughly 10,000 passed directly through the air space where the wind turbines are planned. Obviously these birds would have been in great danger of collision with the blades," says Alon. Weekly surveys were conducted during the winter, and daily migration surveys resumed on March 1st, 2005. "During the spring of 2005, bird observers counted another 200,000 plus birds, mostly White Storks of which a minimum of 15,000 crossed over the proposed turbine farm within the range of the blades.
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Impact on Wildlife|
USA]
Move to protect birds from wind turbines
January 4, 2007 by Junya Yoshida and Eiji Zakoda in The Asahi Shimbun
January 4, 2007 by Junya Yoshida and Eiji Zakoda in The Asahi Shimbun
ASAHIKAWA, Hokkaido–Wind turbines that grace the terrain of this northern region may soon be painted fire-engine red and lit up at night: not for aesthetic reasons, but to stop low-flying birds from crashing into the whirling blades.
With reports of rare bird species being killed off by wind turbines in Hokkaido and elsewhere, companies that operate them are scrambling to find effective yet economically viable methods to make the units more environmentally friendly.
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Impact on Wildlife]
Ministry eyes steps to stop migrating birds from being killed by wind turbines
August 17, 2006 in The Asahi Shimbun
August 17, 2006 in The Asahi Shimbun
The [Japanese] Environment Ministry is urgently trying to find ways to stop migrating birds from crashing into wind turbines amid government plans to dramatically increase this form of power generation.
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Impact on Wildlife]