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Oil Billionaire Building World's Largest Wind Farm

gadzook33 writes "CNN is reporting that oil billionaire T. Boone Pickens is planning to invest billions of dollars in what will probably be the world's largest wind farm. It will eventually generate 4 gigawatts, enough to power 1.3 million homes. The first 600 GE wind turbines are scheduled for delivery in 2010. Pickens says that each turbine will generate about $20,000 in income annually for the landowner who hosts it."

4 of 661 comments (clear)

  1. Re:just a few thoughts on clena energy by aengblom · · Score: 5, Informative

    Just playing devils advocate as from a environmental point of view how could this be a bad thing. First off the US needs to do something like Germany and give economic incentives, ie a fixed price on energy. This way your not competing dollar for dollar with oil and coal.

    Wait, so you think that developers are building these without incentives and that's a bad thing? Sadly, wind still does need incentives -- and gets it in the U.S. -- but the whole idea is for incentives to jump start the technology to where it becomes competitive without the incentives.

    And these turbines, at least, aren't really gobbling land -- a lot of them get placed on ranch land, so it's essentially multi-use.

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  2. Pickens is not a good guy by rhadamanthus · · Score: 5, Informative
    This is the same guy planning to drain the Olligalla (sp?) aquifer to supply southern texas with water. Private water rights being abused, right before your eyes.


    FWIW, these two projects (the wind farm and the water system) are really the same

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  3. Some notes by GreggBz · · Score: 5, Informative

    I live close to the Waymart Wind Farm. Just a few notes:

    I totally support wind energy and think the turbines have done good for the community.

    They make noise. Even at 1/2 mile away, low whooshing sounds are clearly audible, especially at 4AM.

    They are HUGE. Pictures don't do it justice. By the time your next to one, it's an awesome site.

    The community here gets jobs and money from them. The government pays 1.8 cents per kilowatt hour for wind energy, netting the community here $150,000 a year. Also Florida Power and Electric pays about 12 employees here to service them. I've known a few that have worked on the turbines, they have some amazing pictures of being on top.

    They significantly interfere with off-air television. I work for the cable company, and we had to build a giant antenna in another site because our first giant antenna was to close to the windmills. Local houses have trouble getting off-air signals, digital HD included.

    They are a tourist attraction. The first few years they existed here, many people tried to sneak onto the private land to snap pictures etc..

  4. Re:In other news by mikael · · Score: 5, Informative

    Not forgetting buildings. Cities are known to increase temperate by two degrees centigrade for every mile radius of urban development.

    National Geographic had a program which described how the latest skyscrapers in New York were being designed to save on energy by using rainwater.

    Although, they were saying that every skyscraper increased the surface area of the city due to the vertical walls, but failed to mention the shadow created by the building.

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