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GAIA Host Collective
The best way to insure the power remains local is for your municipality to build the power generating system. If you live in a city that generates its own power, you can get in touch with the windmill guys and they will help you sell windpower to your municipal generating company. If you get your power from a co-op, the same thing applies. If you do not have local municipal generating, you can approach your city leaders with it as a method for preventing blackouts, insuring local power, some local jobs and an additional revenue stream for your city. The windmill guys handle the financing, and a bond issue can take care of it for the city. Believe me, municipal and co-op generating companies are looking for any way out of the petroleum trap too, and if you put public support behind it, things can happen.
What they are afraid of is NIMBYism and any recoil from local people. But if it's locals asking for it, things usually go your way with enough people behind it.
My personal feeling is that there is nothing more bucolic than a bunch of windmills turning on top of a hill, especially if I know the power is heating my home!!
I'm not sure if people are aware of the price they will have to pay, especially if wind starts growing beyond 10-15%. As I discussed here the costs would be mind-boggling.
As electricity moves to more of a real-time market pricing, the government woven glove over the invisible hand of the market will take care of the NEED for storage.
People can run their delayable loads when power is cheaper, things like charging the electric car, washer, dryer, et la.
If the shipping by electric rail infrastructure is constructed properly (along with tax law changes to make JIT shipping not advantatagous tax wise) when there is excess electrical power, the freight trains move.
The present POV WRT electrical power - flip a switch and its there, will just have to change. Variable pricing based on resource aviablity will force the change is all.
Can you imagine the losses that a loss of power would cause for a aluminium factory for example? Sorry, but this is a total nonsense.
Besides, the variations in wind power go down the bigger the area covered by the wind farm is.
If USA can finance new technologies, develop and build 2,593 F-35 fighter jets, they can afford a few new wind turbines. All depends on which one they want the most sky power consumers or sky power producers.
http://www.lockheedmartin.com/wms/findPage.do?dsp=fec&ci=15152&rsbci=11173&fti=0&ti=0&sc=400
Wonder how long that fill up is going to last.
http://www.lockheedmartin.com/wms/findPage.do?dsp=fec&ci=
15152&rsbci=11173&fti=0&ti=0&sc=400
http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/FTPROOT/features/beamon1.pdf
My reading has convinced me that wind power isn't as "relatively" expensive as the conventional wisdom would have it. For one thing, once it is built, the "fuel" is almost "free" and therefore, with very low price volatility (risk). And, if you believe in peak oil, then high fuel prices and volatility will be (are?) the norm. (How about 30-year fuel contracts? Under huge price increases, most of the suppliers will simply go bankrupt, and the power company will then have to pay market rates.) Capital and maintenance costs are high for wind, but no other generation method is exactly free. The following link gives another comparison:
http://www.earthscan.co.uk/news/article/mps/UAN/71/v/3/sp/
I think that one of the reasons that the USA has been on a wind power building binge is the subsidy, but I also think that the power companies have discovered a type of a gold mine in wind, and they are taking advantage of it. Maybe the wind power companies are pleading poor economics partly because they are attempting to milk us for more dollars. Heck, the oil industry does this all the time, and they get billions and massive tax breaks every year! Maybe the wind power industry is just drinking at the same trough.
It will be clearly the opposite IMO, and with the implied necessity of subsidies you will have to add a heightened tax burden as a nice little extra.
Regarding the cost - above 10-15% wind penetration we will have to find a way to store that wind energy and start building expensive storages in a geometric progression. Nobody included these costs in this article and noone included the costs of maintaining a fossil powered backup capacity even with penetration well below 10%. But of course who cares, what is important is to show the public that we do something to reduce fossil fuels usage. Blah.
Let us not fool ourselves, wind is not THE answer. It could be one of the answers but relying on it to replace all nuclear, gas and coal is simply not serious. I'd also say irresponsible, IMO.
According to my Southern California Edison stub, I got 3% of my 2004 power from wind (1% solar, 1% small hydro, 2% biomass, 9% large hydro, 11% geothermal, 18% coal, 22% nuke, 33% natural gas).
(In terms of weaning us off corporations ... the "off grid" stuff does continue to evolve with some technology overlap.)
15% wind and 19% gas would look much better IMO. The obsolate NG power plants could be left as a backup for wind. All you will need is some NG storage facilities. Hope your grid is not too decentralized.
(the "off grid" stuff is doomed. we are all in the Matrix and nobody is researching red pills)
Note that in our state there is a law against billboards, and there are a lot more pristine scenic views than one can find elsewhere, upstate New York for example. (I live in an absolutely gorgeous valley, that has "scenic view corridor" building restrictions.) So here, wind farms would not be just another blight on the landscape, but the only "blight".
That's also a part of the resistance.