On Tuesday RedState brought you the story, “Why Are Wind Turbines Around the World Toppling Over? And Why Aren’t the Rest Spinning?” The answer to question number one is that design and production flaws occurred in the race to get green money bucks from the government, the answer to the second is that many are not spinning because they either need maintenance, or the wind is blowing too hard, or there’s not enough wind. (Or they’re just not all they’re cracked up to be.) There’s another windmill story out there that I didn’t cover, however—I didn’t want to be long-winded—namely, whales are dying in unusual numbers on the beaches of New York and New Jersey, apparently from sound devastation caused by construction of offshore turbine farms. It’s pitting the climate crowd against the environmentalists, and while you might assume they’re the same people, sometimes their interests diverge. Since December 2022, at least 9 dead whales have washed up in the northeast states: The issue has caused enough concern that 12 New Jersey mayors wrote a letter to state and local officials this week and demanded an immediate moratorium on the projects:
Sad scenes like this have become all too common lately: There are seven offshore wind projects in federal waters off the coast of New Jersey and New York currently under construction, according to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM). The whale deaths are causing some strange alliances, as environmental activists are becoming increasingly vocal in their concern while the climate groupies are not happy that anyone would dare get in the way of their Holy Grail, clean energy. Forget the whales, is their basic message, according to Politico:
Yeah, whales are more concerned about a slightly warming ocean than they are about devastating noise pollution that’s seemingly killing them right now, not at some point in the future. Did you ever think Fox News host Tucker Carlson would be on the same page with the 40-year-old non-profit Clean Ocean Action? And yet here they are:
Watch: As I’ve written before, I’m not anti-clean energy; in fact, I’m all for it—when it actually becomes efficient and cost-effective. I’m not convinced that covering millions of acres of our land and our seafloor with unsightly windmills is the answer, considering they’re extremely high-maintenance, dependent on the weather, and are probably killing whales. In the meantime, while these technologies are being developed, we’re shooting ourselves in the foot by strangling our energy production and nuking projects like the Keystone pipeline. But if more dead whales start washing up on our shores, expect this Battle of the Activists to become an all-out brawl. I’ve got my sofa and popcorn at the ready. One thing is for sure—if all these whales started showing up on beaches in Texas because of oil production plants, those facilities would have been shut down yesterday. Related:–> |
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