Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumFour indicted in Sweetwater wind turbine blade dumping probe; cleanup not yet started
Four indicted in Sweetwater wind turbine blade dumping probe; cleanup not yet started
(To get a scale of these things, it is useful to compare the size of the cars in the parking lot.)
RELATED | Texas environmental agency cracks down on wind turbine blade disposal in Sweetwater
The City of Sweetwater, the Sweetwater Police Department, Sweetwater Economic Development and the Nolan County District Attorneys Office held a press conference Thursday, to provide an update on the status of the wind blades at the location, outline actions taken and discuss the indictments...
...Nolan County District Attorney Ricky Thompson said cases were presented Tuesday to a Nolan County grand jury based on the Sweetwater Police Department investigation. Thompson said four cases were presented, actually eight cases total, and said the indictments involve illegal dumping and theft of property with engaging in organized criminal activity. Thompson said the theft-related charge was a first-degree felony and said the illegal dumping charge in Texas only carries a state jail felony.
Thompson also said the individuals responsible do not live in Nolan County and don't even live here in the state of Texas.
The issue dates back to at least 2022, when two massive piles of old wind turbine blades were reported being stored in Sweetwater and Nolan County. Global Fiberglass Solutions has two storage locations tied to the matter, one inside the Sweetwater city limits and another south of town...
I should expect some "whataboutism" connected with the Texas oil and gas industry, which I acknowledge, but the fact that oil and gas are dirty fuels - albeit necessary in Texas to address the unreliability of the wind - does not make wind energy "clean." Neither wind nor solar nor dangerous fossil fuels are as clean as nuclear energy.)
Note that these blades have been decommissioned after they finished spewing microplastics from their coatings into the air.
(For just one example of the microplastic pollution associated with wind turbines see: Stefania Piarulli et al 2024 J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. 2875 012050 Assessment of microplastics in the sediments around Hywind Scotland Offshore Wind Farm
Based on Danish data, it can be shown that the lifetime of a wind turbine is, on average, less than 20 years, although some wind turbines can function for longer periods (at reduced efficiency) and many are finished within 5 years.
Ercot, the Texas grid, is one of the leading wind producing grids in the country.
According to the Electricity Map, over the last year, the carbon dioxide intensity of the Ercot grid was 288 grams CO2/kWh which, in "percent talk" is 993% higher than that of France, 29 CO2/kWh. Again, in "percent talk," about 8.5% of Texas electricity comes from nuclear energy.
Have a nice evening.
Response to NNadir (Original post)
walkingman This message was self-deleted by its author.
gay texan
(3,196 posts)They had no plans of ever recycling these, they simply wanted the money.
Rumor mill has it that it's snared a few local politicians
LetsGetSmartAboutIt
(62 posts)Microplastics were not from the leading edge coatings on the blades so it's not a good reference for pollution from wind turbine blades.
I could be reading it wrong since it is not very clear about the results.
Anyone who is curious should read them.
It seems that there is an "astroturf" effort to sow misinformation about solar and wind to get local people upset and show up to fight installations.
The stories are scary and I haven't confirmed them carefully but some are pretty far fetched...
thought crime
(1,454 posts)The Wind Energy Industry is undergoing constant innovation on all aspects of the development and operations cycle. New materials for blades are being developed to make them recyclable.
https://www.siemensgamesa.com/global/en/home/explore/journal/recyclable-blade.html
The poster prefers to show Wind Energy in the worst possible light.
I agree: astroturf
NNadir
(37,788 posts)...turbine blade coatings is well known, and is, in fact, why the blades up as landfill.