Voting For Wildlife Extermination
Extending the wind energy PTC will drive eagles and other majestic birds to extinction
Paul Driessen
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The latest justification for extending the industrial wind
electricity production tax credit (PTC) is that we need an “all of the
above” energy policy. The slogan falls flat, even when it’s expanded to
“all of the above and below” – which is rarely the case with radical
environmentalists and “progressive” politicians, who steadfastly oppose
“any of the below” (ie, hydrocarbons).
America needs an “all of the sensible” energy policy. If an energy option makes sense – technically, economically and environmentally – it should be implemented. If it flunks, it should be scrapped.
Industrial wind energy mandates, renewable portfolio standards, subsidies, feed-in tariffs and
production tax credits fail every test. They flunk environmental
standards disastrously. In fact, they are subsidizing the slaughter of
countless eagles, hawks, falcons, owls, herons, cranes, egrets, other
birds and bats.
The wind PTC epitomizes “you didn’t build it.” If any business
“didn’t get there on your own,” or was “successful because, along the
line,” somebody (in government) “gave you some help” – it is Big Wind.
Industrial wind energy has been mandated, propped up, subsidized,
built and protected by government. Elected and unelected officials at
the federal, state and local levels have given it every unfair advantage
that taxpayer and ratepayer money, legal favors and exemptions, and
crony corporatism could bestow upon it. Meanwhile, in numerous cases,
the same legislative, regulatory, environmentalist and industrialist
cronies have penalized and marginalized Big Wind’s hydrocarbon and
nuclear competitors – often for the same reasons that are ignored with
wind energy.
Industrial wind is actually our least sustainable energy resource.
It requires perpetual subsidies to survive. The tax revenues it takes
from productive sectors of the economy, the insufficient and unreliable
nature of wind electricity, and the exorbitant electricity rates that
wind turbines impose on factories and businesses, kill two to four jobs for every “green” job created. Wind is a net job loser.
Big Wind also imposes excessive environmental impacts. It requires
vast amounts of raw materials and land for turbines, backup power and
long transmission lines. The extraction and processing of rare earth
metals and other materials devastates large agricultural, scenic and
wildlife habitat areas and harms people’s health, especially in China.
Worst, the turbines are returning numerous bird and bat species to the
edge of extinction, after decades of patient, costly efforts to nurse
them back to health.
These are not sparrows and pigeons killed by housecats. They are bats that eat insects and protect crops.
They are some of our most important and magnificent raptors, herons,
cranes, condors and other majestic sovereigns of our skies. They are
being chopped out of the air and driven from numerous habitats.
The US Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS), American Bird Conservancy
(ABC) and other experts estimate that well over 500,000 birds and
countless bats are being killed annually by turbines. The subsidized
slaughter “could easily be over 500” golden eagles a year in our western
states, Save the Eagles International
biologist Jim Wiegand told me. Bald eagles are also being butchered.
The body count for the two species could soon reach 1,000 a year.
In the 86-square-mile area blanketed by the Altamont Pass wind
facility, no eagles have nested for over 20 years, and golden eagle nest
sites have declined by half near the actual facility, even though both
areas are prime eagle habitat, says Wiegand. Wildlife expert Dr. Shawn
Smallwood estimates that 2,300 golden eagles have been killed by Altamont turbines over the past 25 years.
The wind industry keeps the publicly acknowledged death toll “low”
and “acceptable” by employing deliberately flawed methodologies, says
Wiegand. Companies have crews search around turbines that are not
operating; search only within narrow radiuses of turbines, thus missing
birds that were flung further by the impact or limped off to die
elsewhere; search for carcasses only every 2-4 weeks, allowing
scavengers to take most of them away; avoid using dogs to sniff for
bodies; not count disabled or wounded birds and bats; and pick up
carcasses, under the guideline of “slice, shovel and shut up.”
High security at most wind turbine sites makes independent analysis
almost impossible, adds ABC wind energy coordinator Kelly Fuller. Even
the faulty (fraudulent?) raw bird kill data are rarely made public and
are difficult to access even through the Freedom of Information Act.
Amazingly, Fish & Wildlife does not require that the information be
made public. What little does get released is too often filtered,
massaged and manipulated – and now the FWS may allow the industry to put
even these suspect body counts into private data banks that would not
be subject to FOIA.
The FWS and Justice Department prosecuted and fined oil companies
for the unintentional deaths of just 28 small migratory birds (no
raptors and no rare, threatened or endangered species) over several
months throughout North Dakota. They fined ExxonMobil $600,000
for accidentally killing 85 birds over a five-year period in five
states. But they have never prosecuted or penalized a single wind
turbine company for its eco-slaughter. Now they are going much further.
The Service has proposed to grant
“programmatic take” permits that would allow wind turbine operators to
repeatedly, systematically, legally and “inadvertently” injure, maim and
kill bald and golden eagles –turning what has been
outrageously selective (non)enforcement of endangered species laws into a
007 license to kill. While the new rule “is not specifically designed
for the wind industry” (as an industry spokesman helpfully pointed out),
Big Wind will be by far the biggest beneficiary.
The FWS says it can do this based on illusory “advanced conservation practices”
that are “scientifically supportable,” approved by the Service, and
“represent the best available techniques to reduce eagle disturbance and
ongoing mortalities to a level where remaining take is unavoidable and
incidental to otherwise lawful activity.” The Service also claims
“mitigation” and other “additional” measures may be implemented where necessary to “ensure the preservation” of eagles as a species.
When its goal is to restrict development, the FWS frequently defines species,
subspecies or “distinct population segments” for sage grouse, spotted
owls, “jumping mice” and other wildlife – or labels a species
“imperiled” in a selected location, even when it is abundant in nearby
locations. With eagles, the proposed “take” rules strongly suggest that
the Service could easily say the presence of eagles in some parts of the
Lower 48 States or even just Alaska would mean their preservation is
ensured, even if they are exterminated or driven out of numerous
habitats. (Ditto for other species imperiled by wind turbines.)
Attempts to “mitigate” impacts or establish new population segments
will almost certainly mean imposing extra burdens, restrictions and
costs on land owners and users outside of turbine-impact areas.
Another vital, majestic species being “sliced” back to the verge of
extinction is the whooping crane, North America’s tallest bird. Since
2006, installed turbine capacity within the six-state whooping crane
flyway has skyrocketed from 3,600 megawatts to some 16,000 MW – and
several hundred tagged and numbered whooping cranes “have turned up
missing and are unaccounted for,” says Wiegand. And yet, another 136,700
MW of new bird Cuisinarts are planned for these six states!
The Service knows this is happening, and yet turns a blind eye – and
Big Wind is not about to admit that its turbines are butchering whooping
cranes, bald eagles, Peregrine falcons, bats and other rare species.
This subsidized slaughter and legalized carnage cannot continue.
Every vote to extend the PTC, or approve wind turbines in or near
important bird habitats and flyways, is a vote for ultimate extinction of majestic and vital species in numerous areas all over the United States.
Wind energy is not green, eco-friendly, sustainable or sensible.
Extending the subsidized slaughter is not something any members of
Congress, state legislatures or county commissions – Republican or
Democrat – should want to have on their conscience.
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Paul Driessen is senior policy advisor for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org) and author or Eco-Imperialism: Green power – Black death.
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