Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Could Wind Turbines Be A Catastrophe In The Making?

Christopher Booker is a journalist in the UK for the Sunday Telegraph through which he shows a sceptical attitude to global warming and wind turbines. There is little scepticism about climate change - it is definite. Scepticism would be thrown aside if it could be shown that it and possibly global warming are actually being contributed to by wind turbines.
The changes we see here might be the unintended consequences of their action as it coincides with the massive installation of them across the world but in the UK and Europe in particular.
Locally speaking, farmers in California actually choose to be in  the lee of wind farms to  avoid damaging night-time frosts. Friction or air tumbling might be the cause of this warming effect..
From a global viewpoint however, the Lorenz effect should be considered, given it contends that a butterfly’s flapping in the Amazon can disturb critical weather systems such as to cause a tsunami in Hawaii. How much more then the trillions of cubic kilometres of post turbine air that are is persistently rising into the brittle fabric of the atmosphere. Those massive volumes, being of low density and warmer air, are able to hold more water as vapour and rise and carry with them many thousands of tonnes of water which, perhaps, we are seeing descend in the North of the UK or anywhere else for that matter.
Also, not to diminish the effects of carbon dioxide with which it interacts very unfavourably, water vapour is the most important greenhouse ‘gas’.It's levels must rise with the rise in sea levels that are predicted and will aggravate in time the effects outlined above and contribute to global warming.
It is said that modelling of the weather is difficult. Forget modelling here.Turbines are everywhere.
What needs to be done now is getting measurements and sampling from what exists to determine what truth is in that which I have outlined.

I think, with a sizeable fraction of a trillion pounds spent on wind turbines already in the UK, it would be a good time to take stock before the rest of the planned installations here go ahead.

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