Posted on 08/20/2014 10:01:54 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Californias massive Ivanpah solar power plant can produce enough electricity for 140,000 households but the environmental cost is nothing less than an avian slaughter.
The plants 350,000 mirrors bounce sizzling sunlight to the tops of three 40-story boiler towers, heating steam for turbine electricity generators. Temperatures near the towers can reach up to 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit, heat certainly sufficient to fry a fowl.
Workers at the state-of-the-art solar plant in the Mojave Desert have a name for birds that fly through the plants concentrated sun rays streamers, for the smoke plume that comes from birds that ignite in midair, the Associated Press reports this week.
Thats a common occurrence, the AP continues; federal investigators saw a bird burn roughly every two minutes. Ivanpah owner BrightSource estimates that about a thousand die each year, and one environmental group says the plant kills up to 28,000 birds each year.
As the plant prepared to begin operations, workers found the winged corpses of a peregrine falcon, a grebe, two hawks, four nighthawks, and a variety of warblers and sparrows, the Wall Street Journal reported earlier this year.
Those statistics havent curbed the enthusiasm of the Obama administration for the solar-power plant, which granted Ivanpah a $1.6 billion federal loan guarantee. And when the solar farm hosted its grand opening earlier this year, Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz called Ivanpah a shining example of how America is becoming a world leader in solar energy, adding that this project shows that building a clean-energy economy creates jobs, curbs greenhouse gas emissions, and fosters American innovation.
Ivanpah isnt the only green darling with a lot of bird blood on its hands, either. The American Bird Conservancy estimates wind turbines slay 440,000 birds each year, and the an analyst writing in the Wildlife Society Bulletin says its closer to 573,000 in addition to 888,000 bats.
Biologists for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have already expressed concerns about these mounting bird deaths. And in a hilariously illustrated report on migratory bird mortality, the agency reported that the greatest threat to birds, and all wildlife, continues to be loss and/or degradation of habitat due to human development and disturbance.
The report does not specify whether high-speed turbine blades and 1,000-degree solar heat patches qualify as a disturbance.
Jillian Kay Melchior writes for National Review as a Thomas L. Rhodes Fellow for the Franklin Center. She is also a Senior Fellow at the Independent Womens Forum.
Chopped by the wind turbines and flash fried by the solar towers.
Obama should start a Bird-of-Prey cooking show on the food channel.
...and throw in some of his favorite dog recipes.
Nuclear power plant designers do a pretty good job of keeping birds out of the reactor cores.
Birds, babies, kidnaped people be killed, etc, means nothing to mac daddy.
But the coyote population around the plant is increasing. Hmmmmm.
Don’t this beat picking up road kill.
It’s like a road kill fast food stop, already cooked and ready to go.
Not much meat on those warblers and sparrows though.
Headline needs fix:
STEAMERS
Should be
STREAMERS
Shitzu Kabab
Yorkieshire pudding
Poodles with Noodles
Chow Chow Chow Mein
SchnauzerSchnitzel
German Shepherd’s Pie
Lab-zagna
Maltesed Milk Duds
Golden retriever ratatouille
Weiners and Kraut
Pugs in Blankets
Boston terrier Cream Pie
Collie Flower Au Gratin
Hot (Real) Dogs
Kinda bony.
But bald and golden eagles have lots of meat!
In the final analysis all are made to taste like ‘fried’ chicken. Served with a helpin’ o’ grits or ‘taters and maybe a little ‘shine on the side its a meal.
In other news:
A Global Warming temperature monitoring station has been installed directly above this solar farm....
Eco-Wackos Now Worse Than House Cats On Wild Bird Population!
“Temperatures near the towers can reach up to 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit”
Global Warming culprit!!!!!!!!
calling Algore... calling Algore
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