Originally posted by MrGongGong
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Far more importantly, however, most wind farms are an utter waste of an awful lot of money (and they're inevitably unsightly into the non-bargain). I'm all for the widespread development of sustainable energy resources and the concomitant reduction in the extraction, refining, distribution and use of fossil fuels, but there are very few areas where wind farms make a profit, which is what they'll have to do if they're to take the place of all or part of those more traditional forms of power generation; they require a good deal more in maintenance costs than do solar farms which, whilst also not being the most attractive sights, are a great deal less ugly than wind farms. How often have we driven past existing wind farms only to find that at least half of the turbines are not even functioning? The tale that i like the most about wind turbines is the one where one collapsed onto a parked car - by reason of having been blown down...
As to the principles under which anyone in governmental power might allow or disallow others to control things in UK, I note that one of the respondents to this article protests that some people (such as the Trumps, Murdochs et al of this demi-monde) seem to think that they're bigger than nations; whilst this may be a debatable assertion, it remains worth bearing in mind that those nations do not for the most part have easy automatic procedures in place to preclude such a risk and that, in order that they do, there would need first to be watertight international agreement between all of them and, given the immense and irresoluble contrasts between nations' vested interests, that's about as unlilkely as Philip Glass writing a work to "trump" the Gurrelieder...
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