Category Archives: Uncategorized

Broken Wind Farm Blades Worry Farmers

From the Pantagraph 9/29/2020:

LEXINGTON — Tim Jolly is a fifth-generation McLean County farmer and is looking forward to a safe harvest this fall.

However, while farming in the footprint of a wind farm near Lexington, Jolly has major concerns over the potential of falling debris from nearby wind farm turbines from the Bright Stalk Wind Farm.

At least three of the turbines appear to have been damaged over the summer and Jolly is wondering why.

….

For the full article, click here:

https://www.pantagraph.com/news/local/broken-wind-farm-blades-worry-local-farmers-residents-near-lexington/article_9db85191-de7d-5182-ae17-eed61cab24c7.html

EDF Livingston County Windfarm FAA Application Filed

The FAA permit for the EDF Livingston County Windfarm was submitted on 8/21/2019 for 106, 499-foot turbines, marked as in Campus, IL. They are shown in yellow below.

FAA’s Information

The FAA cases are in this range, shown are the 1st and last turbine, click on them for details:

2019-WTE-7386-OE to 2019-WTE-7491-OE

You can read our previous article on this project here: http://www.pcwindfarm.org/edf-livingston-wind-project-2019/

Ambient Noise Is “The New Secondhand Smoke”

I became familiar with Acoustical Society of America (ASA) when every “Sound Expert” (Acoustician) that testified for the Wind Companies listed being a member of ASA in their credentials.

When you join the ASA, it includes a complimentary Quarterly journal in the mail called “Acoustics Today”. It’s color, printed on high-quality paper, worth reading if you have interest in sound.

This month’s issue raised my interest with a blurb on the front page “Ambient Noise is ‘The New Secondhand Smoke'”.

This is a really good article, it talks through all the various sound levels and at what point they cause issues. It has TWO pages of References at the end to support all of it’s claims. I roughly counted 73 references.

To me, a Wind Industry skeptic, this rang true — sleep can be disturbed at 30 dB(A)[LAeq, a more constant noise] and 45 dB (LAmax, a more spiked noise). The author of the article also touches on how noise CAN find a pathway to cause physical health problems. With sources.

Some of the studies quoted, like Munzel on cardiovascular disease (2018), didn’t come out until after our hearing.

So, what we have is an article, published in a journal by an organization that the Wind Industry sound experts themselves list on their bio’s, that supports what we’ve been saying all along.

It will be interesting to see how the Wind Industry’s “Sound Experts” react. Will they attempt to discredit all 73 references?

Here is a link to the full article: