New York town enjoys wind power boom – July 29 07

AlJazeeraEnglish asked:


The generation of wind power is growing at a rate of 25 percent a year in the U.S., along with demand for renewable energy. While not every community is happy to consider the emerging giant wind turbines on the horizon – a city in New York State considers them a favor. Kristen Saloomey have details of Lackawanna, once a thriving industrial city

Tags: , , , , ,

17 Responses to “New York town enjoys wind power boom – July 29 07”

  1. hardyoak says:

    from the Buffalo News, Oct. 26, 2008:

    In certain parts of New York, you wont be able to take a drive without seeing one of these facilities up close or off on the horizon, or around the next bend, said Daniel MacKay, director of public policy for the Preservation League of New York State.

    At the very least, added MacKay, that is a fundamental transformation of the upstate New York landscape, what is beloved about that landscape, what people seek refuge in that landscape for.

  2. BanjoNaps says:

    They do not kill birds at a rate high than barns and you damn well know it.

  3. mevneutron says:

    A few small farms are interesting and even attractive, like a Calder mobile. But I can’t help but think that implementing at GigaWatt capacities (~1000 turbines considering the low capacity factor of wind) would create a tremendous eyesore and a tremendous stability burden to the existing grid.

  4. hahajohnnyb says:

    We have a coal power plant somewhere, never seen it, never notice it. Trouble is, I don’t live in the mid-west, I live in Texas #1 producer of Wind Power.

    Never had any trouble with our electricity, and we had some of the cheapest power in the country until these wind plants started moving in, now we have a couple of blackouts every year.

    These things are hard on raptors, without raptors our snake population increases, presenting a real danger to people, pets and live stock.

  5. bellaggio1770 says:

    I bet your midwest redneck village has a coal power plant next to it, great stable power, great black smoke, cancer in your brain.

  6. kakapi says:

    Call your local cable companies or the following numbers to ask for Al Jazeera English.

    Time Warner Cable Inc.: 1-203-328-0600
    Charter Communications: 1-888-438-2427
    Comcast: 1-800-COMCAST
    Cox Communications: 1-404-269-7054
    Dish Network: 1-888-284-7116
    Mediacom: 1-866-755-2225
    National Cable & Telecommunications Association: 1-202-222-2350

  7. hahajohnnyb says:

    Only benefit is for the conartists putting these things up. People of New York get higher electric rates and a less stable grid more prone to black outs.

    Enjoy that politician electricity, you think that you want it until you get it.

  8. lojolo7 says:

    In response to codered1969, mabey what is truly odd is how Lackawanna was probably promised money for their schools when the wind factories came to town and they are still the worst in New York!?!

  9. CodeRed1969 says:

    I live in Lackawanna, at first they looked odd but I’ve gotten used to it myself… That’s one problem fixed, now what are they going to do about Lackawanna schools being the worst in New York lol…

  10. cromagnon35 says:

    Nice peice. There’s actually a drive going on in the rural communities for landowners to allow placement of windmills on our property (of sufficient size and wind volume) all over NY. It’s going to start being a common sight here too (I hope)

  11. vhbeazel says:

    Living in the valley of Tehachapi, CA/US, with one of the largest windpower farm developments in the nation, the 20 year old wind generators are being replaced with new ones…one three megawatt generator will replace 30 of the 100 kilowatt class! That make windpower better than it was even five years back.

  12. pat637 says:

    Thank you al Jazeera for this great piece !

  13. suhailshafi says:

    I live in Buffalo, NY which is right next to Lackawanna. I see the wind turbines on my way to work each day. Thank you al Jazeera for this great piece !

  14. kwijibo950 says:

    Actually NYC isn’t that bad of a polluter when you figure how many people live there. The density helps reduce transportation, and buildings are slowly becoming greener. CA is the greenest state, however (thanks to our great weather). The worst offenders per capita are those rural states that have a lot of agriculture, and foolish legislators. NY and CA still has a long way to go, but we are ahead of the curve in green-ness.

  15. electrorocket says:

    I think they look kind of cool. Better than smokestacks, for sure!

  16. tommikovala says:

    Maintaining the off-shore mills is a lot more expensive, and it’s not like too many people live next to those eight that are now installed…

  17. mo1elftausend says:

    However here in Germany we experienced, that windmills can be annoying in some places. Also adding the higher power of off-shore windmills I think those off-shore parks are the way to go when there price declines.

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.