----- forwarded message -----
Date: Fri, 02 Nov 2001 10:34:01 -0500
From: "Tom Gray" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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___________________________________________

STANFORD SCIENTISTS ADVOCATE
LARGE-SCALE WIND POWER PROGRAM
___________________________________________

        The United States should make a large investment in wind farming to help 
meet the nation's electricity needs and address global warming, two energy 
experts from Stanford's Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering 
have concluded.

        Writing in the August 24 issue of the journal "Science," Associate 
Professor Mark Z. Jacobson and Teaching Professor Gilbert M. Masters 
conclude that wind power is an abundant, clean, and affordable alternative 
to coal and other fossil fuels.

        Last year, wind-driven turbines produced less than 0.1% of America's 
electricity supply -- compared to 52% generated from coal, according to the 
U.S. Department of Energy.  One reason is the perception that wind farms 
are more expensive to build and operate than coal-fired power plants--a 
notion that Jacobson and Masters dispute.

        "Much of the recent U.S. energy debate has focused on increasing coal 
use," they note. "Since the 1980s, though, the direct cost of energy from 
large wind turbines has dropped to 3 to 4 cents per kWh, comparable with 
that from new coal power plants."  The authors argue that the health and 
environmental costs of coal amount to another 2 to 4.3 cents per kWh, 
making wind energy unequivocally less expensive than coal energy.  The two 
point to the indirect costs of coal-generated power plants, including the 
production of smog that causes asthma and other respiratory illnesses; 
carbon dioxide emissions that contribute to global warming; and acid rain 
that destroys lakes and forests.

        Jacobson and Masters also cite statistics from the Centers for Disease 
Control showing that coal dust kills some 2,000 U.S. mineworkers annually 
and has cost taxpayers approximately $35 billion in monetary and medical 
benefits to former miners since 1973.

        "Shifting from coal to wind would address health, environmental and
energy 
problems," note the authors. Wind is a clean source of energy, they add, 
and should be promoted and funded by federal and state governments.

        A typical 1,500-kilowatt turbine costs about $1.5 million to install and 
roughly $18,000 to $30,000 a year to maintain -- a bargain in the long 
haul, according to Jacobson and Masters.  "The U.S. could displace 10% of 
coal energy at no net federal cost by spending three to four percent of one 
year's budget on 36,000 to 40,000 large wind turbines and selling the 
electricity over 20 years, recouping all costs," they argue.

        The authors calculate that, by building approximately 250,000 new 
turbines, America could eliminate almost two-thirds of its coal-generated 
electricity, thereby reducing its 1999 greenhouse gas emissions to 7% below 
1990 levels--a goal originally proposed by the Clinton administration under 
the controversial 1997 U.N. Kyoto Protocol on climate change.

        "If you want to solve this country's energy problem, the U.S. needs to 
consider some type of large-scale program," says Jacobson. "The federal 
government could either go into the energy business for itself, or it could 
foster wind energy through tax incentives that would catalyze 
private-sector investment."

        State governments also should take the initiative, write Jacobson and 
Masters.  They point out that energy-strapped California could obtain 10% 
more electricity from wind by spending less than 10 % of its state budget 
for one year on the construction of 5,000 new turbines, then selling the 
electricity over 20 years to recover all costs.

        Turbines are most efficient in higher winds, note the authors, and could 
provide needed revenue to farmers and ranchers in areas where mean annual 
wind speeds are highest--including the Dakotas, Texas, coastal regions, and 
large portions of the West and Northeast.

        Proper siting can help address conflicts between wind energy and birds, 
observe Jacobson and Masters. They also point out that the loss of birds 
associated with new wind farms would be small compared to the current loss 
of forests, birds, fish, and other wildlife from acid discharge caused by 
coal combustion.

        The authors note that, last year, Germany produced nearly three times
more 
wind-generated electricity than the U.S., and Denmark -- a country roughly 
half the size of Maine -- produced almost as much turbine power as the 
United States. Denmark and Sweden also have developed wind parks offshore, 
where winds are stronger than over land.

        "Clearly, the U.S. has not maximized its wind potential," conclude 
Jacobson and Masters. "Doing so would address health, environmental and 
energy problems."


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