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An interesting story on the German situation
http://www.renewableenergyaccess.com/rea/news/story?id=19339
Here are some more very interesting facts on the Danish windpower situation -- provided by John Etherington (UK). This information, together with that provided by Dr. Mason, should give you lots of ammunition that can be used when wind advocates make claims about the situation in Denmark.
Download: MoreOnDanishWindpower.pdf
Background Denmark (pop. 5.4 million) is a leading pioneer in the field of renewable energy. Since 1985 it has erected about 3,100 MW of wind turbine capacity. Of this 420 MW are sited offshore (Nielsen, 2004), and more is planned for the near future (Bendtsen and Hedegaard, 2004). Over the same period many small gas- or bio-fuelled CHP plants were deployed for local district heating and/or electricity production. Interest in solar power is also considerable. The Danish Wind Turbine Industry is particularly important to the economy of this small country, currently supplying about 40% of the world market and employing about 20,000 Danes (Nielsen, 2004).
Download: Wind-Mason-Danishexperience.pdf
THE answer is blowing in the wind. Or perhaps not. The issue of wind farms has crept up the political agenda so stealthily that it has advanced from being virtually off the political radar just six months ago to being close to the centre of the screen now. By the time Parliament returns in the autumn, it is a fair bet that whirligigs will be, if not the only game in town, certainly one of the most topical. This development was inevitable, given the exponential rate of expansion at which these obscenities have overrun our countryside; but the immediate impetus was given to the issue by Michael Howard’s intervention last week.
http://scotlandonsunday.scotsman.com/opinion.cfm?id=881172004