I bet they burn more diesel than the power they generate.
From the hill above my town on a clear day could probably see 400 odd turbines and speaking to someone who does all the environmental impact studies a lot more on the way.
I no longer mind the look of them, its just the waste of money and how ineffecient they really are. Most of the 1's near me required cutting down vast areas of commercial timber prematurely which would off cost a fair bit as well as the carbon footprint
Tidal or hydro is the way to go, a few of the local big landowners have put various hydro schemes in and u would not even know they are there, producing power 24/7 only down side if there is a drought. But how ofen does that happen in scotland?
And even if it did still a time when electrirty is required less (summer) and any peaks in production will be during the winter colder months. U get a real cold snap/frost those turbine will never turn, when we had those 2 cold winters 4/5 years ago the turbines hardly turned for 4-6 weeks.
I do think the mini turbines for private energy are quite a good thing thou as u have the grid for back up, but madnes to think turbines can reliablly supply the grid
Not sure if the technology is really there yet with tida but again 24/7 energy and 2 of uks esturies are right up there for the quickeist tidal flow in europe!
It seems the offshore farms are good for fish stocks to regenerate as the boats can't net.
Agreed with the Hydro schemes, I too have seen a few on estates which are very unobtrusive after a few years of habitat regrowing around them and highly efficient.
As someone who spends a lot of time on boats around the coast I'm not yet convinced abut the tidal schemes. In theory they could be very good but the environmental issues around river silting and erosion. The tide does not flow very quickly either, most estuaries peak for 3 hours at 2 to 3 knots with the remaining 3 hours of a tidal stream flowing at 0 to 2 knots. The big worm type drives are not yet efficient and converting this slow flow into efficient power to my knowledge.
In my opinion they don't look half as ugly or take up as much good farm land as the acres and acres of solar farms we have sprouting up in the south west.At least another two have gone up around M5 and the A38 near slimbridge in the last couple of months and they are huge.All the land taken up and deer fenced.

I was told, but don't know how true it is, that the blades are so finely balanced that damage from a bullet or even catapult can scrap a blade ? This in turn throws the whole lot out of balance ?
True / false ???
I do a lot of sailing around the East Coast. 15 years ago you came out of the river Crouch, wiggled round the sand banks and crossed the Thames on the way to Dover and only ever saw the odd fishing boat or container ship.
Today you pass four windmill fields, each with 200 to 300 turbines, half of them not going round. It's like driving around a bloody high rise estate. And more support ships buzzing about than you can jump over. I bet they burn more diesel than the power they generate.
Green energy, ********.
I'm not sure where youre looking or how youre counting but the four fields you see as you come out of the River Crouch are:
Gunfleet Sands 48 turbines
Greater Gabbard 140 Turbines
Kentish Flats 30 Turbines with 15 turbine extension under construction
London Array 175 turbines. The worlds largest operating offshore windfarm. There may be plans for the 200 or 300 turbine fields but none exist as yet!
No of them burn diesel either!
It seems the offshore farms are good for fish stocks to regenerate as the boats can't net.
no but the energy and toxic waste in producing them makes coal fired generators look positively clean!
That's false.
The blades are balanced but they are robust enough to withstand birdstrikes and lightning. I've even seen blades with holes in them through to the lower layers of fibre and resin.
That is true for every power plant construction project. Over the lifespan of a nuclear powerplant (from constrauction to decommissioning) the estimate is 16gCO2e/kwh which is comaparable with that of an offshore windfarm.