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Turbine opponents blow in to Evansford

09 Feb, 2010 09:53 AM
WIND CHANGE: One-time wind farm advocate Donald Thomas now believes turbines are affecting the health of those who live or work in the area. Picture: van der Klooster

THE noise of turbines could carry all the way to Clunes if the Waubra South wind farm extension goes ahead, Evansford resident Donald Thomas says.

Mr Thomas joined about 60 wind farm opponents at a meeting at Evansford Community Centre last week to draw attention to the health issues they say the turbines create.

Organised by the Pyrenees Landscape Guardians, the meeting, held on Sunday, January 31, brought together wind farm opponents from regions throughout the state.

Mr Thomas said his Waubra farm, on Studd Rd, where he works for several months of the year, was located about a kilometre from one of the turbines.

He said headaches, heart palpations and high blood pressure were some of the symptoms he experienced.

For his parents, who had lived on the farm for more than 50 years, a good night's sleep was "little more than a rarity there these days."

"`Before it all started we were very much for them (the wind farms)," he said.

"It wasn't until they suddenly started turning that all the problems happened."

The Waubra Wind Farm is the largest renewable power project in the Southern Hemisphere.

The Wind Farm began generating green power in February 2009 and was fully operational from July 2009.

The company behind the wind farm, Acciona energy, has proposed a new wind farm development at Evansford, 8km north east of Waubra and 9km west of Clunes.

A spokesman for Acciona said the company was still conducting investigations of the site at Evansford.

"We don't expect to be lodging a planning application until later this year at the earliest," he said.

"There's no scientific evidence to suggest there is a link between wind farms and adverse health effects."

Victorian Landscape Guardians vice president Kathy Russell said last week's meeting brought wind farm opponents from across the state together in Evansford, to see "what they would have in store themselves when these developments take place in their own locations."

Waubra residents spoke at the meeting about their experiences.

At the meeting a petition was started requesting a moratorium on wind farms until health studies could be undertaken.

Peter Kavanagh DLP Member for Western Victoria also attended the meeting and told The Advocate he planned to raise the issue in parliament.

"There are people who have lived in farms for decades and they've moved out of their farms because of this," he said.

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Date: Newest first | Oldest first
Graeme Hood of the University of Ballarat (his qualifications can't be found on the internet) was commissioned by opponents to conduct studies/tests back in September 2009. If there are all these so called serious adverse side effects why is there absolutely no published evidence? I don't believe there is a conspiracy, more likely no damned evidence.
Posted by bigal, 9/02/2010 11:05:40 AM, on The Advocate (Hepburn)
As a former owner of the Breamlea Wind Generator south of Geelong, I admit my small turbine was quite clunky: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pg PLubeVcD8 Big modern turbines may also cause a degree of industrial noise pollution: infrasound. What we privileged First World types have totally lost sight of is that to prevent 2C of warming needs an 80 per cent CO2 reduction - ABSOLUTE - below 1990 levels, and applying the good old Aussie Fair Go globally, that equates to about one tonne CO2 per person per year, even less per person if our numbers keep increasing. Unless we set such draconian targets, our children are all going to fry, so let's get a carbon tax and then a ban on all fossil fuel combustion including natural gas ("petro-methane"). To indulge in the tokenism of wind farms in a perpetual growth economy is to delude ourselves. To put the market - of all things - in charge of emissions trading is to put the lunatics in charge of the asylum. A "clean" gas turbine power station on a dead planet is what the economists call a stranded asset. For any money-making system to willfully destroy a whole planet and its 6.7bn inhabitants is a monstrous crime.
Posted by RadicalGreenie, 11/02/2010 9:58:34 AM, on The Advocate (Hepburn)
Actually Lake Bonney wind farm (SA, built in three stages) is bigger than Waubra. LB 279MW against Waubra 172MW.
Posted by Dave Clarke, 15/02/2010 5:20:53 PM, on The Advocate (Hepburn)

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