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Thread: But The Boats are going to fast off shore!

  1. #21
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    Clean energy my ass...


    https://www.texasmonthly.com/news-po...e-blades-dump/

    Thousands of Old Wind Turbine Blades Pile Up in West Texas
    Officials in Sweetwater say an out-of-state company has made their town a dump for the seldom-seen trash created by renewable energy.

    By Russell Gold
    August 24, 2023
    118
    sweetwater wind turbine blades
    Discarded wind turbine blades fill thirty acres on the west side of Sweetwater.
    Eli Rosen/Yucca Films
    Every year since 1958, the West Texas town of Sweetwater has hosted the World’s Largest Rattlesnake Roundup, which is exactly what it sounds like. Thousands of the venomous ophidians are rooted out of their dens and brought to the Nolan County Coliseum to be gawked at, “milked,” and often beheaded and skinned. It started as a way for the region to rid itself of some of its least-welcome residents. Now community leaders wish they could do the same with several giant piles of scrap that have for too long been left to bake in the sun. But that’s proving to be much trickier than wrangling reptiles.

    About forty miles west of Abilene on Interstate 20, Sweetwater has unwittingly become home to what is possibly the world’s largest collection of unwanted wind turbine blades. When forklifts deposited the first of these in a field behind the apartment complex where Pamala Meyer lives, on the west side of town, in 2017, she wasn’t initially bothered. But then the blades—between 150 and 200 feet in length and mostly made of composite materials such as fiberglass with a binding resin—kept coming. Each was cut into thirds, with each segment longer than a school bus. Thousands arrived over several years, eventually blanketing more than thirty acres, in stacks rising as high as basketball backboards. Every few dozen feet, a break among the stacks leads into an industrial hedge maze.

    “It’s just a hazard all the way around,” Meyer said. She worries about neighborhood children exploring the unfenced piles and says that stagnant pools of water inside the blades breed swarms of mosquitos. Matt Jackson, who works in a nearby warehouse, has other concerns. The piles create shaded nooks and crannies, perfect for Sweetwater’s unofficial mascot. “It’s just a big rattlesnake farm,” he said.

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    sweetwater wind turbine blades
    Global Fiberglass says the blades will soon be processed, but Sweetwater leaders have heard such promises before.
    Eli Rosen/Yucca Films
    The blades were brought here by Global Fiberglass Solutions, a company based in Washington State that announced in 2017 its intention to recycle blades from wind farms across the region. Instead of ending up in landfills, they would be ground up into a reusable material that could be turned into pallets, railroad ties, or flooring panels. Global Fiberglass is one of a few companies attempting to develop a viable business from recycling blades.


    Besides the main boneyard—behind Meyer’s apartment—stacks of blades also occupy ten acres a couple miles south of town, and the company is storing blades in other locations in the county. “They have, in my view, abandoned them there,” said Samantha Morrow, the Nolan County attorney. “The county doesn’t have and cannot find millions of dollars to clean this up.”

    The Sweetwater piles are also at least partly the indirect result of a rule clarification the Internal Revenue Service issued in 2016. Before then, a wind farm could collect valuable federal tax credits for only its first ten years of operation. But the IRS determined that it would restart the clock on the credits if a wind farm “repowered” its turbines—replacing most of their equipment with newer parts. So, despite the expected two-decade lifespan for turbine blades, wind farms across Texas and other states began replacing many that remained in good shape years early.

    Some paid Global Fiberglass to remove the older blades and haul them away. The company set up shop in an empty industrial facility in Sweetwater that was once an aluminum recycling plant, but Don Lilly, the managing director of Global Fiberglass, told me that only a handful of blades have ever been ground up there. He said the company was close to ramping up and would soon mill the blades into pieces the size of coarse sand. “The blade material is sold,” he said, “but I can’t go into that part yet.”


    Sweetwater has heard such pledges before. The county declared the stockpile a public nuisance a year ago. City attorney Jeff Allen said Sweetwater’s local ordinances are aimed at overgrown lots, not turbine blades, leaving the city with limited legal options. He said he believes Global Fiberglass “intended to be a viable business” but at some point “it just came off the rails.” (Lilly disputes this and says the delays have come from ensuring “all systems were engineered.”)

    Sweetwater benefits from the wind-energy industry, including two large wind farms nearby. Drivers arriving on I-20 from either direction are welcomed by a giant wind turbine blade painted with the town’s name. But even the community’s biggest boosters of renewable energy long ago ran out of patience with Global Fiberglass’s mess. “We’d like to see them gone,” said Karen Hunt, director of the local chamber of commerce. “The sooner the better.”

    Sweetwater isn’t the only place Global Fiberglass has stockpiled blades. It has a total of 1,300 in Newton, Iowa, and two other cities in that state, according to the state’s Department of Natural Resources. After an investigation, the agency concluded in 2021 there was no recycling going on, nor was any likely to happen. It declared the company to be running an unpermitted dump.

    Frank Liebl, executive director of the Newton Development Corporation, testified at a state hearing that the initial excitement in 2017 of recruiting a blade-recycling company soon soured. In the intervening years, he asked Global Fiberglass many times when it would begin its recycling. He always got “the same answer: ‘Soon,’ ” he said.


    By July 2021, the company owed more than $1 million in unpaid rent in Newton, according to testimony at the Iowa hearing from its landlord’s attorney. In Texas, it failed to pay taxes to Nolan County in 2020 and is now three years in arrears, according to tax records. Last year, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality fined the company $10,255 for what it described as illegally stored solid waste. It allowed the company to pay the penalty in monthly installments for three years. In June, Global Fiberglass defaulted, according to the commission.

    In Newton, pressure from the state of Iowa seems to have worked. Craig Armstrong, a city employee, said that General Electric recently acquired the blades. It’s unclear whether GE purchased them from Global Fiberglass or from the landlord who was owed the $1 million in rent, who may have taken possession of the blades. The city was promised that they would be sent to a recycling center by the end of the year, although none had been removed by mid-August, according to a Newton city official.

    Lilly declined to talk about the Iowa blades. He said the situation in Sweetwater is different and insists that Global Fiberglass will grind down and recycle these blades. “If you come back nine months from now, you will not see the material,” he said. We’re marking our calendars and will check back in May.

  2. #22
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    The actual cause of the diminishing whale herd is a cause the leftist enviro-crusaders are unwilling to sacrifice under any circumstance. Climate change is their alter.

  3. #23
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    Climate Change is their current religion. A couple years ago it was Covid, before that it was George Floyd. These people get hyper focused on the "current thing", make it their religion, and will concede on absolutely nothing.

    We could literally show them a video of windmills chopping up birds into fertilizer and they still wouldn't acknowledge it.

  4. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by JimmyD714 View Post
    Climate Change is their current religion. A couple years ago it was Covid, before that it was George Floyd. These people get hyper focused on the "current thing", make it their religion, and will concede on absolutely nothing.

    We could literally show them a video of windmills chopping up birds into fertilizer and they still wouldn't acknowledge it.
    Yup, he's crazy...


    like a fox. The dude may be coming in a little too hard and crazy but 90% of everything he says is correct.

    Sort of like Toof. But way smarter.
    ~Scatter Shot

  5. #25
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    Of note on the speed restrictions, there have been 6 lethal vessel strikes from vessels under 65' since 2005 (none from vessels under 42'). So the proposed rule would potentially save 1 whale every three years...not much gain for slowing down the majority of the east coast...also of note, no strikes from vessels under 65' occurred in SC since 2005 (lethal or nonlethal).

  6. #26
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    This is what we're up against.

    KJP Admits White House Screens Biden Statements After He Invents a Fake Daughter Named ‘Heather’.

    In Wednesday's press briefing, Jean-Pierre had to apologize for yet another mistake by Biden. In doing so, she further exposed not only Biden's incompetence, but that of his communications team as well. Jean-Pierre had just finished sluffing off a question about there being no wall between Joe Biden and his family's business dealings with her usual response to hard-to-handle topics: "Go ask somebody else." That's when a reporter hit her with a question she couldn't run from, because it had to do with the White House communications team. "I have another question about fact-checking here at the White House," the reporter said. And it was a doozy. "The initial statement from the president about the passing of Governor Bill Richardson included condolences for his wife of 50 years, Barbara, and their daughter, Heather. That line about Heather, the daughter, has been removed because they didn’t have a daughter named Heather — or a daughter. So can you walk us through how these press releases are fact-checked; who signs off on them in the end; and then, in this case, how this error was made?" Some of the exchange was posted on the social media platform X by RNC Research.

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/polit...acf237d7&ei=15

  7. #27
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    I been telling yall for along time this country is in real trouble.
    Gettin old is for pussies! AND MY NEW TRUE people say like Capt. Tom >>>>>>>>>/
    "Wow, often imitated but never duplicated. No one can do it like the master. My hat is off to you DRDUCK!"

  8. #28
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    Next you'll be telling us the sun is hot.

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