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brenthutch

The case for wind farms

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>Still waiting for the obit that shows that power plant emissions killed someone

============
HSPH Report Quantifies Health Impact of Air Pollution From Two Massachusetts Power Plants

For immediate release: May 04, 2000

Boston, MA--Air pollution from two Massachusetts coal-fired power plants contributes to particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide and ozone exposure over a large region. Using a sophisticated model of how particulate matter and its precursors are dispersed in the atmosphere, Harvard School of Public Health scientists Jonathan Levy and John D. Spengler have calculated exposures to 32 million residents living in New England, eastern New York and New Jersey from these older plants.

Their report estimated that current emissions from the Salem Harbor and Brayton Point power plants can be linked to more than 43,000 asthma attacks and nearly 300,000 incidents of upper respiratory symptoms per year in the region. The study also estimated that 159 premature deaths per year could be attributed to this pollution.

The health risks are greatest for people living closer to the plants. Twenty percent of the total health impact occurs on 8 percent of the population that lives within 30 miles of the facilities.
============

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>Still waiting for the obit that shows that power plant emissions killed someone

============
HSPH Report Quantifies Health Impact of Air Pollution From Two Massachusetts Power Plants

For immediate release: May 04, 2000

Boston, MA--Air pollution from two Massachusetts coal-fired power plants contributes to particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide and ozone exposure over a large region. Using a sophisticated model of how particulate matter and its precursors are dispersed in the atmosphere, Harvard School of Public Health scientists Jonathan Levy and John D. Spengler have calculated exposures to 32 million residents living in New England, eastern New York and New Jersey from these older plants.

Their report estimated that current emissions from the Salem Harbor and Brayton Point power plants can be linked to more than 43,000 asthma attacks and nearly 300,000 incidents of upper respiratory symptoms per year in the region. The study also estimated that 159 premature deaths per year could be attributed to this pollution.

The health risks are greatest for people living closer to the plants. Twenty percent of the total health impact occurs on 8 percent of the population that lives within 30 miles of the facilities.
============




DAMMIT BILL

That was not in his approved reading list from Koch

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How much of that are you subsidizing with your two vehicles and five boats?



The VW TDI that gets 50 +MPG? I don't know... since most of it is bio diesel.. you tell me



SUREEEEE it is...

Quote

Another FAIL from another fringe rightie.. OH MY



You'd certainly know about that whole FAIL thing, seeing as how often you do it.
Mike
I love you, Shannon and Jim.
POPS 9708 , SCR 14706

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I totally agree! I just love driving across West Texas and have to look at those damned things!
Myquestion is, with all those windmills... how many are really producing power?


Chuck




Yeah... those too!


Chuck
Yeah, because oil wells are so attractive...

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>Still waiting for the obit that shows that power plant emissions killed someone

============
HSPH Report Quantifies Health Impact of Air Pollution From Two Massachusetts Power Plants

For immediate release: May 04, 2000

Boston, MA--Air pollution from two Massachusetts coal-fired power plants contributes to particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide and ozone exposure over a large region. Using a sophisticated model of how particulate matter and its precursors are dispersed in the atmosphere, Harvard School of Public Health scientists Jonathan Levy and John D. Spengler have calculated exposures to 32 million residents living in New England, eastern New York and New Jersey from these older plants.

Their report estimated that current emissions from the Salem Harbor and Brayton Point power plants can be linked to more than 43,000 asthma attacks and nearly 300,000 incidents of upper respiratory symptoms per year in the region. The study also estimated that 159 premature deaths per year could be attributed to this pollution.

The health risks are greatest for people living closer to the plants. Twenty percent of the total health impact occurs on 8 percent of the population that lives within 30 miles of the facilities.
============



Yep, there is that estimated thingy again

But there are other studies, other opinions and different conclusions using the same data those who feel like you use

http://junkscience.com/2011/09/22/debunked-children-more-vulnerable-to-air-pollution/#more-3043

and

http://junkscience.com/2011/09/20/how-epa-lied-to-congress-about-the-cross-state-air-pollution-rule/#more-3016

or

And this is the best one

http://junkscience.com/2011/08/19/air-pollution-scare-debunked/#more-2542

Just to tease

Quote

What if today’s levels of air pollution didn’t kill anybody?

That certainly would be bad news for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which has spent the past 15 years stubbornly defending its extraordinarily expensive and ever-tightening air-quality regulations.

The EPA claims airborne fine particulate matter kills tens of thousands annually and that the prevention of those deaths will provide society $2 trillion annually in monetized health benefits by 2020.

But we can debunk those claims with more than mere criticisms of EPA’s statistical malpractice and secret data. We have actual data that simply discredit the EPA’s claims.



I also like how you off handedly would de-value the property of others to suit your world view and agenda in that earlier reply to me

Very revealing

Oh

And no

I do not want people to die from emissions from anything

I DO want pure science to decide

Not enviro nut AWG the sky is falling alarmists
"America will never be destroyed from the outside,
if we falter and lose our freedoms,
it will be because we destroyed ourselves."
Abraham Lincoln

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[Reply]I DO want pure science to decide



Dammit. I'm getting a bit fed up with this. What will science decide, rush? It won't decide anything. This is the alarmist issue that is being now taken by the denier side.

Science does not decide where to go. It is only politics that makes these decisions. "Science says we need to spend $50 trillion by 2025 to combat global warming. There is no choice." No. Science does not say that.

Politicians say that. Political minds say that.

What we have is a circumstance where "science" is being used as an adjunct to policy. The scientists is not being asked to provide the ups and downs. No. The scientist is now demanding that things be done a certain way. That's not science - that's policy.

This is why AGW is so hotly contested - because the arguments are about policy. "Well, my climate models show that we need to pump trillions into windmills." And the person who puts his windmills on his farm saysa, "science tells me I am doing a wonderful thing for humanity." And the humanity around him says, "I'm humanity and I say the science sucks if this is good."

This is why global warming has such a political split. One side says the other side is "anti-science" for opposing windmills. No. It's not anti-science but pragmatic. And pragmatism comes into policy.

Science will never decide what is best because "best" is subjective. Science tries to be objective.

Science and policy should be kept separate - at the very least in discussions. Want to talk science? Then talk it. Want to talk policy? Then talk it. But let's quit calling policy "science."


My wife is hotter than your wife.

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I totally agree! I just love driving across West Texas and have to look at those damned things!
Myquestion is, with all those windmills... how many are really producing power?


Chuck



Yeah, because oil wells are so attractive...

Not to mention the stench of them either... I wonder how many thousands of cases of cancer... all that wonderful effluent from all that smell of oil and its components everywhere out there. Polluted air... polluted water... oh thats ok.. it's just business.:S


All that escaping H2S gas, there has to be some side effect. [:/]


Chuck

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How much of that are you subsidizing with your two vehicles and five boats?



The VW TDI that gets 50 +MPG? I don't know... since most of it is bio diesel.. you tell me


Another FAIL from another fringe rightie.. OH MY



OMG, to bad that you know so little about this. We could have 50-60 mpg on diesels right now if it wasn't for the greenies out there. the diesel polutants in the form of nox (causing smog) is the the reason why we don't have the fuel mileage right now. the only way to rid nox and get 50-60 mpg is to put $10,000 exhaust systems on those cars. many diesel are going to these exhaust systems but it is making them unaffordable.

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Do you think we should ignore smog?

Wendy P.



well you need to pick what is important smog or good fuel mileage. you cannot ave both and afford it. everyday I see people that cannot pass the emission test because they cannot afford the repairs to the cars. The gas powered cars cost hundreds and sometimes thousands to repair, how can you afford 5000 to 10000 in repairs on the new diesels?

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you cannot ave both and afford it

I can. If you shouldn't worry about someone who's worked all his life in a high tech industry because he can't find a job right now, why should I care about people who don't look ahead enough to see that they're spewing shit around for other people to breathe?

Wendy P.
There is nothing more dangerous than breaking a basic safety rule and getting away with it. It removes fear of the consequences and builds false confidence. (tbrown)

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[Reply]I DO want pure science to decide



Dammit. I'm getting a bit fed up with this. What will science decide, rush? It won't decide anything. This is the alarmist issue that is being now taken by the denier side.

Science does not decide where to go. It is only politics that makes these decisions. "Science says we need to spend $50 trillion by 2025 to combat global warming. There is no choice." No. Science does not say that.

Politicians say that. Political minds say that.

What we have is a circumstance where "science" is being used as an adjunct to policy. The scientists is not being asked to provide the ups and downs. No. The scientist is now demanding that things be done a certain way. That's not science - that's policy.

This is why AGW is so hotly contested - because the arguments are about policy. "Well, my climate models show that we need to pump trillions into windmills." And the person who puts his windmills on his farm saysa, "science tells me I am doing a wonderful thing for humanity." And the humanity around him says, "I'm humanity and I say the science sucks if this is good."

This is why global warming has such a political split. One side says the other side is "anti-science" for opposing windmills. No. It's not anti-science but pragmatic. And pragmatism comes into policy.

Science will never decide what is best because "best" is subjective. Science tries to be objective.

Science and policy should be kept separate - at the very least in discussions. Want to talk science? Then talk it. Want to talk policy? Then talk it. But let's quit calling policy "science."



Ahhhh

Ok?
"America will never be destroyed from the outside,
if we falter and lose our freedoms,
it will be because we destroyed ourselves."
Abraham Lincoln

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Yep, there is that estimated thingy again


THIS is not an estimate.



Those are strange particulates

Not related though
"America will never be destroyed from the outside,
if we falter and lose our freedoms,
it will be because we destroyed ourselves."
Abraham Lincoln

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Yep, there is that estimated thingy again


THIS is not an estimate.



Those are strange particulates

Not related though



Related to post #46
"I wonder how many people living downwind of a wind turbine have DIED of emphysema. How many miners have died obtaining the fuel?"

The part of the post that you conveniently ignored.
...

The only sure way to survive a canopy collision is not to have one.

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>OMG, to bad that you know so little about this. We could have 50-60 mpg on diesels
>right now if it wasn't for the greenies out there.

We DO have 50-60mpg diesels BECAUSE of the greenies out there.

===================
Clean-Diesel, 70-mpg Polo May Head Stateside: Test Drive
By Ben Hewitt

July 31, 2007 12:00 AM
Last week I flew to the U.S. Environment and Engineering headquarters of Volkswagen in Auburn Hills, Mich. My mission? To drive diesel cars that are confirmed for the U.S. market (the Jetta, in 2008) and, perhaps with more intrigue, those that are sold only in Europe—for now.

PM has previously reported on the 2008 clean-diesel Jetta (click here for video), so I won't linger on it except to say that it's a wonderful car—quick and quiet and really fun, even as it gets Prius-baiting fuel mileage in the 45-mpg range.

It's also not the car that most impressed me. Nope, that honor goes to the Euro-only Polo, a Rabbit-like hatchback—only smaller—with plenty of room for four adults, a modest hatch that could swallow a weekend's worth of gear, and a 1.4-liter, turbocharged diesel under the hood. Oh yeah, and a five-speed manual transmission.

Here's the kicker: The Polo gets 60 to 70-plus mpg.

=======================================
Chevrolet Aims for 50 MPG with Upcoming Cruze Diesel

By Jim Sharifi
04:00PM Aug 17, 2011

2012 Chevrolet Cruze

Last month, we told you that a diesel version of the Chevrolet Cruze has been announced for the U.S., and although the oil-burning affordable small car probably won’t come to market until 2013, details are slowly starting to surface.

With the Cruze Eco already on sale, some members of the press surmise that the upcoming diesel Cruze will have to offer performance, as well as good fuel economy. “General Motors thinks a sizable segment of U.S. car buyers want more than just fuel economy from a diesel engine, making the business case for an oil-burner in the Chevrolet Cruze when the nameplate already has the high-mileage Eco variant in the market,” writes Ward’s Auto. “But just in case, plans call for the Cruze diesel coming in 2013 to achieve fuel economy in the range of 50 mpg.”

A 50 mpg highway estimate for the upcoming Cruze diesel certainly out-guns the Cruze Eco, which gets an EPA-estimated 28 mpg in the city and 42 mpg on the highway with a manual transmission, but the diesel variant may also offer a significant boost in power. “GM has unofficially confirmed that it will indeed be based on the 2.0-liter diesel that's found under the hood of the Holden Cruze CDX,” says Autoblog. “In the Holden, the 2.0-liter mill pumps out 160 horsepower and 265 pound-feet of torque.”
==========================================

>the diesel polutants in the form of nox (causing smog) is the the reason why
>we don't have the fuel mileage right now.

What's a greenie to do? Come up with a system that eliminates NOx emissions via a catalytic converter - which has been done. While the deniers are claiming that the EPA wants to destroy America, the environmentalist have been quietly solving the problem.

So you can continue to complain if you like. The only request that environmentalists would have is to get out of the way while they solve the problems you're complaining about.

>the only way to rid nox and get 50-60 mpg is to put $10,000 exhaust systems
>on those cars . . .

Yep. Car companies said the same thing about fuel injectors, catalytic converters and ECU's. Just try to find a car today without those things.

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Yep, there is that estimated thingy again


THIS is not an estimate.



Those are strange particulates

Not related though



Related to post #46
"I wonder how many people living downwind of a wind turbine have DIED of emphysema. How many miners have died obtaining the fuel?"

The part of the post that you conveniently snipped and ignored.



I did not snip or ignore anything

nice try though

I am still waiting for the obit however


I wonder how many minwrs have died getting the mineals for the turbines?

I like how when you are loosing the debate you try and change the topic or direction

Next
"America will never be destroyed from the outside,
if we falter and lose our freedoms,
it will be because we destroyed ourselves."
Abraham Lincoln

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>OMG, to bad that you know so little about this. We could have 50-60 mpg on diesels
>right now if it wasn't for the greenies out there.

We DO have 50-60mpg diesels BECAUSE of the greenies out there.

===================
Clean-Diesel, 70-mpg Polo May Head Stateside: Test Drive
By Ben Hewitt

July 31, 2007 12:00 AM
Last week I flew to the U.S. Environment and Engineering headquarters of Volkswagen in Auburn Hills, Mich. My mission? To drive diesel cars that are confirmed for the U.S. market (the Jetta, in 2008) and, perhaps with more intrigue, those that are sold only in Europe—for now.

PM has previously reported on the 2008 clean-diesel Jetta (click here for video), so I won't linger on it except to say that it's a wonderful car—quick and quiet and really fun, even as it gets Prius-baiting fuel mileage in the 45-mpg range.

It's also not the car that most impressed me. Nope, that honor goes to the Euro-only Polo, a Rabbit-like hatchback—only smaller—with plenty of room for four adults, a modest hatch that could swallow a weekend's worth of gear, and a 1.4-liter, turbocharged diesel under the hood. Oh yeah, and a five-speed manual transmission.

Here's the kicker: The Polo gets 60 to 70-plus mpg.

=======================================
Chevrolet Aims for 50 MPG with Upcoming Cruze Diesel

By Jim Sharifi
04:00PM Aug 17, 2011

2012 Chevrolet Cruze

Last month, we told you that a diesel version of the Chevrolet Cruze has been announced for the U.S., and although the oil-burning affordable small car probably won’t come to market until 2013, details are slowly starting to surface.

With the Cruze Eco already on sale, some members of the press surmise that the upcoming diesel Cruze will have to offer performance, as well as good fuel economy. “General Motors thinks a sizable segment of U.S. car buyers want more than just fuel economy from a diesel engine, making the business case for an oil-burner in the Chevrolet Cruze when the nameplate already has the high-mileage Eco variant in the market,” writes Ward’s Auto. “But just in case, plans call for the Cruze diesel coming in 2013 to achieve fuel economy in the range of 50 mpg.”

A 50 mpg highway estimate for the upcoming Cruze diesel certainly out-guns the Cruze Eco, which gets an EPA-estimated 28 mpg in the city and 42 mpg on the highway with a manual transmission, but the diesel variant may also offer a significant boost in power. “GM has unofficially confirmed that it will indeed be based on the 2.0-liter diesel that's found under the hood of the Holden Cruze CDX,” says Autoblog. “In the Holden, the 2.0-liter mill pumps out 160 horsepower and 265 pound-feet of torque.”
==========================================

>the diesel polutants in the form of nox (causing smog) is the the reason why
>we don't have the fuel mileage right now.

What's a greenie to do? Come up with a system that eliminates NOx emissions via a catalytic converter - which has been done. While the deniers are claiming that the EPA wants to destroy America, the environmentalist have been quietly solving the problem.

So you can continue to complain if you like. The only request that environmentalists would have is to get out of the way while they solve the problems you're complaining about.

>the only way to rid nox and get 50-60 mpg is to put $10,000 exhaust systems
>on those cars . . .

Yep. Car companies said the same thing about fuel injectors, catalytic converters and ECU's. Just try to find a car today without those things.



the problem is that the exhaust systems are actually $5000 to $10000 and not affordable for someone to repair.

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>the problem is that the exhaust systems are actually $5000 to $10000 and
>not affordable for someone to repair.

And again EXACTLY the same things were said about catalytic converters, fuel injection, ECU's and oxygen sensors.

Yet today repair shops deal almost exclusively with cars that have all that stuff. If you claimed "repair places can't handle pricey catalytic converters with their complex precious metal innards" you'd be laughed at.

Diesel exhaust systems aren't $10,000. They cost a few thousand to car manufacturers (primarily due to the new catalysts) and are coming down fast as economies of scale kick in. The Golf diesel costs about $4000 more than its gasoline twin, and about half of that is exhaust system. The Audi A3 diesel costs about $1500 more, and the BMW 335 diesel costs $1600 more.

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So we have a consensus that there is no "best" source of energy.:)



Don’t know that I ever said there was

I also did not say anything about policy or science

I agree with your post

I don’t know where I would have indicated differently

I did say pure science should be the driver

I have never stated policy is science or visa versa.

I have stated that I do not think over all, this topic, or any similar topics, are about mother earth and pollution.

It is about those who feel the life style they believe in is somehow morally superior to those who disagree with them
They use alarmism to push their agenda

And then, there are those, like the Algore, who use those who feel a moral superiority, that use alarmism, to push agendas that make them rich

Not much more to it IMO
"America will never be destroyed from the outside,
if we falter and lose our freedoms,
it will be because we destroyed ourselves."
Abraham Lincoln

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