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Wind turbines pose a variety of hazards, from fire to falling over and exposed cables

Continuing from an article he wrote last week, Al Christie lists seven hazards of wind turbines. As well as a fire hazard, they pose a risk of oil leaks, falling over and a hazard to coast guard radar systems.  And if cables for offshore wi

Wind turbines pose a variety of hazards, from fire to falling over and exposed cables

Continuing from an article he wrote last week, Al Christie lists seven hazards of wind turbines. As well as a fire hazard, they pose a risk of oil leaks, falling over and a hazard to coast guard radar systems. 

And if cables for offshore wind farms are not buried deep enough in the seabed, they can become exposed by tide and storm activity, which, Christie says, could be a hazard for swimmers.

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Wind Turbine Environmental Destruction Part 2: The Hazards of Wind Turbines

By Al Christie

After writing last week about the destructive practices of mining for rare earth elements needed for wind turbines and the deadly destruction of wildlife, I ran out of time before getting to the other hazards.

Read more: How Wind Turbines Are Destroying the Environment and Ecology of Planet Earth, Al Christie, 15 May 2025

I’m short of time again this week, so I will just hit a few issues without trying to cover the whole gamut. Some of the points are from an earlier post.

Thomas Shepstone shared a post from ‘MGUY Australia’ on the absurdity of pursuing building new wind farms. They are built way out in the middle of nowhere, creating the need for miles of access roads and miles of high-voltage distribution lines and towers. In his presentation on YouTube, MGUY Australia showed one of those giant wind turbine parts that got stuck under a bridge:

It takes a special truck to handle one of these turbine blades.

The blades made at LM Wind Power’s Cherbourg plant are 107 metres long (351 feet) and measure some 5.4 metres (almost 18 feet) in diameter at their wide end. They weigh about 55 tonnes, and there are 3 of them on each tower.

The towers are 984 feet high and weigh 2,550 tonnes. (That figure probably includes the concrete footing – not sure.) The 12 MW (megawatt) generator, gearbox and cover weigh 600 tonnes.

Imagine transporting such equipment from factory to dock to barge, and then having big enough cranes to hoist all of it up into position. Quite a challenge, and not cheap.  But the difficulty of transporting wind turbine parts on existing highway systems is not the biggest hazard.

1. Security is a concern. Wind farms send their collectively generated electricity to land by undersea cables, which could be vulnerable to sabotage.

In addition, the Block Island offshore wind farm, a 30-megawatt facility off the coast of Rhode Island, found that its high voltage cables that carry electricity to land were not buried deep enough and were being exposed as the seabed was being worn away by tides and storms, making the exposed cables dangerous to swimmers.

2. Oil leak hazard. The turbine generators require maintenance every 6 to 12 months and a schedule for changing the 1,400 litres of lubricating oils, hydraulic fluid and gear oil for all the gears and bearings and yaw and drive mechanisms.

Sometimes the oil leaks. When oil leaks happen, they can cause a lot of environmental damage. Oil can contaminate farmlands and forests, and becomes particularly problematic when it spreads into groundwater or worse into the sea from offshore turbines.

3. Fire hazard. Sometimes they catch on fire, and they’re hard to put out because of the tower height and all the oil, so usually they are just allowed to burn themselves out, but flaming debris falling 500 feet to the ground, of course, can start an even larger fire disaster.

In an article explaining why dealing with the possibility of wind turbine fire is important, Wind Systems noted:

4. Falling over hazard.

In an article about the increase in wind turbine failures, including blades falling off and turbines collapsing, Popular Mechanics said:

The article accompanying the image above stated:

We all heard the big news story about the turbine blade that crumbled off a wind turbine off the coast of Nantucket in July 2024. The fibreglass and foam debris from a failed Vineyard Wind turbine blade washed up on Nantucket beaches. The blade, part of the Vineyard Wind offshore wind project, broke and folded over while undergoing testing, causing debris to scatter into the ocean and then wash ashore. Nantucket Magazine reported that the incident left more than 6 cubic yards of foam and roughly 1.5 cubic yards of fibreglass on Nantucket beaches. CBS News reported that development of the wind farm has since been halted by the federal government.

5. Backup batteries hazard.

Because of the unreliability of wind, wind turbine installations need the addition of multiple 20-tonne container-sized backup battery assemblies. (Last week’s post mentioned the toxic mining of rare earth minerals needed for the special magnets in wind turbine generators. When the rare earth minerals for the backup batteries are added to those used in the turbines and generators themselves, onshore wind farms require eight times the amount of critical minerals as natural gas power plants do, and offshore wind farms require 13 times as much.)

But the hazard is fire and explosion. When one of these babies catches fire or explodes and burns, they’re so hot, it’s almost impossible to put the fire out, and the fumes are toxic. The Moss Landing fire in California in January 2025 was uncontrollable, and its impacts extended past the duration of the fire itself:

6. Coast Guard hazard. Offshore wind turbines can interfere with Coast Guard radar systems, potentially impacting search and rescue operations, navigation and even vessel safety. The rotating blades and large structures of wind turbines reflect radar signals, causing clutter and obscuring the radar view, particularly for smaller vessels and stationary objects like buoys. This can also be a national defence security risk.

About the Author

Al Christie self-describes as a former agnostic physics major in college, later a born-again Christian. He’s interested in science related to energy, microbiology, the danger of mRNA vaccines, and finance and investing, as well as keeping up on evidence for the Bible’s absolute truth.  He publishes articles on a Substack page titled ‘My Two Cents’ which you can subscribe to and follow HERE.

Featured image: Controlled demolition of wind turbines. Source: The Loizeaus Group

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