The AWEA Blog: Into the Wind


Dear Mr. Ebert: Don't fall for "Windfall"

As the anti-wind docu-diatribe "Windfall" opened this weekend in Chicago and New York, AWEA extended an unusual invitation to noted film critic Roger Ebert to come visit an actual operating wind farm so he can better judge for himself whether the film tells the truth.

AWEA's letter, from AWEA VP for Public Affairs Peter Kelley, gets right to the heart of the matter: "It was disappointing to see such a normally clear-eyed film critic taken in by such a fact-free and slanted take on wind power."

Viewers may be taken in by Windfall's HD cinematography and lingering landscape views of rural New York landscapes, but there is little pretense of balance or scientific accuracy in its content. Some other reviewers have noticed.  Comments AV Club's Noel Murray, "The documentary isn’t big on hard data; instead, [Director Laura] Israel allows the majority of her interviewees to deliver anecdotes, speculation, anti-corporate conspiracy theories, and just a few statistics, rebutted only by their equally riled-up neighbors or by industrial videos."  Variety's Rob Nelson describes it as "gassy" and "strictly and gratingly" one-sided.

AWEA urges Mr. Ebert to see for himself, inviting him "to tour a wind farm within a two-hour drive of your home in Chicago, and to meet with wind workers for a roundtable discussion of how misinformation is impacting their lives and careers – at which they will answer any questions you have. We can include neighbors of the project, and health experts, in this discussion as well... "

The letter continues, "No energy source, or human activity for that matter, is completely benign. Regardless of how we decide to power our society, there will be some impacts... It is important to keep in mind that wind power won't produce any pollution — today, tomorrow or over the next 10 or 20 years. The National Academy of Sciences has estimated the "hidden costs" of traditional energy sources — largely due to the human health impacts from pollution — at $120 billion per year. Because of this, wind power has remarkable health benefits when compared to other energy sources."

AWEA extends the same invitation to all viewers and critics of Windfall the movie, and all those who come across the colossal quantity of misinformation about wind power circulated on the Internet:

 

Come see for yourself.  Visit a working wind farm and watch and listen to the wind turbines.  You won't hear much, but you will gain a better understanding of why we are proud of what our industry has achieved. 

This year, U.S. wind turbines will generate as much electricity as a train full of coal stretching from Los Angeles to London, with no air or water pollution, greenhouse gases, or hazardous waste. You won't learn that from Windfall, because this film is not about the choices we make as a society, but rather about smearing an industry and misinforming all the Americans who are counting on wind to make more clean, renewable energy than any other source — right now, when we need it the most.


7 responses

  1. Caroline Dennis February 20, 2012 02:03PM
    Dear Mr. Gray, I am a very level headed common sense kind of person who owns a small custom cabinet company in northern Indiana but lives in Whitley County, Indiana. I have not seen Windfall yet but plan to in the immediate future. If it is anything like the damage occurring where I live than I am listening to my gut that says what a BIG GREEN GREEDY MACHINE that AWEA actually is. We are on to the scheme of just lining your pockets under the fuzzy wuzzy green illusion you and all the other boondoggle wind and solar companies that claim they truly care about our environment. Not when bogus energy projects such as this really do pit family against family and neighbor against neighbor. Not when these suckers have 300 gallons of petroleum and gear oil in them. Not when they have enough cement to give us a lungful of CO2 with a sprinkling of rebar. These are so green that they are doing all of us a favor by removing millions of birds thanks to the "take" permit that our current administration allows you to obtain! Yuppers, I know that by placing these energy facilities in areas with people you are slowly obtaining your goal of selling out portions of our country by bundling the leases and selling them to foreign countries! We are onto you Mr. Gray and the best part is....so are all my neighbors.
  2. Marie McNamara February 14, 2012 04:07PM
    AWA Goodhue Wind Company (T. Boone Pickens owned through his company, Mesa Power: Financial Officer: Mark Ward, CEO: Peter Mastic) just sued our small township in southeastern Minnesota. So, what am I supposed to like about wind companies like this? WINDFALL is an awesome documentary film that tells the same story of my town. Go see it! I wrote to Roger Ebert and told him what a good review he did, and no wonder he is surprised. U.S. journalists are not doing their job. They are payed off by big foundations seeking political clout. I have the same question as above. What am I suppposed to like about this energy policy?
  3. larry sherman February 10, 2012 04:32PM
    AWEA - why do you not mention that massive wind farms are being built on top of forested mountains overlooking pristine wilderness lakes in the state of Maine as is being propose in Oakfield and Island Falls? This area has been documented by the US Dept of Energy as being a poor wind resource area. Why build massive 500 foot tall wind turbines in an area documented as being of poor wind resource? Just doesn't make any sense unless yuou realize that the tax subsidies given the wind industry by US taxpayers encourage them to build wind farms in staes that have mandated renewable energy standards regardless of whether its appropriate for that area. Why destroy the environment if you're supposedly trying to save it?
  4. Abraham Gale February 8, 2012 12:27AM
    1.5 MW or bigger wind turbine is quieter and not polluting as a medium truck. It is more costly than a truck. The high cost of wind farm, in the hundreds of millions of dollars range stirs emotional reactions, when some people that live in the area expect to get high rewards for agreeing to have a wind farm around. Other people that see or need the employment benefits and realize the contribution to slowing global warming are supportive of wind farms. Everyone, against and pro wind farms use electricity which is either generated from fossil fuels or renewable sources, and we all know the differences.
  5. Mike Barnard February 6, 2012 04:25PM
    Windfall is heavily slanted, with anecdotal evidence from upset people and a 'wind expert' who has been an anti-wind advocate for years. There is no balance in the documentary. Perhaps balance is too much to expect. The reality is that wind is benign for the vast majority of people near or far from wind turbines. The reality is that wind provides reasonably priced energy to an energy ecosystem that requires it. The reality is that wind is an ecologically benign energy source in a world that needs more of them in light of global warming. The reality is that a small number of pissed off people are working hard to misinform a lot of other people. In many cases, they are spouting solid waste but don't realize it. In others, they are deliberately spreading false information. It's a pity and a shame that they are attacking one of the best and least impactful forms of energy for personal, narrow and parochial reasons. If they had any perspective and balance, they would demand reasonable set backs, not abolition. If they had any perspective, they would favour wind for rural farms, not get up in arms about their neighbours who need to make a living. Laura Israel chose to make a heavily slanted film when she chose Lisa Linowes, a long-term anti-wind activist, as her technical advisor. She -- and her supporters --shouldn't be surprised that intelligent and thoughtful people find this disingenuous and biased.
  6. Lisa Linowes February 5, 2012 06:21PM
    Tom, You may want to read the reviews by NPR, Salon.com, the Village Voice, the NYTs etc. Windfall documents how Meredith NY responded to a wind project proposed in their community. Filmaker Laura Israel captured the interviews as they happened. Nothing staged; no one was coached. I'm sorry you feel Windfall had a personal, caustic agenda. Nothing could be further from the truth.
  7. Art Lindgren February 5, 2012 03:12PM
    First of all, Peter Kelley needs to think about the point of the film. It's about how the wind energy issue tore apart a community during the process of considering a wind farm where people live. If Mr. Kelley thinks 'Windfall' is an anti-wind set of lies, then he ought to think hard about the product he's promoting. The product he's selling certainly causes this kind of upset in town after town as they are accosted by the wind industry. But I suppose we gotta remember the industry pays his salary, so his bias is the exact opposite of mine. Then I'd like to know if Peter lives within a half mile of a 1.5 MW (or bigger) turbine? In fact, I'd like to know who in the AWEA does? If y'all buy or live in a house next to a turbine, then we can talk. Let us know. I would also imagine the 80% approval rate for these things quoted in the article is from people who either don't live next to them or are being paid by the wind industry for a lease or other such arrangement. What's the approval rate among folks who live near them? The other's don't really count, do they? They don’t really know and they don’t really care, and if it devastates a family living near the turbines, it’s not them so it’s OK by them. It certainly sounds good. It sounds like it’s “green”, like it’s non-polluting, like it’s “free”, like it’s gonna save the world from global warming. What could be bad? Maybe you can tell, I live next to an industrial wind turbine site. You can buy my house, which is now pretty worthless. But hey!... Pay me it's pre-turbine value, and it's yours. In fact, if you're truly interested, you'll probably hear from me (backed up by the Ben Hoen study) that turbines are so wonderful that buying my house is a terrific investment! Go for it. Oh... And let us know - who are the AWEA members and Wind Farm operators who live next to industrial wind turbines? I'll certainly be anxious to hear about the value of their property, how well they sleep, if their electric rates have gone down, and if their town has not been torn apart like the town in the film.

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