Eco-camouflage and the war against wind farms

November 23, 2023
Issue 
Seismic blasting, used to locate fossil fuel deposits, is more likely to badly impact whales.

The stranding of humpback whales on the east coast of the United States earlier this year gave the fossil fuel lobby a new angle on their opposition to wind turbine technology and renewable technology: whales are being threatened by offshore wind farms.

Republican presidential contender told a rally in South Carolina in September that these 鈥渨indmills鈥 were driving whales 鈥渃razy鈥, inflicting death in such numbers that they were washing up on shore 鈥渙n a weekly basis鈥.

The technology is being studied, and there are various environmental concerns, often specific to their intended locales.

The field is complex, as work commissioned by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, an adjunct of the US Department of the Interior, outlines. A from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine concerned the Nantucket Shoals region, an area of complex hydrodynamics and ecology.

The authors acknowledged that large turbines of the size planned for the region had not, as yet, been built in US waters and would therefore require extensive modelling on oceanographic effects, notably on zooplankton populations upon which whales feed.

Rob Deaville of the Zoological Society of London鈥檚 Cetacean Strandings Investigation Programme also that disruptions to marine wildlife can take place in the construction phase of windfarms given the presence of percussive noise.

Animals, such as porpoises or dolphins, 鈥渕ay move out of that area while you鈥檙e installing the wind farms, but then the longer-term picture: in some areas they may never come back, in some they may come back in larger numbers than before鈥.

Such concerns, albeit cautious, are not the same as claims of mass whale mortality that has become a hobby horse for opponents of renewable energy sources.

Look behind the newly converted whale-loving types and you are likely to find an avid fossil-fuel lobbyist or someone advocating the merits of nuclear energy.聽

The issue has also made its way to Australia.

In New South Wales, residents of the Hunter and Illawarra regions woke up to making the claim about the harmful effects of wind turbine technology.

A roadside billboard in Port Stephens, north of Newcastle, featured a beached whale with a background of wind turbines, sporting the words: 鈥淪top Port Stephens Offshore Wind Farms.鈥

Fictional articles have also made similar claims. One which purports to have been published in the academic journal Marine Policy asserted that offshore wind farms in the Illawarra and Hunter would result in an annual whale death toll of 400.

But the journal鈥檚 editor-in-chief, Quentin Hanich, of the phantom study, with its alleged origins in the University of Tasmania, which had been shared on a Facebook group 鈥淣o Offshore Wind Farm for the Illawarra鈥.

鈥淲e never received this imaginary paper 鈥 I am seeing no evidence that the study ever took place.鈥

None of this troubles the Coalition. Federal Opposition Leader Peter Dutton has , erroneously, that there had been 鈥渘o environmental consideration of what these huge wind turbines, 260 to 280 metres out of the water, will mean.鈥

Another example of a fossil-fuel MP turned green populist is Queensland Nationals Senator Matt Canavan. He recently Sky News that 鈥渕assive amounts of wind farms, and solar panels which take up enormous amounts of land 鈥 destroy koala habitat [and have] a massive impact on our environment 鈥 we destroy the environment to try and save it鈥.

Canavan has campaigned against a net zero emissions policy and could barely conceal his at the wording of the 2021 Glasgow Climate Change communique that countries 鈥減hase down鈥 rather than 鈥減hase out鈥 coal burning.

For Canavan, this meant that COP26 had given Australia the 鈥済reen light鈥 to keep digging and 鈥渟upply the world with more coal because that鈥檚 what brings people out of poverty鈥.聽

The anti-wind farm campaigners ignore the inconvenient fact that almost all the humpback whale strandings showed signs of being stuck by vessels.

In February, the Marine Mammal Commission that 鈥渢here is no evidence to link these strandings to offshore wind energy development鈥.

Greenpeace in November stating that 鈥渙ffshore wind farms aren鈥檛 killing whales鈥. It concluded that 鈥渂uilding offshore wind is way, way better for ocean wildlife than fossil fuels, especially offshore gas and oil鈥.

No single peer-reviewed study, Greenpeace said, has found that offshore wind farms are responsible for whale mortality.聽

Fishing, ship strikes and oceanic disruptions arising from climate change are the greatest threat to various whale populations.

[Binoy Kampmark currently lectures at RMIT University.]

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