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August 29, 2011

Airships for Northern Canada

I had a blog entry prepared that was a fairly serious industry piece and was about to post it, but then I came across this interesting news item which I've decided to post instead. (I'll post the other one in a few days.)

The item is from CBC and concernes plans to build helium-filled giant airships like they used to construct and fly in the early 20th Century. In this case, they're being designed to move freight etc. around in the high north.

The possibilities for giant airships interest me a great deal and I think this is but one of many potential applications. While this topic may seem a bit offspec, it really isn't when you consider the environmental benefits of this kind of alternative transportation. It's interesting what people are coming up with these days as society continues its slow journey toward sustainability.

Here's the CBC article:

Futuristic 'airships' to be built for North

CBC

A British manufacturer will build a fleet of airships for Yellowknife’s Discovery Air to supply remote communities and enterprises in the North, the two companies say.

The futuristic giant blimps from Hybrid Air Vehicles will cost $40 million each, Discovery Air Innovations, a Quebec-based subsidiary of Disovery Air, announced after signing its agreement with HAV.

The aircraft use a mix of non-flammable helium and air power to fly and can land on almost any surface, HAV says on its website

They'll be able to carry up to 50 tonnes of cargo to mining camps and remote communities, HAV says.

Stuart Russell, the vice-president of a Yellowknife mining logistics company, suggests northern transportation is a challenge just waiting for solutions.

"It's a huge logistical challenge when the ice roads fail,” he told CBC News. “In the High Arctic, there's lots of opportunity for oil and gas extraction but we have to find a way to do it. The airship may be one solution."

Hybrid Air Vehicles and Discovery Air Innovations are working together to design the airship for the North and get it through the certification process.

Discovery Air, which faced major financial problems two years ago and needed assistance from the Northwest Territories government, says it plans to buy up to 45 airships and hopes to have them operational by 2014.

HAV says technological improvements have allowed for an airship much better than the original concept.

"With a cargo capacity of 50 tonnes at speeds up to [185 km/h], we believe this capability will enable economic development of remote, stranded resources with a low environmental impact," HAV said on its website.

Occupational Health and Safety Sector Plans

Ontario Ministry of Labour has posted their annual sector-specific enforcement plans for 2011-2012 identifying hazards specific to workplaces in different sectors - industrial, health care, construction and mining sectors, professional and specialized services and outline what inspectors will be looking for in each sector during an inspection.

These inspections are heightened enforcement campaigns (blitzes) that are intended to promote compliance in the workplace across the province of Ontario, but does not mean that inspectors will not be looking at other infractions. A few of the areas they will be focusing on are:

Workplaces must comply with the OHSA and its regulations. This includes ensuring a strong Internal Responsibility System (IRS) is in place, fostering a sustained culture of workplace health and safety.

The IRS gives everyone within an organization direct responsibility for health and safety as an essential part of his or her job. It does not matter who or where the person is in the organization, they achieve health and safety in a way that suits the kind of work they do. Each person takes initiative on health and safety issues and works to solve problems and make improvements on an ongoing basis. They do this both singly and co-operatively with others. Successful implementation of the IRS should result in progressively longer intervals between accidents or work-related illnesses.

Bill 168 Violence and Harassment in the Workplace (2010 Amendment to OHSA) requires employers to develop workplace violence and workplace harassment policies, procedures and programs as well as assess the risks of violence in the workplace by completing a risk assessment, addressing the risks by putting controls in place and taking every precaution reasonable to protect workers from domestic violence that may occur in the workplace.

Musculoskeletal Disorders (MSDs) occur suddenly, gradually, aftr prolonged or repeated exposure to hazards such as excessive force, awkward posture or repetitive motion causing injuries and disorders of the muscles, tendons and nerves. These hazards can occur in any type of workplace and account for upwards of 44 % of all lost-time injury claims in Ontario. Due to the high percentage of claims in this area, inspectors will be focusing on prevention and control of MSD hazards during proactive inspections.

Infection Prevention and Control is another area that workers are continually at risk from exposure to infectious diseases in the workplace. Employers must develop measures, procedures and controls to protect workers health and safety from exposure to infectious diseases. Inspectors will be reviewing the controls, practices and procedures that are in place in workplaces to ensure they are adequate measures to prevent the risk of exposure.

Further to the four areas outlined above, the inspectors will continue to target and focus on enforcement and intervention. Don't wait until you have an inspector visit your workplace, complete a thorough audit of your facilities and find out where you can improve your Health and Safety bringing it above the minimum standards of compliance.

For more information and details about your sector specific enforcement campaigns go to - Safe at Work Ontario Sector Plans http://www.labour.gov.on.ca/english/hs/sawo/sectorplans/index.php

August 21, 2011

Teenager invents solar trees

I was struck by a recent story on Yahoo.com about 13-year-old Aidan Dwyer, a Long Island resident, who used the Fibonacci sequence to make a solar energy breakthrough.

The story, by Nadine Bells, describes how Dwyer went on a winter hiking trip and looked up into the tangled mass of tree branches above him, and took photos of them, noticing the “spiral pattern that reached up to the sky.”

You and I might have noticed the same thing, and taken a pretty picture, but Dwyer demonstrated a particular scientific genius by going further, with his curiosity leading him to investigate “whether there is a secret formula in tree design and whether the purpose of the spiral pattern is to collect sunlight better.”

How many walks in the woods have I taken without ever asking myself that?

Dwyer applied the Fibonacci sequence -- a mathematical principal found in nature -- to invent a more effective nature-inspired way of arranging solar panels to collect sunlight than the conventional flat panel arrays one sees popping up nowadays on rooftops and farm fields.

You can view a photo (Toru Hanai/Reuters) of the model of what TreeHugger calls the “tree-like stand affixed with small solar panels in the Fibonacci pattern” here:

http://www.amnh.org/nationalcenter/youngnaturalistawards/2011/images/aidan_large_08.jpg

In a Fibonacci sequence each number is the sum of the previous two numbers. So for instance, 1+1 gives you 2, then 2+1 gives you three, then 3+2 gives you 5, then 5+3 gives you 8. The sequence therefore starts off like this:

0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55 and so on…

This simple sequence is ever-present in nature, determining the proportion of chambers in nautilus sea shells, the length of each section of your arms and fingers, and the relative lengths of tree trunks, branches and twigs. Artists like Leonardo da Vinci figured out long ago that the more perfectly a person’s features reflect the sequence and proportions, the more they are deemed “beautiful,” giving us the Mona Lisa and the faces of famous contemporary fashion models like Kate Moss.

Dwyer compared his model’s ability to collect sunlight with traditional flat panels and discovered that the one based on tree-growth patterns produced 20 per cent more energy; even better, when sunlight is at its lowest in the winter, the tree design outperformed flat panels by 50 per cent.

This could have a significant impact on how solar panels are installed in the future. The tree design takes up less room than flat-panel arrays, is effective in spots that don’t have a full southern view, and collects more sunlight in winter. Because the panels are angled, snow and shade have less impact on performance. Tree-like installations could be very effective in urban areas: imagine walking down a street on which the boulevard is lined with solar-panel trees instead of the regular type.

There’s no reason the panel arrangement couldn’t be designed by computer into beautiful patterns, and the supports painted lovely colors. Because they’re following the Fibonacci rule, they should tend to be beautiful in the first place. Solar trees and bushes could festoon the tops of buildings; solar forest could be installed in derelict industrial areas. The design possibilities are almost limitless. Perhaps in place of a “monoculture” of solar trees they could be interspersed in some places with the innovative urban wind mills that are shaped like vertical cylinders.

The concept certainly fits well with the idea that alternate “green” energy doesn’t have to be large-scale and monolithic but rather discrete and local, with many components of “distributed generation” trickling energy to the grid, or directly into homes and apartments to power energy-efficient lights and appliances equipped with smart meters.

Dwyer was named one of its Young Naturalist Award winners for 2011 by the American Museum of Natural History, and the model has garnered interest from various commercial entities. The US Patent and Trademark Office awarded Dwyer with a provisional patent for his innovation.

It fills me with optimism to think that a 13-year-old boy walking in the woods could be inspired to invent something as elegant and useful as solar trees. Many more great ideas are likely to appear in the years to come from inventors of all ages, to help move us toward a more sustainable future, less reliant on non-renewable power.

August 16, 2011

How compliant are you really?

The goal of your local Health and Safety Inspector is to reduce the number of accidents in your workplace by ensuring your health and safety policies, programs, procedures, maintenance of equipment and all other aspects of your IRS are compliant with the OHSA and provincial legislative requirements.

My future blogs will outline different areas that you need to focus on so that you are prepared for the inspector and will hopefully walk away from the investigation with a smile on your face and no orders.

Shipping and Receiving accidents are prevalent where workers are not aware of loading dock hazards, don't know how to identify and control the hazards and where equipment are not maintained. Workers have been pinned between loading docks and vehicles, by vehicles, mobile equipment or unsecured loads, trips and falls and improper use of fork lift/tow motors in the loading dock areas.

In Ontario – February 2011, the Ministry of Labour Health and Safety Inspectors issued 3233 orders including 84 stop work orders in relation to loading dock safety in the industrial sector. The focuses of their visits (these are your clues to compliance) were:
• Pedestrian and traffic safety in interior and exterior areas of workplaces
• Maintenance and housekeeping of the general work environment
• Immobilization and securing of vehicles against accidental movement
• Guarding and lockout
• Material handling equipment safety
• Safe manual material handling activities

The top 10 most frequently issued orders related to the failure to comply with the requirements for:
• Maintaining equipment and facilities in good condition
• Taking reasonable precautions to protect the health and safety of workers
• Examining lifting devices
• Providing workers with information, instruction and supervision to protect their health and safety
• Addressing work surface hazards
• Immobilizing and securing vehicles against accidental movement
• Pinch point hazards
• Securing machinery, equipment or material against tipping or falling
• Preparing and reviewing of health and safety policy and the development of a program to implement the policy
• Posting a copy of the Occupational Health and Safety Act at the workplace

So where do you go from here? Outlined below are a few areas to review. These are not exhaustive, but will give you a head start in developing your Shipping Receiving Health and Safety Program.
1. Complete an audit of your shipping and receiving department.
2. Ensure that all equipment, materials and protective devices are maintained in good condition such as:
• racking systems
• electrical installations and equipment
• eyewash stations
• loading docks e.g. bumpers, lights, levelers
• lifting devices
3. Ensure you are compliant with all health and safety regulations,
4. Ensure that there are no gaps in your workers knowledge, information and instruction when it comes to material handling:
• General loading dock measures and procedures
• Ladder use
• Immobilization and securing of trucks/trailers
• Operation and maintenance of lifting devices
• Manual material handling activities
5. Ensure that you have safe vehicle immobilization and secure procedures at loading docks
6. Ensure that safe loading and unloading activities are in place
7. Ensure that you are taking all precautions reasonable in the circumstances to protect workers including:
• Securing vehicles against accidental movement
• Safe loading and unloading procedures
• Wheel chocking
• Using the appropriate type of ladder for the activity
• Electrical hazards

August 15, 2011

Remembering Ray Anderson

Thanks to Bill Sheehan for passing along the message last week that Ray Anderson, CEO of Interface Carpet, died on August 8. Anderson was a fixture as a speaker at product stewardship conferences and a leader in the Zero Waste movement.

One of Sheehan’s fondest memories is of Ray Anderson reciting this poem, written by an employee at Interface who, like Ray, woke up to see that he was making unthinking choices that would affect his unborn child. Here’s the poem, and then a really wonderful obituary from Grist.com below. Be sure to click on the link to Anderson’s TED talk at the very end.

Tomorrow’s Child

Without a name; an unseen face
and knowing not your time nor place
Tomorrow’s Child, though yet unborn,
I met you first last Tuesday morn.

A wise friend introduced us two,
and through his shining point of view
I saw a day that would see;
a day for you, but not for me.

Knowing you has changed my thinking,
for I never had an inkling
That perhaps the things I do
might someday, somehow, threaten you.

Tomorrow’s Child, my daughter-son,
I’m afraid I’ve just begun
To think of you and of your good,
though always having known I should.

Begin I will to weigh the cost
of what I squander; what is lost
If ever I forget that you
will someday come to live here too.

Glen Thomas - employee Interface


A green giant passes

Ray Anderson, sustainable-biz pioneer, dies at 77

http://www.grist.org/sustainable-business/2011-08-08-ray-anderson-sustainable-business-pioneer-interface-dies

BY LISA HYMAS
8 AUG 2011 6:18 PM

Way back in the '90s, before every company under the sun wanted to be seen as green, Ray Anderson started trying to make his business truly sustainable. Not we-buy-carbon-offsets sustainable or look-at-our-recycled-packaging sustainable, but real-deal sustainable.

In 1994, his world was rocked by reading Paul Hawken's book The Ecology of Commerce, an experience Anderson described as being hit with a "spear in the chest." The book pinpointed business and industry as the biggest force for environmental destruction, but also the most potentially powerful force for positive change. It forced Anderson to recognize himself as a "plunderer of the earth" and inspired him to embark on a multi-step process to become "a recovering plunderer."

Under his leadership, the carpet company he founded in the 1970s, Interface, set forth on "Mission Zero" -- aiming for zero waste, zero impact, and zero footprint by 2020. For Interface, Anderson said, sustainability meant "eventually operating our petroleum-intensive company in such a way as to take from the earth only what can be renewed by the earth naturally and rapidly, not another fresh drop of oil, and to do no harm to the biosphere. Take nothing. Do no harm." In 2009, he told Grist that his company was halfway there.

Mission Zero, according to Anderson, has been incredibly good for business -- bringing costs down, boosting morale up, and attracting a lot of customers. Anderson's proselytizing -- he gave more than 1,000 speeches and wrote two books -- convinced a lot of other business leaders to take up the sustainability challenge, from mom-and-pop outfits all the way up to Walmart.

Anderson died at his home today of cancer. His legacy will, of course, live on, and Interface will continue its climb up "Mount Sustainability."

Watch Anderson's 2009 TED talk:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iP9QF_lBOyA&feature=player_embedded

August 08, 2011

Questioning the wind industry

I thought readers might find this Energy Probe article interesting about the wind industry and its claims. You can read it below, but the original contains interesting links and is available here:

http://ep.probeinternational.org/2011/08/01/parker-gallant-the-wind-industrys-spin/

Parker Gallant: The wind industry’s spin

(August 2, 2011) In Greek Mythology Aeolus was the “King of Wind” but in Canadian Mythology the King of Wind is CanWEA; a not-for-profit association of 420 members including public and private companies, legal firms, manufacturers, etc. and others who feed off of the largess of taxpayers and ratepayers to ensure they retain their mandated (Ontario’s Green Energy Act) place on the energy podium.

The claims made on CanWEA’s website are wide ranging and while Aeolus was associated with creating storms; CanWEA’s claims are principally associated with saving the world from catastrophic global warming. Let’s look at some of those claims:

The Balanced Diet

One of the claims made is; “Wind energy is part of a “balanced energy diet” and is a perfect complement to other conventional forms of electricity generation. One example is wind and hydroelectric. Over short time periods (days and weeks), hydro can be used to compensate for variations in wind power production. Over long time periods (years and decades), wind can be used to compensate for fluctuations in reservoir levels, an effect that will be increasingly felt through climate change.”

Wind-energy Storage

On the latter claim wind-energy may have some use in Quebec or BC for that purpose, but in Ontario we have limited reservoir capacity (140 MW) unless we wish to flood vast regions of the province. In point of fact Ontario is often forced to export power to Quebec during the Spring at a loss.

On the former point in the above extract from CanWEA’s website the “perfect complement” is not perfect. Hydro’s peak production comes in the Spring season when the freshet can produce an abundance (almost to full capacity) of cheap clean hydro power which coincides with peak wind production that frequently reaches similar levels. Unfortunately Spring, and Fall are the lowest demand periods so the “complement” is a misnomer and wind power takes precedent over hydro power meaning we must often spill cheap, clean hydro to give wind-energy their first to the grid rights. The “complement” thereby becomes a burden that the ratepayers endure through higher electricity bills.

Wind-energy Variability Demand

This same webpage from CanWEA states “The variability of wind matches the variability of demand. Generally wind is strongest in cold-weather months when our demand for electricity is highest.”

Ontario’s peak demand for the past several decades occurs in the hot summer months not in the cold-weather months and the variability of wind doesn’t match this cycle. Wind-energy is highest in the shoulder months of our Spring & Fall and at night when demand is at it’s lowest. Wind production in the summer (on average) is less than 17% of it’s capacity and often falls to less then 5% and that is when our demand reaches it’s annual peak.

Wind-energy Reliability

The next CanWEA webpage claims “Wind Power is Reliable.” and goes on to state; “The wind turbines that you see today are the result of decades of research and development. Thanks to these efforts, modern turbines are highly efficient and a typical unit alone can generate enough electricity to power over 500 homes. The science of wind turbine placement has advanced a great deal, too – nowadays, the output of a wind farm can be predicted accurately well before a shovel hits the ground.”

To claim that a typical unit can generate enough electricity to power over 500 homes would require that unit to operate at a 33 % capacity level based on the standard household usage (800 kWh per month) claimed in submissions to the Ontario Energy Board by parties seeking rate increases. My view on the CanWEA statement is that it should state; “a typical unit can generate enough electricity to power 1500 homes for 33 % of the time.” This would ensure that we understand that some other power source would be required for the other 77 % of the time when that unit was producing nothing! The other misleading fact about this statement is that industrial wind turbines, on average, only produce power for approximately 27 % of the time and in the UK a recent report http://www.jmt.org/assets/pdf/wind-report.pdf indicated an average production level of only 21 % was achieved in 2010. The additional problem as highlighted in a recent Aegent study is that “excess output would exacerbate or create a number of undesirable outcomes, including:

-- surplus base load generation

-- dispatched-off situations

-- subsidized exports


Wind-energy & Extreme Weather

This same webpage further claims: “As long as there is wind, there will be wind power.

With good placement, a modern wind turbine will typically produce electricity 70 percent of the time. Enhanced technology and design improvements have also played a part in increasing the reliability of wind power allowing turbines to generate electricity in all but the most extreme weather conditions.”

The foregoing reference to “extreme weather” is exactly what happened in the UK late last year as those extreme conditions took hold and the industrial wind turbines froze and actually were consuming power rather then producing it as the Institute of Energy Research noted. A similar event occurred in New Brunswick as reported here.

So just when we need the power, wind fails to provide it. In those situations we require 100% back-up power. So if CanWEA achieve their goal of 20 % of Canada’s electricity capacity by 2025 we will need 20% of other more reliable and dispatchable power generation to ensure we avoid blackouts.

Wind-energy is always Producing somewhere

This same CanWEA page goes on to ask the question: “But what happens when the wind isn’t blowing? Here it is important to remember that the wind never stops blowing everywhere at once. Experience from around the world has shown that a large number of wind turbines spread over a wide geographic area will actually produce a consistent amount of power. And the use of advanced wind and weather forecasting tools helps to make wind energy more predictable and more reliable than ever before.”

That claim to reliability is no doubt something that the UK and New Brunswick grid operators would dispute. The assertion that a geographic spread of wind turbines “produce a consistent amount of power” has been disputed by many and in Ontario’s case an Energy Probe study going back to 2006 indicated that assertion was not backed up with facts. The study went on to state that wide geographic disbursement of wind turbines would cause considerable transmission and grid related problems and add to costs.

Wind-energy Adaptability

The next CanWEA webpage I wish to explore is this one: where they carry this message; “The modern wind turbine was built to adapt to all kinds of wind and weather conditions. Turbines can even be installed on water; they don’t need to be just on land.”

As noted above the first part of this claim is a stretch based on what happened in UK and New Brunswick and no doubt other areas of the world.

Wind-energy as a Cuisinart

The next part of this page is presumably meant to educate us and has this brief description; “Wind turbines generally consist of large blades mounted on tall towers attached to a horizontal shaft. As the wind blows, these blades cause the shaft to turn. The shaft is attached to a generator located inside the head, or “nacelle” of the turbine, which generates electricity. Cables carry this electrical current to transmission lines that then carry it to homes and businesses. Modern turbines rotate quite slowly, at an average speed of between 18 to 20 revolutions per minute.”

What this fails to tell us is that “revolutions per minute” do not tell us that the tips of the blades are travelling at a speed of as much as 200 kilometres and hour and they are very effective at chopping up birds and destroying bats as this webpage highlights for only one of the many industrial wind turbine sites spread throughout the province.

Wind-energy Availability

The next piece of this webpage carries this message; “Maintenance issues are also much smaller on a wind farm. At some conventional power plants, the entire plant may have to be shut down for repairs whereas at a wind farm, maintenance takes place one turbine at a time. This has led to availability factors (referring to the percent of time that a turbine is available to capture the wind) of 98% – much higher than conventional forms of energy production.”

I am not sure what CanWEA are trying to accomplish here beyond putting an impressive percentage on the page. Availability means absolutely nothing without wind to turn the blades and it is a fact that the actual production from the turbines is on average only 27%. If an educator was to mark CanWEA he/she would give them an “A+” for attendance but an “F” for their paper. I also find it interesting that when I enquired about the Wolfe Island industrial wind installation and why all of their units were producing absolutely no power over a three day period during a recent hot spell I received the following response; “We’re currently performing annual substation maintenance at the site (a scheduled 3-day outage) to ensure park and grid reliability. We perform this in low-wind seasons; however, we need to schedule months in advance. Hope this helps,”

What caught my eye about this reply was both the fact that they had shut down all of the turbines and also admitted that the summer was one of the “low-wind seasons”. So the claim to be able to provide maintenance “one turbine at a time” is a stretch and the disclosure of “low wind-seasons” by one of their members is an admission that they will be unreliable during the peak demand summer season.

Wind-energy to reduce Global Emissions

This CanWEA webpage had this bon mot; “Canada’s electricity system is at a crossroads. Demand is rising and many power plants are approaching retirement. We need more power, and concerns over climate change, air pollution and acid rain damage mean we have to look at cleaner ways to generate it.”

Well, I have a shock for CanWEA. Demand is not rising. In fact Ontario consumed 144 TWh in 2003 and in 2010 we consumed only 142 TWh. Demand has actually fallen, both as a result of the recession and as a result of the loss of major energy consuming industries. Even before the recession a report by the OFL in 2007 indicated Ontario had lost 150,000 manufacturing jobs in the prior 4 years.

Wind-energy to prevent Climate Change

CanWEA go on to state; “Wind is an obvious part of the solution. Wind is quick to install and produces no air pollution or greenhouse gases that contribute to climate change. In fact, in light of the latest report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which warns that in order to avoid the catastrophic impacts of climate change, we need to get global emissions to peak and start to decline before 2020, wind energy may well be the best solution right now. “In this critical period between now and the end of the next decade, we are really it on the supply side and that is a pretty large responsibility,” says Steve Sawyer, the secretary-general of the Global Wind Energy Council.”

This is at the heart of CanWEA’s principal argument-saving us from global warming because “wind energy” will get global emissions to decline. That premise was recently taken to task by a report from Bentek Energy which concluded that claims made on CO 2 and other noxious reductions by the wind industry are “vastly overstated” and wind energy is not “a cost-effective solution for reducing carbon dioxide if carbon is valued at less than $33 per ton.”

Wind-energy as a replacement for Nuclear power-Globally

This same webpage asks the question: ‘What are our choices? Nuclear power has no emissions, but for the technology just to maintain its current market share, 150-180 new plants will need to be built between now and 2020. The complexities around getting those facilities permitted and constructed make it unlikely.”

So CanWEA have gone global with the above statement unless there are proposal that haven’t yet hit the media about plans to construct these plants in Canada. Are they suggesting that industrial wind turbines could take the place of these 150-180 new plants being constructed around the globe or just the 16 in Ontario that have a rated capacity of about 12,000 MW? Aegent Energy in an April 2011 release estimated that just replacing the nuclear plants in Ontario with industrial wind turbines concluded “Given the operating characteristics of wind generation, 34,000 MW of wind capacity and 10,000 MW of natural gas-fired generation capacity would be required to replace Ontario’s nuclear.” and “That amount of wind capacity would require 14,200 km2 of land – the equivalent of a strip 14 km in width around the shorelines of southwestern Ontario.” The Aegent report estimates that 11,333 turbines would be required so if that assumption is applied to the 150-180 plants mentioned in the CanWEA website that would represent over 120,000 turbines and take up over 150,000 km2. .assuming the “150-180 new plants” are of a like output.

Wind-energy doesn’t have “long planning horizons”

This page goes on to say: “New large hydro is a possibility; it faces long planning horizons and fierce public opposition to the environmental devastation caused by flooding huge tracts of land. Small run-of-river hydro facilities have fewer impacts, but are becoming increasingly difficult to access.”

It is amusing that CanWEA would include the phrase “fierce public opposition” presumably inferring that industrial wind installations don’t face similar opposition. The difference between any new large hydro and industrial wind turbines in Ontario is that the GEA gives the wind developers a carte blanche on the “fierce public opposition” as it gives them an easy ride through the bureaucracy of the various ministries that bless their developments. Fierce public opposition does not carry the same weight with the authorities when wind development is being considered in Ontario!

Wind-energy will be cheaper then Natural Gas

Yet another statement on this page has the following; “Natural gas generating plants are easy to build, flexible to operate and produce fewer emissions than coal, but dwindling supplies and uncertainty over what fuel prices will be next year, much less 20 years down the road, make it a risky choice. Other renewable energy technologies, like solar power and ocean energy, are not yet mature enough to make a substantial contribution over the short term.”

Again the fact that natural gas supplies in North America are not dwindling but increasing seems to have escaped the attention of CanWEA and this has kept the price of natural gas at relatively low levels. For that reason new gas generating plants are the energy of choice in the US and are replacing old coal generation plants because they are more dependable and have ramping capability unlike wind. In 2010 new gas generation plants coming on stream were almost 50% more then wind in rated capacity and even new coal generation plants were higher then wind. If one factors in wind’s low delivery abilities at say; 27% they fall even further behind.

CanWEA’s Advertising Offensive

Criticism on the effects of industrial wind turbines are occurring globally and in Ontario the critics have been both vocal and organized. The criticism’s have universally been about;

-- human health,

-- economic costs,

-- wildlife deaths,

-- declining property values, and

-- esthetics/tourism.

As more turbines are erected more critics emerge and those critics now consist of the medical profession, engineers, nature groups, real estate agents, acoustical specialists, economists, and municipal and provincial politicians. On the issue of human health a recent peer reviewed paper by Carl V. Phillips published in the Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society indicates “There is overwhelming evidence that wind turbines cause serious health problems in nearby residents, usually stress-disorder type diseases, at a nontrivial rate.” which is in sharp contrast to the CanWEA claims.

In an effort to counter all of the negative media, CanWEA has embarked on an aggressive campaign which has included support from ENGOs, formal polls with leading questions, commissioned a noise study, an economic study and ran a series of ads on various radio stations and in regional newspapers.

Print Ads

In the latter case they have used several people to carry their message containing such catchy phrases as; “wind energy is about land stewardship”, “my family supports wind energy”, “the wind facility has also brought in some tourists who are curious to see what it’s all about.”, “wind energy is having an incredibly positive impact on our community.” and “ I would say the wind development has been a real boost for the whole community.”

What the ads fail to say is that hundreds of people have had their health affected in some manner, many have abandoned their homes and farms (5 in one small community alone), several have had their properties acquired and forced to sign gag orders and a number of them live in their basements to try and avoid the effect of the noise and vibrations from the turbines. The print ads also often describe a particular industrial wind development and claim it will produce “enough zero-emission electricity to power” a given number of homes.

When I do the math on the electricity they claim they will produce I found that the ads are saying the turbines will operate at a much higher efficiency level (34/36%) then other industrial wind sites in Ontario.

One of the individuals in the ads; Jutta Splettstoesser whose family farm hosts turbines, has embarked on a organized campaign as a “friend” of wind-energy and is being helped out (administratively) by CanWEA & OSEA. The latter was just awarded a $125,000 “education” grant by the Community Power Fund under the Community Energy Partnerships Program which is funded by the Ontario Power Authority and paid for by the ratepayers of this province. The fact that the Executive Director of the CFP worked with the Executive Director of OSEA in the past is simply a coincidence?

Amazingly enough Jutta’s husband was reputedly caught removing anti-wind signs. Another individual in one of the ads is the Mayor of Chatham-Kent and a former MPP when Bob Rae led the NDP to victory. I can only assume that he is still a supporter of the NDP and therefore favours wind turbines. Back in 2009 he was front and centre when CanWEA presented the Municipality with the 2009 National Group Leadership Award. That many people in his municipality suffer adverse health effects from wind turbines apparently is not his concern.

Conclusion:

The claims by CanWEA published on their website and in their advertisements clearly border on unsupportable statements of fact and should be reviewed by the Competition Bureau and Advertising Standards Canada. Perhaps it is time for CanWEA to come clean!

Parker Gallant is a former banker and a director of Energy Probe.

August 03, 2011

Stop the drop

Thanks to Bill Sheehan of the Product Policy Institute for passing this along.

Writes Bill, "Here’s a new report from the UK: From waste to work: the potential for a deposit refund system to create jobs in the UK. It is mentioned in the email below from Bill Bryson, the ex-pat American writer [Walk in the Woods, I’m a Stranger Here Myself] and head of the Campaign to Protect Rural England.

Here's the content:

July 29, 2011

Dear Friend

The true degree of our understanding of how others see us is, for some, an area of interesting philosophical debate. I, however, feel I can say without doubt that, amongst my nearest and dearest, I am not noted for my financial extravagance. Be that as it may, I would confidently place a modest wager that should some interested soul commission a poll to determine people’s recall of bestselling American authors, one name in particular would come up.

I believe that name would be John Robbins. Many years ago, John chose to walk away from a privileged life managing the family firm, Baskin-Robbins. His father was Irvine Robbins, co-founder of the ice-cream purveyor now famous for its 31 flavours - ‘one for every day of the month’. John had the enticing option of dedicating his life to devising a 32nd flavour, in between doing lengths of the ice-cream cone-shaped swimming pool Irv had had built in the back yard. However, instead of embracing the role of prodigal son, John Robbins has spent his life protecting the landscapes, habitats and beauty of the natural world, whilst advocating its inherent importance to us. Recently I came across something he said:

‘The level of consumption that we identify with success is utterly unsustainable. We’re gobbling up the world.’

Now this is neither the time nor the place for an extended essay on my thoughts on the important subject of environmental stewardship but I raise the point because what all this consumption leads to is an exponential rise in the amount of waste we create.

It would seem that we’re not unaware of the problem. Recent research by Ipsos MORI examined the environmental concerns of people in 24 nations across the world*. It showed that the second highest concern for people living in Great Britain was how we are going to deal with the amount of waste we generate. It’s only the Italians who are more worried about this than us.

To try and understand the enormous waste problem we’re facing and determine an effective national strategy for dealing with it, the Government has spent the past 12 months undertaking a review of England’s waste policy. You may remember that Stop the Drop made a formal submission to this review in September last year, detailing our work on the costs and benefits of a UK-wide deposit refund system for drinks containers. Over 3,000 of our supporters sent an email to the Government in support of this affordable and achievable solution to the unnecessary waste created by littered bottles and cans.

On June 14th, the Government published the results of its year-long labours. I turned eagerly to page 34 to read its pronouncements on the virtues of deposit refund systems.

I found myself bitterly disappointed. Leaving aside the irritation that CPRE’s name was spelt correctly and then incorrectly within the space of four paragraphs – once you’re a sub-editor, you’re always a sub-editor – I was astonished to see that the figures used to assert that a deposit scheme would be too expensive were incorrect. By a billion pounds. And this was despite the fact we provided all the detailed modelling and the associated figures to the officials responsible for producing the review.

The Government stated that there are ‘alternative measures’ to achieve the results that a deposit scheme would deliver, a position it has repeated with tiresome regularity. As ever, there is no information forthcoming about what these alternative measures may be.

For the sake of propriety I will simply say that this irks me. Greatly. However, I can assure you that this continued bureaucratic denial of an effective solution to littered bottles and cans – a denial in this instance based on an elementary misunderstanding of the financial systems involved, which have then been falsely represented in a public policy document – hasn’t gone unchallenged. And we will continue to question this entrenched political commitment to a status quo that does nothing to resolve the serious issue of drinks container waste.

Further evidence of the importance of giving a deposit refund system proper consideration can be found in Stop the Drop’s new research report From waste to work: the potential for a deposit refund system to create jobs in the UK. The good news is that there would be a net gain of over 4,000 jobs across the UK if a deposit scheme were introduced. We published the report at a recent Trades Union Congress conference, which discussed ‘What makes a good green government?’, reflecting on the Government’s stated ambition to be the ‘greenest government ever’. I would suggest that supporting the introduction of a system that reduces litter, increases recycling and creates thousands of green economy-based jobs would be a good place to start.

On another positive note, I was very pleased to hear the Government announce during its presentation on the outcomes of the waste policy review that a summit is to be convened to discuss the issue of roadside litter. Indeed, the Secretary of State called roadside litter ‘a perennial bugbear’ and I couldn’t agree more. You may remember that I covered this issue in my previous newsletter and Stop the Drop is working hard to get the issue of ineffective legislation for people who litter from their vehicles resolved. I will of course keep you posted on how plans for the summit develop.

Next time I’m going to tell you about a new network-wide clean-up initiative by Network Rail, which was launched after the publication of our Guide to Litter Abatement Orders in February. There now seems to be a genuine commitment within that organisation to deal with its litter problem and I hope to be able to report positive results to you in September.

Until then, I hope you have a wonderful summer of warm days and plenty of ice-cream.

Very best wishes,

Bill Bryson

August 01, 2011

Creating a Healthy Workplace

In developing a health and safety and wellness program fro you workplaces, go beyond your provincial safety association and CCOHS to Health Canada to find out how to setup your Emergency Management Program, Policies, and Training for your workplace as well as development of your Wellness Programs.

Emergency Preparedeness, WHMIS, Employee Health Programs and Health and Safety are critical to the success of your business. The Health Canada website can assist you with this process.

A healthy workplce addresses both physcial and social environments that support workers and organizational health.

A health Workplace means:
*less absenteeism
*lower turnover rates
*increased pductivity and
*increased job satisfaction

Employees will enjoy:
*improved health
*reduced stress related work
*reduced illness and
*worklife balance

Improved environment, personal resources and health practices will assist in developing a healthier workplace.

Go to Health Canada website: http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/ewh-semt/occup-travail/work-travail/index-eng.php