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Health, hazard, and quality of life near wind power installations
Copyright held by Nina Pierpont
Falling over
A nacelle (generator and gearbox) weighing up to 60 tons
atop a 265 ft. metal tower, equipped with 135 ft. blades, is a significant
hazard to people, livestock, buildings, and traffic within a radius equal to
the height of the structure (400 ft) and beyond. In Germany in 2003, in high
storm winds, the brakes on a wind turbine failed and the blades spun out of
control. A blade struck the tower and the entire nacelle flew off the tower.
The blades and other parts landed as far as 1650 ft (0.31 mile) from the base
of the tower.
[1]
(Note that all turbines discussed in this article are "upwind," three-bladed,
industrial-sized turbines. "Downwind" turbines have not been built since the
1980's.) Given the date, this turbine was probably smaller than the ones
proposed for current construction, and thus could not throw pieces as far.
This distance is nearly identical to calculations of ice throw from turbines
with 100 ft blades rotating 20 times per minute (1680 ft).
[2]
Fires
Most fires in wind turbines are started by lightning and fueled by up to 200 gallons of hydraulic oil in the nacelle. Fire-fighting at 265 ft (26 stories) may not be possible with the equipment of a rural town. A fire may leave wind turbine controls malfunctioning until the equipment in the nacelle is repaired or replaced, making it more susceptible to the kind of accident described above.
Lightning and power surges
Wind turbines themselves cause irregularities in the power
supply as wind speed changes. Within the power grid, supply and demand must
always be balanced; there is no storage of electricity on this scale. When the
wind dies, there is less power (brown-out) until a coal- or gas-powered plant
at some distance from the wind installation fires up to increase production.
When the wind gusts, there are power surges. Residents living near a new wind
turbine installation in Meyersdale, PA, which came on-line in December 2003,
have had to replace stove elements and small appliances due to power surges
which started at that time. Residents of Lincoln Township, WI, near a wind
installation noticed an increase in lightning strikes in their area after the
turbines went on-line in June 1999. Two computers protected by surge
protectors and a TV set, all in different houses, were simultaneously "fried"
one evening when lightning struck a nearby wind turbine tower.
[3]
Flicker
When turning with the sun behind them, turbine blades cast moving shadows across the landscape and houses, described as a strobe effect within houses, which can be difficult to block out. Some people lose their balance or become nauseated from seeing the movement. As with car or sea sickness, this is because the three organs of position perception (the inner ear, eyes, and stretch receptors in muscles and joints) are not agreeing with each other: the eyes say there is movement, while the ears and stretch receptors do not. People with a personal or family history of migraine, or migraine-associated phenomena such as car sickness or vertigo, are more susceptible to these effects. The strobe effect can also provoke seizures in people with epilepsy.
In Lincoln Township, WI, two years after installation, 33% of residents 800 ft to one quarter mile from the turbines found shadows from the blades to be a problem, 40% one quarter to one half mile away, 18% one half to 1 mile away, and 3% 1 to 2 miles away (230 people sampled).
Noise
In the same survey in Lincoln Township in 2001, 44% of
residents 800 ft to one quarter mile from the turbines found noise to be a problem in
their households, 52% one quarter to one half mile away, 32% one half to 1 mile away, and 4% 1 to 2
miles away (229 people sampled). Under certain conditions the turbines could
be heard up to 2 miles away. These numbers correspond well to measurements
made by a sound engineer near a more recent 30 MW, 17 turbine installation on
the Dutch-German border, where residents living 500 m (1640 ft, or 0.31 mile)
and more from the turbines were reacting strongly to the noise, and residents
up to 1900 m (1.2 miles) away expressed annoyance. The engineer found that
measured sound levels were higher than predicted by standard models because of
differences in daytime and nighttime wind patterns, and that annoyance was
increased by the impulsive nature or rhythmic thumping of the sound, a pattern
found at a distance from the turbines (documented at 1500 m, or 0.9 mile) but
not immediately under or among the turbines.
[4]
This was described as a "low pitched thumping sound."
Noise levels sufficient to prevent or interrupt sleep, even
with windows closed, are reported in dwellings close to wind power
installations in all surveys. Low frequency sound, defined as 10-200 Hz,
travels farther and comes through walls and around obstacles because of its
long wavelength; sounds in the range of 25-150 Hz have wavelengths similar to
room dimensions, and can reverberate in rooms. Low frequency sound is
especially bothersome, according to the World Health Organization:
[5]
"Low frequency noise, for example from ventilation systems, can disturb rest and sleep even at low sound levels."
"For noise with a large proportion of low frequency sounds a still lower [measurement] guideline (than 30dBA) is recommended." [This means 30 dB total sound pressure using an "A" filter.]
"When prominent low frequency components are present, noise measures based on A-weighting are inappropriate." [An "A" filter, which filters out low-frequency sounds, is standard in loudness measurement.]
"Since A-weighting underestimates the sound pressure level of noise with low frequency components, a better assessment of health effects would be to use C-weighting." [A "C" filter filters out less of the low-frequency sound.]
"It should be noted that a large proportion of low frequency components in a noise may increase considerably the adverse effects on health."
In other words, the World Health Organization recommends that threshold standards for noise in communities be set lower than 30dB (as measured with the standard "A" filter) whenever the noise has a substantial low-pitched component-as it does from wind turbines. Again, this is because low-pitched noise is more disturbing and has a greater impact on health at low levels than higher-pitched noise. When measuring such noise, a "C" filter will give a more accurate reading of loudness by including more of the low-frequency sounds.
Dr. Amanda Harry, a British physician, found (near a
16-turbine installation in 2003) that 13 out of 14 people surveyed reported an
increase in headaches, and 10 reported sleep problems and anxiety. Other
symptoms included migraine, nausea, dizziness, palpitations, stress, and
depression.
[6]
Noise itself can induce dizziness and loss of balance in people with a previous history of noise-induced hearing loss, since, when people damage their hearing through too much exposure to loud (e.g., machine) noise, the balance organs in the inner ear may also be damaged. This is known as the Tullio phenomenon.
Dizziness (specifically, vertigo) and anxiety are
neurologically linked phenomena.
[7]
Hence the anxiety and depression seen in association with other symptoms near
wind installations are not a neurotic response to symptoms, but rather a
neurologically linked response to the balance disturbances people experience
from shadow flicker or low-frequency noise. Sleep deprivation, by the way,
also causes anxiety and depression.
Older people, who often sleep less soundly, are more likely
to have their sleep disturbed by turbine noise. They may also suffer more
disturbances in equilibrium near turbines because of age-related problems with
the function of the inner ear (e.g., dizziness and tinnitus: ringing in the
ears) or from the nerves or parts of the brain receiving signals from the inner
ear. It is noteworthy that among healthy people age 57 to 91, 5% have chronic
dizziness, and 24% tinnitus.
[8]
Setback
Based on these health effects and hazards, turbines should not be placed within 1700 feet of any road or dwelling. Those living within one half mile (2640 ft) should be apprised that they are likely to experience very bothersome levels of noise and flicker, which continue (though to a lesser degree) to a mile or more from the turbines. At 2 miles, noise is sometimes heard, but few people are bothered. In Lincoln Township, WI, after two years with the turbines, 73% of people said they would not consider buying or building a house within a mile of the turbines, and 23% wished to be at least 2 miles away (212 people sampled).
It is significant that each of these setbacks (the first for hazard of falling objects, the second for noise) is supported by two unrelated pieces of data yielding the same result. For noise, the data from two wind installations of different ages in different countries, one by resident survey and the other an engineer's measurements, yield the same distance at which noise stops being bothersome: at something greater than 1-1.2 miles. Thus the age or specific type of equipment is not relevant to the noise issue, and specific measurements, properly done, support what neighbors of wind installations are saying.
In conclusion, based on these data, wind turbines should not be built within 1.5 miles of people's homes. Let it be understood, however, that there will still be health and life quality problems caused by wind turbines beyond this radius. People living 1.5 to 3 miles from a proposed turbine site should be notified of potential health and life quality effects, and for this they should be appropriately compensated.
*
BA (Yale University, 1977), MD (Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, 1991), PhD
(Population Biology, Princeton Univ., 1985). Dr. Pierpont was formerly a clinical
professor of pediatrics at Columbia University, and is now in private practice
in Malone, NY. Contact Dr. Pierpont at (518) 651-2019 (Malone, New York, USA)
or .
Visit her website at .
[1]
See photos at http://www.pbase.com/wp/wind_turbine_photos.
[2]
Personal communication, Prof.
Terry Matilsky, Dept. of Physics and Astronomy, Rutgers Univ., Piscataway, NJ.
See http://www.xray.rutgers.edu/~matilsky/windmills/throw.html
[3]
Bittner-Mackin, E. Excerpts from the Final Report of the Township of Lincoln
[Wisconsin] Wind Turbine Moratorium Committee, 12/4/03.
[5]
Berglund, B, et al, 2000. Guidelines for Community Noise, World Health
Organization. Quoted in Leventhall, G, 2003, A Review of Published Research on
Low Frequency Noise and its Effects; see
http://www.defra.gov.uk/environment/noise/lowfrequency/pdf/lowfreqnoise.pdf
[7]
Balaban, CD, and Thayer, JF. 2001. Neurological bases for balance-anxiety
links. Journal of Anxiety Disorders 15:53-79.
[8]
Sataloff, J, et al. 1987. Tinnitus and vertigo in healthy senior citizens
without a history of noise exposure. American Journal of Otolaryngology
8:87-89.