Faulty Towers Is Now In Scotland
Basil Fawlty would be proud. There are currently 71 wind turbines in Scotland listed as being Faulty Towers.
Scotland’s green-obsessed government has been left with egg on its face by revelations that dozens of gigantic onshore wind turbines are having to be hooked up to diesel generators to keep them from freezing.
Scottish Power — led by a Spaniard, Ignacio Galan, and actually a subsidiary of Spanish firm Iberdrola — conceded that some 71 of its turbines had to be hooked up to diesel generators to keep them warm in December, according to the Sunday Mail, with a whistleblower telling the left-leaning newspaper that problems with the turbines are deep-seated.
“During December 60 turbines at Arecleoch and 11 at Glenn App were de-energized due to a cabling fault… In order to get these turbines re-energized, diesel generators were running for upwards of six hours a day,” they revealed.
“Turbines are regularly offline due to faults where they are taking energy from the grid rather than producing it, and also left operating on half power for long periods due to parts which haven’t been replaced,” they continued.
“Dirty hydraulic oil is also regularly being sprayed out across the Scottish countryside due to cracks in mechanisms. Safety standards have not improved since a worker was killed in 2017 at Kilgallioch wind farm.”
Indeed, the Record went on to say that some 4,000 liters (over 1,000 U.S. gallons) of leaking hydraulic oil was “sprayed over the countryside” by the turbines — a less than environmentally-friendly impact.
“People should be aware that, while their energy costs continue to rise, our windfarms are not operating as efficiently as they could be due to corporate greed,” they added — possibly a reference to things like the reported £11 million Scottish Power’s Spanish chairman raked in 2021, as regular Scots were being crushed beneath sharply rising energy bills.
Indeed, Richard Tice, the leader of the Reform Party — formerly the Brexit Party — recently complained that some 83 percent of Britain’s offshore wind turbines are foreign-owned, with the largest single owner being the government of EU-members-state Denmark.
“We British taxpayers are paying huge inflation-linked subsidies to create ever larger profits for the Danish taxpayer. What’s the advantage of that?” Tice demanded.
Colin Smyth, a Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) for the Scottish Labour Party in the region, conceded that “having to use diesel generators to de-ice faulty turbines is environmental madness,” attacking Scotland’s devolved government — led by the separatist Scottish National Party (SNP) in coalition with the Scottish Greens — for the fact that their “rhetoric on net zero is very different from the reality” and accusing them of “dishonesty”.
However, the Labour Party is itself far from free of wind-related fiascos in Wales, where it runs the devolved government, with a 300-foot behemoth of a wind turbine costing millions of pounds toppling over in the country last year and terrifying local villagers, for instance — apparently due to high winds.
Wind turbines having issues with wind — the resource they are supposed to be able to tap for ‘renewable’ energy — was far from unheard of prior to this, with other Welsh turbines lighting up like “giant Catherine wheels” after gales caused them to burst into flames in a 2014 incident, for example.
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Good find.
This is the kind of thing I was looking for in another PSI article: https://principia-scientific.com/wind-turbine-life-expectancy-only-half-of-that-claimed/
Of course, such secret info is not generally available.
As far as the generators go, if it wasn’t them it would be taken from the grid anyway, but the incident does serve to show another ludicrous facet.
Leaking oil doesn’t surprise me. I guess it’s seen as inconsequential, and ‘nothing is perfect’.
The energy sector owned by foreign parties is not unusual since successive governments have dismantled the UK sectors and sold them off. Look at Royal Mail now…
One thing seems certain, and that is these installations are built for min price at max profit. You don’t find caterpillar hydraulics leaking or the company would suffer. How often does your power supply disconnect? I’m not referencing remote locations btw.
““We British taxpayers are paying huge inflation-linked subsidies to create ever larger profits for the Danish taxpayer. What’s the advantage of that?” Tice demanded.”
Eh? I expect that’s the reason Nigel Farage is the true leader of the party…
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