German Wind Farm Backlash Builds: Bavaria Slams Brakes On Wind Turbine Roll-Out

German wind farm
HG Well’s imagination meets once idyllic German countryside.

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Germany’s rural vistas of rolling hills, cloaked in pine, spruce, beech and oak, verdant valleys and delightful gothic homes, that fall from the pages of the Brothers Grimm, have been over-run with more than 20,000 of these things.

If there was still a market for Picture Postcards, then the State of Bavaria would be top of the list among the German Lander – mountains capped in snow, impenetrable forests, and fairy-tale castles make it the natural backdrop for holiday snaps and landscape artistry.

Generally, the Bavarian has a reputation for humour and hospitality: think October and giant steins delivered by buxom dirndl clad frauleins. However, that humour and hospitality has its natural limits.

With German’s eco-fascist, ‘Greens’ hell-bent on spearing thousands more turbines all over Bavaria, more than 300 pro-community groups have taken to the barricades to demand a halt to the insanity of destroying their environment in order to erect 290 tonne monsters that produce power with NO commercial value.

The level of subsidy for wind and solar sees Germans paying €20 billion a year for power that gets sold on the power exchange for around €2 billion. For the mathematically challenged that means €18 billion is being squandered with nothing to show for it, save bitterly divided and hate-filled communities, uninhabitable homes and brewing political fury.

Consequent upon that fury, Bavaria’s government has introduced a mandatory setback rule (10 times the height: 10-H) which, with turbines towering 200m, means a minimum distance of 2km from homes. In closely settled Bavaria that spells the end for hundreds of proposed projects; and, coupled with the German government’s recently imposed cap on new wind power capacity, the beginning of the end for the wind industry in Bavaria and beyond.

Success! German State Of Bavaria “Puts Brakes On” Wind Energy, Industrialization Of Rural Landscape
No Tricks Zone
Pierre Gosselin
12 April 2016

German Bavarian Broadcasting, Bayerischer Rundfunk (BR), has a report on wind energy in the southeastern state that is famous for its Oktoberfest, dirndls and lederhosen. It appears the brakes have been effectively applied to the scenery pollution industry.

Eyesores no longer welcome in Germany
An angry Bavaria puts halt on more pointless eyesores.

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Bavaria is also home to some of the country’s most idyllic landscapes. But unfortunately Germany’s “Greens” have been pushing hard to industrialize this precious natural treasure – all with the aim of saving the planet.

They have proposed the construction of dozens of wind parks of 200-meter tall turbines across the country side.

In the early days wind turbines were viewed as sort of a novelty and many communities even lobbied to get them. However, as wind parks sprouted across the country, people woke up to the natural destruction and overall inefficiency the wind energy has wreaked.

Today, the BR report tells us that the tipping point has been reached: wind parks are no longer welcome; they’re too ugly, noisy, inefficient and only a very few profit from them at the expense of the many.

The BR report features one Bavarian village, Obbach, where a wind park with five 200-meter tall turbines was installed just 800 hundred meters away.

Unfortunately for the village the park had been approved before Germany’s 10-H rule was enacted, and so construction went ahead much to the dissatisfaction of the village residents.

The 10-H rule stipulates that no turbine may be closer to a living area than 10 times its height. Had the rule been enacted sooner, it would not have been possible to put up the park and the Obbach’s residents would have been spared the eyesore and noise.

Resident Andrea Lettowsky tells BR:

“For me I keep thinking about how this used to be a beautiful landscape with open fields, and now it’s an industrial zone.”

That’s pretty much the sentiment that has spread across Germany, and with the 10-H rule Bavaria is leading the way in the country’s growing resistance to landscape spoilage by inefficient wind power.

Already over 300 citizens initiatives have formed to resist the construction of new parks across the country. Moreover, recent reports tell us the German government is poised to scale back on renewable energies, aiming to cap it at 40 – 45% of total energy supply by 2025, according to the Berliner Zeitung.

The BR reports that although it is too late for Obbach, the new 10H rule is welcome and now gives communities the power to stop wind park projects that are aggressively pushed by deep-pocketed outside investors. Though it’s regrettable the park could not be stopped, Lettowsky is optimistic that other projects will be stopped elsewhere. The BR report concludes:

“The fact is that the 10-H rule and the resistance from the citizens have pretty much put the brakes on further wind park construction in Bavaria.”

Indeed, thanks to forward looking states like Bavaria, the renewable energy tide is changing for the better.
No Tricks Zone

oktoberfest
A familiar and much more pleasant Bavarian scene …

6 thoughts on “German Wind Farm Backlash Builds: Bavaria Slams Brakes On Wind Turbine Roll-Out

  1. Hello. Thanks for the wonderful work. The picture above is very ugly in an interesting way. We find ourselves fighting against that craze (30 machines) in the midst of France. Could you tell us if this pic could be reused on our non-profit site as well, please? Cheers. Let’s fight back.

  2. On top of all of the egregious failings of industrial wind turbine technology, they are indeed “eyesores”…not so much at a distance and structurally…but when they are a predominant visual affect in one’s immediate environment. Around my otherwise idyllic home setting, I have had to avert my eyes as much as possible so as not to feel utterly disoriented during this past year. Having lived here for almost four decades, the dystopian effect of blades turning in every direction one can see, where once there was only sky, trees and birds, is truly distressing.
    To think that a relative newcomer to Canada, leaseholder from Germany, did this to my neighbourhood is another subject. I have always tried to love my neighbours.
    I am so distraught to think that all of these beautiful places in the world are being visually ruined….for nothing! They must be turned off and dismantled and then, of course, recycled.

    1. The blades themselves cannot be recycled. As I understand it they have to be carefully buried. In other words they have to go a landfill- one of the very things greenies object to!

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