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Who Speaks for the Birds?

The enviros don't like it when birds die.  It is certainly un-PC for energy companies to kill birds.  But wind power operators--now that is a different story!

Explains Robert Bryce in the Wall Street Journal:

ExxonMobil pleaded guilty in federal court to killing 85 birds that had come into contact with crude oil or other pollutants in uncovered tanks or waste-water facilities on its properties. The birds were protected by the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, which dates back to 1918. The company agreed to pay $600,000 in fines and fees.

ExxonMobil is hardly alone in running afoul of this law. Over the past two decades, federal officials have brought hundreds of similar cases against energy companies. In July, for example, the Oregon-based electric utility PacifiCorp paid $1.4 million in fines and restitution for killing 232 eagles in Wyoming over the past two years. The birds were electrocuted by poorly-designed power lines.

Yet there is one group of energy producers that are not being prosecuted for killing birds: wind-power companies. And wind-powered turbines are killing a vast number of birds every year.

A July 2008 study of the wind farm at Altamont Pass, Calif., estimated that its turbines kill an average of 80 golden eagles per year. The study, funded by the Alameda County Community Development Agency, also estimated that about 10,000 birds-nearly all protected by the migratory bird act-are being whacked every year at Altamont.

Altamont's turbines, located about 30 miles east of Oakland, Calif., kill more than 100 times as many birds as Exxon's tanks, and they do so every year. But the Altamont Pass wind farm does not face the same threat of prosecution, even though the bird kills at Altamont have been repeatedly documented by biologists since the mid-1990s.

Who will speak for all of the magnificant raptors being murdered every year by rapacious wind capitalists?

View all comments (2) | Leave a comment

Tim| 9.8.09 @ 9:37AM

"ExxonMobil is hardly alone in running afoul of this law."

Missy| 9.8.09 @ 2:04PM

I hate wind energy for this very reason. It just ticks me off that we are killing so many magnificent birds for nothing.

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More Blog Posts by Doug Bandow

http://spectator.org/blog/2009/09/08/who-speaks-for-the-birds

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