Dave Bailey Posted January 7, 2013 Report Posted January 7, 2013 LOL@ the 57 nests in Ontario Bull. Bald eagle numbers have been increasing steadily for decades since the banning of CFC's nearly wiped them out decades ago. Nothing 'sickening' about this. That article was P3TA-calibre stupidity. DDT, not CFCs. Big difference.
jedimaster Posted January 7, 2013 Report Posted January 7, 2013 Don't think this fish would agree... Looks like a fancy cormorant to me. I say kill them all they are clearly depleting the fish stocks.
Steve Posted January 7, 2013 Report Posted January 7, 2013 "If you know a thing about these windmills the energy can't be stored for long so has to be sold, which goes for cheap." wow - rather misinformed. wind turbines don't determine if energy can be stored - they only create energy. it is up to the owner to determine if they want to harness and sell back to the grid, or store it. nothing to do with the turbine itself. as long as they don't move offshore, i'm for the most part 100% a-ok with wind turbines.
Rich Posted January 7, 2013 Report Posted January 7, 2013 (edited) Yes but those drawbacks aren't going to cost us a huge jump in taxes. They will sell most of the power from these turbines to Quebec and the states for less then what we are paying for it to be made. Do taxes not also go into nuclear and coal power generation? Im sorry i thought these were government controlled? And the turbines certainly can, and do, store the energy. Not all of them, just most. Quebec is in Canada, so no matter where the Canadian power is going, at least it's staying in Canada. And our power is not discounted to any other countries, no matter how it was harvested. Edited January 7, 2013 by Rich
jedimaster Posted January 7, 2013 Report Posted January 7, 2013 In Ontario power generation is private, well crown corp. OPG runs the bulk of the plants and Hydro One runs the bulk of distribution. OPG has 4 nuke plants(two leased to bruce power), 5 thermal stations(coal and diesle) 65 hydro electric, and 2 wind urbines. 96% of the power produced is either nuclear, hydroelectric or wind.
ratherboutdoors Posted January 7, 2013 Report Posted January 7, 2013 There is always a fine line between developing society and protecting nature.
DoubleDigits Posted January 7, 2013 Report Posted January 7, 2013 I don't think anyone really falls for this silly crap. A Conservative, anti-environmental advocacy group screaming bloody murder over a birds nest?? Puleeze...
Joeytier Posted January 7, 2013 Report Posted January 7, 2013 DDT, not CFCs. Big difference. Yep. Thanks for the correction.
Steve Posted January 7, 2013 Report Posted January 7, 2013 Rich, tubines don't contain any storage capacity. they can only generate. the generated power is then transmitted to storage devices (forms of batteries), or to the grid. storing power is not practical ($$$$), which is why all our power generators (coal, hydro, nuclear, etc) all send their power directly back to the grid.
F7Firecat Posted January 7, 2013 Report Posted January 7, 2013 Fisherville isnt like n/w ontario or peterborough or any other place where bald eagles are prevalent. Fisherville has ONE nest that I know of which is now gone. Fisherville for those that do not know is a nice quiet farmland area. I live 20 minutes away and I know it sure is nice to know that such things like bald eagles live in my neck of the woods, it remains to be seen what will become of them. These energy people walked in and cut down an ACTIVE bald eagle nest that was there before the windmill project even came to fruition. They could have moved the road or windmill but they chose to cut it down. Remember this is the year 2013, this is complete Bull that this was ever allowed to happen. Money talks and crap walks unfortunately. To put it into prespective, think of it as if a cottager on your favorite lake built a dock and destroyed a bunch of spawning habitat for bass, muskie or whatever. Then the MNR chooses to look the other way becasue of well i wont say but the cottager has lots of $$$$$. Im sure people would be crying the blues. But hey the fish can just move on and build another nest at another spawing location can they not........... Next maybe your favorite bass area on Lake Simcoe will be filled with windmills, I know they proposed to have them on LSC right out in the water, wouldn;t that be awesome.
DRIFTER_016 Posted January 7, 2013 Report Posted January 7, 2013 Next maybe your favorite bass area on Lake Simcoe will be filled with windmills, I know they proposed to have them on LSC right out in the water, wouldn;t that be awesome. More structure is never a bad thing fer catchin' de green panfishes.
pylon Posted January 7, 2013 Report Posted January 7, 2013 I have a nest by our cottage. 25 years and still breeding. I'm guessing a few generations have brooded there. (Near Thunder Bay )
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