Will Morro Bay wind farms be the demise of Port San Luis?

June 25, 2023

Robert Sidenberg

OPINION by ROBERT SIDENBERG

I heard about the proposed Morro Bay Offshore Wind Farm awhile back but didn’t really think too much about it. It would supposedly be out of sight and didn’t seem to have any affect on my life since I launch my fishing boat out of Port San Luis.

But now I understand there is a plan to industrialize Port San Luis to be used as a base to assemble, operate, and maintain the 1,000 feet wind turbines for the wind farm and for the Vandenberg Space Force base to barge in rockets and components that are too large to travel by land. This plan would involve major dredging to accommodate large ships, cranes and other heavy equipment. Additional concrete piers will be constructed requiring under water blasting.

I am not sure this is such a good idea. I began to do some research on wind farms. This developed into hours and hours of digging through material. What I have learned is quite alarming.

About wind energy

When looking at the actual science, producing electricity via wind turbines appears to be inefficient and expensive when compared to other options. It is a bit difficult to understand the real cost of electricity produced by wind turbines since wind is not constant. It doesn’t blow all the time nor does it always blow at the same speed. Traditional methods of producing electricity that use fuel such as natural gas or nuclear are more constant and easier to calculate.

One wind turbine operating at 100% efficiency, the maximum power that could be generated is approximately 56 watts per square foot of turbine swept area. For an offshore wind turbine farm to deliver 2,300 million watts equal to the same amount of energy supplied by the Diablo Canyon Nuclear Plant, would require wind turbines covering a 1,072 square mile area along our coastline. Diablo Canyon covers only .02 square miles and produces 8.6% of California’s total electrical generation.

But wind turbines do not operate at 100% efficiency. They operate at 35% to 45% efficiency due to the intermittency and variation of the wind. The effect of the enhanced fluctuations is dramatic.

In a 2023 research paper published in the United Kingdom titled “The Inadequacy Of Wind Power,” the author, Professor of Physics, Wade Allison writes, “The generation of electricity by wind tells a disappointing story. The political enthusiasm and the investor hype are not supported by the evidence.”

When analyzing data of the total European Union and United Kingdom wind energy generated each day in 2021, with the installed nominal generating capacity of 236 GW, the highest output actually reached was only one day at 103 GW. Recorded data of wind power generated by all United Kingdom offshore wind farms for March 2022, shows during some periods it rose to the nominal installed capacity of 10 GW.

However, for eight days of the month it, averaged no more than 1.2 GW. So 8.8 GW was not produced during that time. That much lost energy equals 1,600 GWh which is 1,000 times the capacity of the worlds largest grid storage battery of 1.6 GWh located at Moss Landing, California.

The idea that enough large battery storage plants can be built to store enough energy to cover the periods when enough wind isn’t blowing is not a realistic solution. We still will need traditional power plants to be running to cover the fluctuations of the wind farms.

Generating electricity with offshore wind turbine farms does not appear to be a viable technology on its own. None of the operations in service now around the world are even close to being profitable and it appears they never will without being propped up with government subsidies and tax credits as they are today.

How easily, without pause our government gives away the peoples money, our money. Are we not being taxed enough as it is? Of course if consumers are willing to pay exceedingly high electricity rates four to five times the current rates then wind farms might be profitable at times when the wind blows. Actually if we continue down this road we will be forced to pay these rates.

In looking at other countries that have embarked on aggressive renewable “green energy” programs like wind and solar, what is happening in Germany should be a lesson to us all.

After shutting down their last remaining nuclear power plant, Germany’s economy has fallen into recession and they are facing electricity shortages and soaring prices while critical industries are leaving the country. Some suggest Germany will have to go back to nuclear if it wants to phase out all fossil fuel as wind and solar will not fully cover demand.

And in the United States, Avangrid, the developer of Massachusetts’s largest approved offshore wind project, Commonwealth Wind, is wanting to renegotiate contracts they signed with the three major utilities. The company says that due to supply constraints and rising interest rates they will need to charge more than originally agreed for their wind power for the project to be viable. That cost will of course be passed on to the consumers.

A good sound energy program should be sensible, reliable, and affordable. Offshore wind farms do not meet any of this criteria. We are already paying a lot for electricity and with the state’s plan to require all cars and homes to be electric we will certainly be paying even more.

To cover our coastline with thousands of offshore wind turbines and industrializing many of our ports, including Port San Luis, to support the wind farms is a bad idea. We are setting ourselves up for a real disaster.

We are being forced into an energy program by the state of California that very likely will leave us in a vulnerable position with electricity shortages and high consumer rates. No person or local governing body has been given a choice in the matter. The promise of good paying jobs and a boost to the local economy is being presented as a big benefit. But who really believes that?

An environmental nightmare

What about the negative impact to tourism and the loss of jobs related to it, or to the local commercial and sport fishing industries and the business that support them? And what about the disastrous impact of large scale dredging and underwater blasting to the marine life and birds?

The “zone of lethality” is a term used in environmental assessment reports required for projects such as this that denotes the number of fish, whales, or birds are expected to be killed either by the dredging and blasting during the construction or the by the wind turbines while in service.

The preparation for offshore wind farms along our Mid-Atlantic coastline is being blamed for the killing of 30 whales and a dozen dolphins. A recent report compiled by two federal agencies, NOAA and BOEM finds that noise, vibration, electromagnetic fields, heat transfer, and thermal radiation associated with offshore wind farms could alter the marine environment. Noise levels from the turbines may have negative effects on communication, foraging, and predator detection.

A study by the California Ocean Protection Council with funding from the California Energy Commission evaluated the effects of offshore wind turbines in the Morro Bay, Diablo Canyon, and Humboldt Areas.

The sustained northwesterly winds in these areas drive the upwelling of deeper, cool, nutrient-rich waters that sustain a thriving ecosystem. Modest changes (about 5% reduction) to wind speeds found near the wind farms leads to a decrease in upwelled physical volume transport to the coastal zone.

The development of large-scale off shore energy has the potential to reduce the wind stress at the sea surface, which could have local and regional implications on the overall ecosystem.

The global agenda to reduce CO2 emissions has quickly become a frenzy to reach zero emissions without any rational thought or common sense. When it comes to something as important to our survival as the production of electrical energy we need go about this
in a more intelligent fashion.

Our economy, our food and water supply, our financial system, our military, our freedom, all depends on a consistent, reliable, and affordable method of generating electricity. Of all the ways that we can produce renewable electrical energy, wind energy is probably the worst.

Other options

But we do have other proven, reliable, and affordable options that take up less space on the planet, do less harm, and make a lot more sense.

Today, there are companies that capture CO2 from manufacturing plants and sell it for commercial and industrial use. Scientists have developed a technique that removes CO2 from the exhaust flues of natural gas power plants.

Natural gas is a relatively clean burning fuel. It wasn’t that long ago when the government was pushing for automobiles to run on natural gas. Renewable natural gas is a biogas that can be used in place of fossil natural gas. It comes from a variety of sources like existing solid waste landfills, wastewater treatment plants, livestock farms, etc. And there is also green hydrogen, another carbon free fuel source that is created from water.

This project being planned for Port San Luis to serve the Morro Bay wind farm is a bad idea on many levels. And the same applies to the wind farm project in Morro Bay.

As far as the additional use by Vandenberg, although I am in full support of the Space Force program, I do not think Port San Luis is the place for that. They have other options that would be better suited.

For those of us who love the Central Coast it is time to stand up and make our voices heard. Our representatives in Sacramento are out of control and need to start representing us. These two projects are just the beginning of a much bigger plan to install thousands of wind turbines along our coastline.

It is time to get organized. We need to save Morro Bay and Port San Luis and the Central Coast.

Robert Sidenberg is an Arroyo Grande resident. For more than 40 years, he has enjoyed sports fishing out of Port San Luis.


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This whole concept will be an environmental disaster. The technocrats have outfoxed the environmentalists.


Mr. Sidenberg –

Great job. In spite of the disingenuous (or uninformed) noise generated by the “Ra Ra Wind” claque, we are potentially backing blindly into a meat grinder, and it’s almost assuredly going to be way too late to back out by the time the pols, the press, and the public wise up. You guys out there know about earthquakes. We know about hurricanes. The North Sea doesn’t know much about either, or about their impacts on these approaching 1,000 foot tall monstrosities. A Category 5 hurricane hugging the Atlantic Coast from Cape Hatteras to the Gulf of Maine is 1) going to happen, and 2) leaving tax- and rate-payers owning a couple of billions of dollars worth of subsurface and above the surface wreckage, a huge demolition/cleanup bill, a bunch of dead critters, a bunch of (permanently or temporarily) severely disturbed ecosystems, and four centuries worth of fishing (recreational and commercial) infrastructure irrevocably gone. For what? Inadequate electric supplies when the wind’s blowing and the sun’s shining, and “emergency” generators-hopefully nuclear-when they’re not. Keep on keeping on. This fools errand has to be stifled.


While being on the subject of renewable energy how about the solar plants out in California valley, 4000 acres under glass and we don’t hear a word about them, how great they are or anything, I’ve looked for them on the internet and all I could find was when they were being built, not a word since then, other than a bunch of grass fires that seem to come from nowhere that usually didn’t happen like that before, word is from people that had property there is that birds flying above the panels at the right time and place seem to become balls of fire from the reflective heat, this also sounds like pie in the sky electricity also.


and we don’t hear a word about them, how great they are or anything,”


They work and provide profits for the investors, it’s gas and nukes that need cheerleaders to keep pushing the propaganda.


The problem is that people jump on these popularity bandwagons with absolutely no facts. Once people study the facts and try to protest, they are shouted down as anti ________《fill in blank》. They are then afraid of speaking out and we end up 10 years later rubbing 2 sticks together and wonder where we went wrong.


They are then afraid of speaking out” Yet here you are with absolutely no facts and who is not being shouted down.


Kettle,read carefully where I say people jump on board with no facts and when they do obtain facts they are accused of being anti.

…..So where are facts useful with the “believers”?


I did.


…..So where are facts useful with the “believers”?” Flat earthers, the religious, libertarians, so true but sometimes we get through with actual math.


Sometimes.


Mr. Sidenberg didn’t even touch on maintenance of the turbines, 20+ miles offshore, in a fairly hostile and highly corrosive environment. Wind farms are difficult enough to maintain on dry land with easy access for trucks, heavy lift cranes, and fire fighting equipment. Add huge waves, high winds, and barrels of oils leaking into the sea. I won’t even mention the environmental damage from one of these sinking.


Diablo Canyon is protected by a civilian force of well trained, heavily armed, para-military personnel. That sort of security would be financially and physically prohibitive on the 400+ square miles of wind farm ocean. Bad guys in fast boats could easily destroy any number of turbines quite easily, or even cut the main power line to shore, with the very least worry of a rapid response by the farm owners, Coast Guard, or military. That’s just for our local farm, what about the one scheduled off Humboldt?


Economically, a wind turbine will not replace the energy used to create it (mining iron ore, copper ore, titanium ore, aluminum ore, steel production, oil based plastics, lubricants, coolants, paints etc), for at least 20 years, by which time it will have nearly reached its production life.


Meanwhile, a nuclear plant will still be chugging along. Having paid for itself long ago, and with constant upgrading, can continue long after its original projected life, and do so 24/7/365. All, on less than 100 acres.


Economically, a wind turbine will not replace the energy used to create it”


Wrong, a viral post on Facebook claims that wind turbines cost more energy to produce than could ever be gained back from them. Social media is not science.


Wind turbines recoup the energy expended to manufacture them within a year of normal operation, according to Eric Lantz, wind analysis manager at National Renewable Energy Laboratory.

That said, many studies have estimated even quicker time periods – between four and eight months, he told USA TODAY in an email. 

Ryan Wiser, a scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory who specializes in renewable electricity systems, reviewed 20 studies of wind power energy payback timeframes for a 2011 IPCC renewable energy report.

He found that the “median reported energy payback time for wind power plants was 5.4 months,” he told USA TODAY in an email.”


Your “studies” only take into account the cost of the windmill itself (I buy a windmill that costs $10, will take 3 days to pay back the $10). They fail to take into account the very much not green energies expended to mine the materials, process the materials, create the various parts, ship the parts, erect the parts, produce the oils required, and maintain the parts. When you add all that up, it makes the windmill an expensive eyesore…


Unless, of course, the US government steps in!


https://theconversation.com/wind-costs-more-than-you-think-due-to-massive-federal-subsidies-38804


Your “studies” only take into account the cost of the windmill itself “


No, but feel free to change the subject to subsidies if that will get you internet points.


People are dying because of the switch to Green Energy. This is not about energy as much as it is about the Progressives wanting to run every aspect of our lives. They were bitterly opposed to offshore drilling but now want to ruin the coastline with dubious wind turbine projects. With the increased cost of energy and the rampant inflation caused by Biden and his stupid war in Ukraine that is in reality just a scheme to protect his interests people are having a hard time in England paying their energy bills and are dying as a result. Plus we had the debacle in Texas where people died because of wind turbine failures although natural gas failure was a factor too. Stop the madness already. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/feb/27/dying-cold-europe-fuel-poverty-energy-spending and https://www.republicworld.com/world-news/us-news/heres-why-did-the-power-grid-failed-in-texas-and-beyond.html


People are dying because of the switch to Green Energy.”


Bullshit.


“On average, there are 32,000 more deaths between December and March than the rest of the year. Many have perished because of the refusal of a society with abundant wealth and resources to provide for its most vulnerable citizens. An average of 9,700 deaths each year are believed to be caused by living in a cold house, according to research by National Energy Action (NEA) and the environmental group E3G. 


Poverty kills: this isn’t hyperbole, but fact. Some 10% of the total deaths, significantly more than 3,000, are directly linked to fuel poverty itself.”


Not to mention the diesel fuel used and pollution caused by thousands of trips from LA harbor to twenty miles off Morro Bay by ships, barges, tugboats and support equipment.


Excellent reason to stage it all in port san luis.


Just FYI, It was revealed last year that the Global Warming Policy Foundation, which sponsored the research of Wade Allison, is about to lose its non-profit status because it has taken contributions from Americans with links to oil and gas companies.


GWPF is simply a group of lobbyists who work for the fossil fuel billionaires. They would very much like to see America slow down its transition to renewable energy because it will cost companies such as Exxon and Chevron billions in profits.


Also FYI, the heat index (combination of temperature and humidity) shattered previous records by hitting 125F in recent days. In addition, the North Atlantic Ocean continues to break surface temperature records.


I agree with Robert. It’s time to get organized and stop this nonsense. Wind farms, electric vehicles, climate change…all are contrived to make you think the sky is falling. Trust the science.


It’s time to get organized”


Lol. Agree on something? Good luck with that.


Feel-good failure.