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Fewer bats dying after Alberta wind turbines tweaked

Von: abc (abc@123.cl) [Profil]
Datum: 30.09.2009 17:05
Message-ID: <20090930-150540.155.0@abc.shawnews.vc.shawcable.net>
Newsgroup: alt.animals.rights.promotion alt.animals.ethics.vegetarianuk.politics.animals rec.animals.wildlife
Fewer bats dying after Alberta wind turbines tweaked


September 25, 2009


"Given that more bat fatalities occur in low wind speeds and the
relative ease of manipulating operation of turbines, we examined
whether reducing the amount that turbine rotors turn in low wind speeds
would reduce bat fatalities."

"Given that more bat fatalities occur in low wind speeds and the
relative ease of manipulating operation of turbines, we examined
whether reducing the amount that turbine rotors turn in low wind speeds
would reduce bat fatalities."
Photograph by: Courtesy of Hydro-QuÈbec.,

CALGARY — University of Calgary researchers say they've discovered a
simple way to drastically reduce the number of bats killed near wind
turbines in southern Alberta.

The study, published in the Journal of Wildlife Management, found that
slowing the turbine blades in the area of Pincher Creek, Alta., during
periods of light wind reduced migratory-bat mortality by up to 60 per
cent.

Pincher Creek is about 200 kilometres south of Calgary.

The findings come on the heels of previous research that blamed the
sudden changes in air around the wind turbines for killing large
numbers of bats every year, as the mammal's respiratory system wasn't
able to withstand the pressure.

TransAlta initiated the followup study to figure out how to reduce the
number of deaths without significantly reducing the wind energy the
turbines generate.

Researchers began with the premise that the tiny bats don't like to fly
in high winds, said U of C biology professor Robert Barclay, who co-
authored the paper.

"The idea was, if most of the bat activity is when the wind isn't
blowing all that hard and most of the energy is produced when the wind
is blowing hard, perhaps there's a way of modifying how the turbines
operate when the wind's not very strong, thereby reducing the
fatalities," Barclay said.

Most of the bats dying near the turbines are migratory, including the
silver-haired and hoary species. The bats apparently move to Alberta
for the summer to give birth, then fly down south for the winter,
Barclay said.

It's during their migration period that they become most vulnerable to
the wind turbines.

The efforts to reduce the deaths factored in the wind speeds bats tend
to fly in, and the turbines' mechanical capabilities, said study co-
author Erin Baerwald.

"Given that more bat fatalities occur in low wind speeds and the
relative ease of manipulating operation of turbines, we examined
whether reducing the amount that turbine rotors turn in low wind speeds
would reduce bat fatalities," she said.

TransAlta operators made a simple adjustment to the amount of wind
speed needed to start the blades turning, said Barclay.

The efforts proved successful, he said, with researchers recording a 60
per cent drop in the fatality rate with minimal impact to the energy
operation.


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