“Clean” energies are not yet perfectly “innocent.” Laws and guidelines must be enforced, and labor and funds must be devoted to reducing the destructive impact of solar and wind technologies on birds and their habitats.
Dead oiled Birds - Pixnio
It is very difficult to be a wild animal today.
In the year 1800 there were approximately 1 billion humans alive on planet Earth. Today, only a little over 200 years later, there are approximately 7.8 billion of us, and we’ve occupied the vast majority of Earth's dry land. Today very little true wilderness remains. Just as our population numbers have overwhelmingly increased over the past two centuries, our energy consumption has increased dramatically over that time as well. In fact, our energy consumption has increased far more significantly than our population numbers would imply, and this is especially true in “developed” regions like North America and Europe. Very little of this energy consumption can be labelled as “green.”
More or less all human activity results in animal suffering and death. This is true of energy production as well. But not all sources of energy are equally as destructive. Below we will outline which sources of energy cause the most, and the least destruction, and we will provide recommendations on how these technologies can proceed with the least harm, based on current industry best practices.
Fossil Fuels Are An Unmitigated Disaster
By far, fossil fuels, which include coal, oil and natural gas, are the worst
possible sources of energy, except perhaps nuclear energy. Energy is
generated from fossil fuels by burning them. When they burn, they release
carbon pollution, which warms the atmosphere, causes increasingly violent
weather events, contaminates water, and pollutes the air.
Scientists deem climate change to be one of the largest threats to wild
animals on the planet, alongside habitat destruction and the illegal
wildlife trade. Climate change may sound very abstract, but it is not.
Almost half of U.S. birds could be lost this century as the current climate
crisis shrinks and disfigures their ranges. Chief scientist, Gary Langham,
at the Audubon Society, has called global warming "the greatest threat our
birds face today."
In 2009, B.K. Sovacool estimated that 14.5 million birds die each year
across the U.S. due to fossil fuel power plant operations in his paper
"Contextualizing avian mortality: a preliminary appraisal of bird and bat
fatalities from wind, fossil-fuel, and nuclear electricity," No clean source
of energy, even if scaled up to the size of the current fossil fuel
industry, would come anywhere near these numbers.
Accordingly, there is near universal agreement — including among the Audubon
Society and the American Bird Conservancy — that clean sources of energy are
vastly preferable to dirty sources of energy when it comes to protecting
animals.
Green Energy, Though Far From Perfect, Is Vastly Preferable
In contrast to fossil fuel sources, green energy sources — including solar
and wind energy — are clean. They produce electricity without releasing any
carbon pollution or contributing to climate change. So, right off the bat,
solar and wind energy are part of the solution to climate change, the
greatest threat to birds today.
It is true that both wind turbines and solar facilities do currently kill
birds. This is a tragedy and by no means should wind, solar power or other
forms of green energy be embraced blindly. All means necessary must be taken
to reduce these projects’ impacts on wildlife as much as possible, something
we will cover below.
Still, in terms of both global efforts to reduce climate change, and local
efforts to reduce bird and animal suffering and death, both wind and solar
power are vastly preferable to traditional fossil fuels.
Wind: Better Studied, But Perhaps More Disruptive to Birds Than Solar
In terms of bird fatalities, there is no comparison between wind or fossil
fuel generated power. In the Sovacool study cited above, it was found that
wind farms are responsible for 0.3 bird deaths per gigawatt-hour (GWh) of
electricity, whereas fossil-fuel power stations are responsible for 5.2
fatalities per GWh. According to those numbers, fossil-fuel power stations
are 17 times more lethal than wind farms. At those rates, if we replaced
fossil fuels with wind energy, we could potentially prevent millions of bird
deaths.
To stress, there are real concerns around wind power. From collision deaths
to habitat degradation, wind farms do displace and kill birds. Offshore wind
farms come with their own issues, including noise associated with the
construction process, and the presence of the installations disturbing the
behavior of marine animals.
Still, scientists are exploring ways to reduce the collateral damage of wind
farms, and are making progress. Additionally, offshore wind farms have as
many benefits as they have drawbacks. Fishing is generally not permitted
near the platforms, and there is even evidence the wind installations may
function as artificial reefs which help restore damaged ecosystems.
Just as importantly, however, wind farms can be dismantled and replaced with
even more “gentle” technologies down the road, whereas the pollution and
climate change brought about by fossil fuels will remain in the atmosphere
for centuries, possibly millenia.
Solar: Less Understood, But The Preliminary Data is Promising
Unlike with wind power, a figure for fatalities per GWh of electricity is
not available for solar, so we cannot do a side by side comparison. That
said, a 2016 first-of-its-kind preliminary assessment by Leroy J.Walston Jr.
et al. estimated utility-scale solar farms around the U.S. kill less than
one-tenth of 1% of the estimated number of bird deaths by fossil-fuel power
plants. Even factoring in the fact that solar panels only account for 2.7%
as much energy production as fossil fuel generation currently, assuming
solar is to be scaled up to produce as much energy as fossil fuels, bird
deaths from solar plants would still only amount to less than 4% of those at
fossil fuel plants.
The data is still very preliminary, and we should plan for the worst, but as
noted above, there is near universal agreement — including among the Audubon
Society and the American Bird Conservancy — that clean sources of energy,
including solar, are vastly preferable to dirty sources of energy when it
comes to protecting animals.
It is true that bird deaths at solar plants can be gruesome, and accordingly
make headlines. The “lake effect,” in which water birds can mistake a large
reflective solar facility for a body of water, and die after colliding into
them (this effect has not been observed on small, distributed solar panels),
is a real problem. As is solar flux-related mortality, in which birds are
incinerated upon exposure to concentrated sunlight (this only happens at
thermal solar plants, also known as concentrating solar plants, which are
far less common than photovoltaic (PV) solar plants and panels).
Again, however, there are steps that can be, and already are being, taken to
reduce bird morality. And again, just as with wind farms, solar plants can
be dismantled and replaced with even more “gentle” technologies down the
road, whereas the pollution and climate change brought about by fossil fuels
will remain in the atmosphere for centuries, possibly millenia.
Recommendations For Further Reducing the Impact of Clean Energy on Animals
The following are recommendations that apply to both wind and solar plants:
Wind Turbine Specific Recommendations
Offshore Wind Power Recommendations
Solar Farm Specific Recommendations
Potentially Problematic Solutions For Which Pros and Cons Must be Weighed Specific to Each Site
IDA's Position
The main threat to wild birds is the enormous increase in the human population over the past few centuries. If we really desire to reduce our impact on wild animals, we need to reduce our numbers by lowering the human birth rate dramatically as well as lessen our total energy and resource consumption.
That said, in the near-term, we stand in agreement with the Audubon Society
and the American Bird Conservancy that alternative energy in the form of
wind and solar power make for vastly preferable options to fossil fuel based
sources of energy. As is widely recognized, alongside habitat loss and the
illegal wildlife trade, climate change ranks as one of the greatest threats
to wildlife today.
To stress again, however, “clean” energies are not yet perfectly “innocent.”
Laws and guidelines must be enforced, and labor and funds must be devoted to
reducing the destructive impact of solar and wind technologies on birds and
their habitats. And as soon as less harmful new technologies are developed,
we should adopt them and leave behind the current generation of wind
turbines and solar farms.
In the meantime, one big thing we can do to protect animals and mitigate the
impact of climate change is lowering the human birth rate by choosing to
adopt over birthing our own children and by switching to a plant-based diet.
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