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Tuesday, October 07, 2008
NJ: We'll become a world leader in wind power
By WAYNE PARRY
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New Jersey is powering up an ambitious plan to become a world leader in the use of wind-generated energy.

Gov. Jon Corzine wants the Garden State to triple the amount of wind power it plans to use by 2020 to 3,000 megawatts. That would be 13 percent of New Jersey's total energy, enough to power between 800,000 to just under 1 million homes.

"We want to create this generation's race to the moon, but this time, a race to the sea, to harness this potential wind source off of our coasts, and bring economic development, environmental benefits, and new, green jobs to the Garden State," Corzine said Monday.

Environmentalists hailed the plan. Dena Mottola Jaborska, executive director of Environment New Jersey, termed it "a gale force for change, moving us away from dirty power and towards a new energy future. It is the most visionary plan to promote offshore wind energy in the nation."

Last week, Garden State Offshore Energy, a joint venture of PSE&G Renewable Generation and Deepwater Wind, was chosen to build a $1 billion, 345 megawatt wind farm in the ocean about 16 miles southeast of Atlantic City. That plant would be able to power about 125,000 homes.

There are currently no offshore wind power projects anywhere in the United States, but two others have been approved for areas off Rhode Island and Delaware, environmentalists said.

In Atlantic City, the local utilities authority has a wind farm consisting of five windmills that generate 7.5 megawatts, enough energy to power approximately 2,500 homes. It powers a wastewater treatment plant, with surplus energy going to the area power grid.

The state Commerce Commission assessed the potential costs and benefits of offshore wind on New Jersey's economy. It concluded that while there would be some negative impacts on tourism, these would be temporary and would decline quickly. Continued...

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Subject: Don Juan - If it's really cost-efficient
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...meaning that capital invested in your "Coastal breezes," "wave-generated electricity," and "hydrogen conversion" will earn out (i.e., really satisfy demand while meeting predicted costs and providing an inflation-adjusted profit sufficient to draw that capital away from other potential investments), why aren't the venture capitalists and other investors putting enouogh money into it to get the "technology [you claim] is both here and cost-efficient" into operation without subsidies, set-asides, "required to meet a minimum standard" extortionism, and all the other kinds of government life-support boondoggles you want?

The answer is that there *IS* no demand, by which is mean real, sustainable consumer-preferred voluntarily-originating purchasing potential to justify the investment.

It's said that "When it's time to railroad, people start railroading."

Well, it's not time for your bullsh!t wind-and-wave power greenery.

And please engrave your fantasies about anthropogenic "global warming" on a sheet of galvanized steel, fold it until it's all corners, and shove it up your cloaca.

None of the garbage upon which you watermelons base your political machinations has ever once passed the scientific sniff test.

Therefore to hell with you.





=====
"The fact that nobody asks you to sing is NOT an indication that you should sing louder. This sounds obvious until it's applied to matters like mass transportation. There are virtually no private mass transit companies. This does not represent the failure of the market to provide a needed service, it represents the failure of an unneeded service to GO AWAY!"

-- L. Neil Smith

Let the ME drink their damned oil!
SJ Doc: "This means that wind farms will never be able to provide a significant - or significantly reliable - fraction of the electrical energy required by the Garden State no matter how much that lying sonofabitch Corzine and his goons cook the statistics to make his bullsh!t look prettier than it smells."

I would respectfully disagree. Coastal breezes are remarkably reliable, and the same transmission infrastructure could be used to carry wave-generated electricity. Excess capacity can be used to facilitate hydrogen conversion and/or transmitted to the grid via a DC transmission system. New houses could be required to meet a minimum standard of energy efficiency, and old houses could be retrofitted. The savings would free up LNG for use in autos -- a bridge to the hydrogen economy. The energy crisis, balance of payments crisis, and global warming problem all have the same solution, and the technology is both here and cost-efficient; all we need is the capital to implement them and will to git-r-dun.
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