This compelling saga recounts the human effort to capture the
power of the wind for electricity--from the first European
windmills, to nineteenth century experiments in rural
electrification, to the immense wind farms in California and the
plains states that feed power grid today.
Environmental historian Robert W. Righter describes eccentric
inventors and techinical innovations, analyzes the politics of the
power industry, past and present, and demonstrates that individuals
and small businesses have made the greatest contributions to
wind-energy development. "Wind Energy in America" also focuses on
contemporary developments, including U.S. government research and
regulation and the international race for dominance in the
wind-turbine business. Righter explores the arguments of people and
organizations opposed to the spread of wind generators--often the
same environmental groups, paradoxically, that hailed wind energy
as a savior in the late 1970s.
This abundantly illustrated history, free of ideology and cant,
will be of lasting interest to environmentalists, scholars, and all
readers alert to the need for alternatives to coal and oil.
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