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Over the past few decades, the vexing problems of climate change
and finite resources
have ignited contentious global debates about alternative energy
technologies. In this lucid,
balanced book, Rody Johnson investigates the development and
deployment of one
such technology--wind power--and, in particular, the ways in which
a heated battle over
that energy source played out in an Appalachian community.
Johnson's wide-ranging account examines the history of wind power;
its capacity and
output in comparison to such sources as fossil fuels, other
renewables, and nuclear energy;
the infrastructural challenges of transmitting electricity from
wind farms to end users;
global efforts to curb carbon emissions, including the Kyoto
treaty; the role of public
policy, government subsidies, and tax breaks; and the differences
and similarities between
wind power regimes in the United States and Europe.
Interwoven throughout this discussion is the compelling narrative
of how, beginning
in 2005, the proposed construction of a wind farm along mountain
ridges in Greenbrier
County, West Virginia, pitted locals against each other--a story
that puts a human face on
the arguments about wind power's promise of clean, renewable
energy and its potentially
negative effects, including bird and bat kills, a disfigured
natural landscape, and noise
pollution. Drawing on countless hours he spent attending public
meetings and interviewing
those on both sides of the issue, Johnson not only pictures the
Greenbrier County
struggle in illuminating detail but also makes valuable
comparisons between it and similarly
pitched battles in another West Virginia county, where a wind farm
had already been
built, and in Florida, where plans to erect beachside wind
turbines next to a nuclear plant
faltered.
Concluding with a thoughtful, realistic assessment of a 2012 study
suggesting that
the country has the capability of receiving 80 percent of its
electrical generation from
renewables by 2050, "Chasing the Wind" makes a vital contribution
to the ongoing dialogue
regarding America's energy challenges and what is likely required
to meet them.
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