Sentences with phrase «living near turbines»

Noise is the predominant concern of people living near turbines, leading to annoyance in a small proportion of exposed people, particularly in association with negative visual impacts or lack of perceived personal benefit.
He has conducted a relentless campaign to vilify people who claim living near turbines is affecting their health.»
Conduct research on the effects of wind turbines by ACTUALLY speaking to people who LIVE near a turbine and are experiencing symptoms.
And tens of thousands who have lived near turbines for up to 25 years without health problems which anybody links to wind power.»

Not exact matches

-- Infrasound, sound below 20 MHz, sickens many who live near wind turbines.
Ernie Marshall, who lives near a wind farm in Goderich, Ontario, said that once the turbines got rolling, his health began to suffer.
We are now fully aware of the hazards of smoking tobacco but how long before our government stop accepting lobbying from the industry and wake up to the hazards of living near wind turbines?
STT's editorial team does not live near wind turbines and their homes are not threatened by wind turbines, so we reject the NIMBY charge often levelled by those who never have to live or work near industrial wind turbines, at the unfortunates who have no choice but to do so.
Residents living near a wind farm have reported sheltering in their homes when lumps of ice were thrown from blades from a 410 - ft high turbine near Peterborough, Cambridgeshire.
This illustrious group of PHD's conclude however, that she proves no causal link between those ill health effects and living near wind turbines.
In this entire 163 page report, nowhere does it state that they spoke directly to anyone who lives or has lived near a wind turbine and had their lives profoundly impacted by an IWT.
They cite the work done by Dr. Nina Pierpont, who has spent years studying and working directly with people living near wind turbines and experiencing ill health effects.
This seems to be a case that suggests there is a strong link between ones experience in living near wind turbines being linked with ones initial attitude to wind turbines and wind power.
Did this esteemed panel of experts hoist themselves out of their chairs and actually go speak to people who live near wind turbines?
Since the Massachusetts study came out last year, the wind industry (including CanWEA and AWEA) have been diligent in proclaiming it everywhere, to be proof positive that there are no health impacts from living near industrial wind turbines.
Frankly, it is the nearest wind turbine to where I live, and a number of neighbours are having problems, and not just with the audible noise but with the infrasound and low - frequency noise, based upon the symptoms they are reporting to me.
It is not an attitude; it is to understand the realities of living near wind turbinesliving, working, attending school, being incarcerated near wind turbines.
He went on to say «It found many people living near wind turbines at a wind farm near Cape Bridgewater in Victoria are suffering health complaints caused by low - frequency noise generated by wind turbines».
In fact, it is quite alarming to me, because I have interviewed people who live near wind turbines that you in Australia would probably consider to be quite small and solitary — wind turbines that are 100 kilowatts, even — and they are experiencing health problems, even people living near a 10 - kilowatt wind turbine.
You folks in South Australia, that your journalism, appears to be light years ahead of the United States media with respect to recognition of adverse health impacts of industrial wind on those living near colossal turbines.
When Premier Dalton McGuinty's Liberal government could no longer ignore complaints ranging from sleep disorders, vertigo to ringing in the ears from ordinary folks living near industrial wind turbines, it directed Dr. King to examine the current medical literature.
Brian and Joanne Kermond live near Pacific Hydro's Cape Bridgewater turbines in Victoria.
Ontario's Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change received thousands of formal complaints from people living near industrial wind turbines, but did little about it, a coalition of groups and individuals opposed to wind farm development is charging.
The review addresses symptoms associated with the central nervous system, such as dizziness, vertigo and epilepsy, among others, that have been raised in the context of living near wind turbines.
In a piece published in The Conversation; 2018/05/02; 1,700 people living near 250 wind farms across 34 US states were asked how they felt about being close to turbines.
The review includes a review of individual risk factors, such as noise sensitivity and others that may affect how people respond to living near wind turbines.
The problem first came to light when residents living near Europe's largest wind farm, the 215 turbine Whitelee farm in Ayrshire, began to suffer from diarrhoea and severe vomiting.
Nothing wrong with having wind turbines near where you live, unless of course you don't use electricity.
«PEOPLE living near wind farms face a greater risk of suffering health complaints caused by the low - frequency noise generated by turbines, a groundbreaking study has found.»
Excessive turbine development is not only bad for the populations who have to live near them, but also damages the tourist economy.
On the other hand it is true that some wind farm companies have acted unethically at times, with insufficient consideration for the people who are going to be living near wind farms at other times, and they generally emphasize the advantages and down - play the disadvantages of wind turbines.
Would you buy a house near industrial wind turbines if you knew studies show significant health risks being reported from citizens who live in close proximity?
Homes near wind turbines are worthless, no one wants to live anywhere near them.
Most people who live near wind turbines do not complain of adverse symptoms.
The authors have also set up a web site to collect information about noise from people living near large wind turbines: www.windturbinenoisehealthhumanrights.com.
A survey of those people who live near wind turbines, their health problems, and aiming to establish whether those problems are related to the turbines, to perceptions about the turbines or totally unrelated to the turbines.
This is not true: it would be true if it stated «Some people who live near wind turbines complain of symptoms...».
In the paper «Wind Turbines Make Waves: Why Some Residents Near Wind Turbines Become Ill», by Magda Havas and David Colling — the abstract starts with «People who live near wind turbines complain of symptoms...Turbines Make Waves: Why Some Residents Near Wind Turbines Become Ill», by Magda Havas and David Colling — the abstract starts with «People who live near wind turbines complain of symptoms...&raqNear Wind Turbines Become Ill», by Magda Havas and David Colling — the abstract starts with «People who live near wind turbines complain of symptoms...Turbines Become Ill», by Magda Havas and David Colling — the abstract starts with «People who live near wind turbines complain of symptoms...&raqnear wind turbines complain of symptoms...turbines complain of symptoms...».
A number of allegations have been made in relation to adverse health effects of living near wind turbines which do not appear to be supported by scientific evidence
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