I'm not sure if I understand you correctly, but are you implying that because windmills are presented as being green, they should be held up to a higher standard than other technologies - and if they cannot meet that higher standard we should just stick to the 'old' technology (regardless of consequences)? That's a bit odd, isn't it (to put it mildly).J.A.W. wrote: ↑08 Aug 2021, 13:38What % of scrapped large aircraft components are resin-impregnated glass-fibre (or like composites)?
Any 'strawman' type - 'yes, but' - conflation, esp' when comparisons with unashamedly filthy & decrepit
fossil-thermal units are raised, are so 'red-herring', as to be shameless, & clean-green energy must
surely be capable of, & duly held to, a far higher standard, ethically/commercially/politically... No?
I'm all for keeping all technologies to the same standards, and at that, accounting for the externalities for all. Yes, that includes landfilling for windmills. But at the moment, there seems to be a lot of selective outrage towards the negative externalities of windmills (and other green technologies), while those outraged do not uphold the same standards for the established system, all in order to uphold the (self-destructive) status quo. I'd be happy to see effort directed to windmill blade recycling, sure, but we should not lose the perspective - there are much, much bigger fish to fry at the moment.
As for that quantitative perspective, the issue itself of course is not 'windmill blades', but as you say, composite materials. Now, I found this little analysis targeted at Australia that provides some numbers:
- windmill composite landfilling is currently some tens of thousands of tonnes per year, and expected to reach up to 370000 ton/y in 2050. The blades make up ca. 10-15% of the turbine, the rest being recyclable (another source on aircraft recycling I found mentions that 85-90% of an aircraft is recycled - although that doesn't mention what is the remained).
- But, wind turbine blades make up about 5% of the global composite production annually. The other 95% of composites has the same problem (yet, the outrage seems to be selectively against windmills).
- For a 1MW turbine (which is rather small now), the waste boils down to 160 g solid waste/MWh.
- The amount of solid waste generated in coal fired plants is 200x larger per MWh (ashes, of which 64% are landfilled - and leaking toxic components, whereas the composites are inert).
- And that is only the solid waste.. then there's also the water and airborne pollution.
So yes. Blade, or better said, composite landfilling is a thing, and if there are ways to reduce it - let's go for it. But it's a very, very minor issue compared to some of the other things we need to tackle. And to argue that we should delay/avoid implementation of wind farms for it is simply outrageous, put in perspective. Wind energy has its fair challenges (mostly intermittency of the supply and the required changes to infrastructure), but this ain't one of them.
https://medium.com/climate-conscious/wi ... 61913dcbd9