From: Miguel Llanos, NBC News on ENN.com
Placing wind turbines off the East Coast could meet the entire demand for
electricity from Florida to Maine, according to engineering experts at Stanford
University.
It would require 144,000 offshore turbines
standing 270 feet tall — not one of which exists since proposals have stalled
due to controversy and costs. But the analysis shows it's doable and where the
best locations are, says study co-author Mark Jacobson, a Stanford professor of
civil and environmental engineering.
The team is not advocating for an "all
wind" approach, saying it'd be foolish to put all of one's energy eggs in
a single basket, but they do think it could reach up to 50 percent. Today the
U.S. gets about 4 percent of its electricity from wind, but only via turbines
on land.
The first large-scale offshore wind farm was
proposed in 2001 off Massachusetts' Nantucket Island. But vocal opposition,
including from political heavyweights like the Kennedy family, are seeking to
block the $2.6 billion Cape Wind project, arguing the 130 massive turbines
would mar views and endanger boat and air traffic.
"The question that I would first ask"
critics, Jacobson told NBC News, "is would they rather have a coal or
natural power gas plant in their neighborhood, which affects their health and
that of their children as well as their quality of life and property values, or
an innocuous turbine that they could barely see during those times when they
were actually looking offshore."
Article continues at MSNBC.com