Industrial Wind Turbines Are Slaughtering Millions of Birds and Bats

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We are constantly told by mainstream media and climate change campaigners that industrial wind turbines (IWTs) are environmentally friendly. We supposedly need this form of “green energy” to help “stop climate change,” they say.

Yet nothing could be further from the truth. No matter how much IWT manufacturers and their political and environmentalist allies tell us otherwise, IWTs are not even remotely “green” or environmentally friendly. In their 2021 book, “‘ Clean’ Energy Exploitations: Helping Citizens Understand the Environmental and Humanity Abuses That Support ‘Clean’ Energy,” authors Ronald Stein and Todd Royal explain:

“Green energy uses materials from some of the worst ecological and human rights offenders that exist on Earth… The volume of wind turbine waste is projected to soar in years to come, with mining and manufacturing waste, service waste, and end-of-life waste being the major sources. It is estimated that there will be 43 million metric tons just of blade waste worldwide by 2050.”

And they will do nothing to “stop climate change,” of course. In fact, they contribute to climate change in the vicinity of the turbines by slowing the wind as they use wind energy to turn the blades.

But perhaps the greatest lie we hear from IWT advocates is that their contribution to bird and bat mortality is negligible. As explained by my guest today, Greece, New York-based Suzanne Albright, IWTs cause a tragic mass slaughter of these animals, especially raptors such as golden eagles, which the Ontario government labeled as “Endangered” (i.e., they write, “the species lives in the wild in Ontario but is facing imminent extinction or extirpation”).

Suzanne Albright is a founding member of the Great Lakes Wind Truth. She is also a member of the Braddock Bay Raptor Research, a volunteer raptor educator, and a migratory owl surveyor. This organization engages in programs and activities to promote the health and preservation of raptors. Suzanne lives along the shores of Lake Ontario, and so witnesses the mass migration of birds across and around the Great Lakes. She is a retired family nurse practitioner.

Listen in today to learn what industrial wind turbine manufacturers and operators are hiding from the public.

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