Does wind power cause visual pollution in your opinion?

I remember reading somewhere (probably my high school textbook) that one of the reasons people don’t like wind power being built is they cause visual pollution.

In my opinion, I think it would be pretty cool to just look out my window and see a giant windmill there, the opposite of visual pollution.

stackPeek,
@stackPeek@lemmy.world avatar

Isn’t it sound pollution instead of visual pollution, though, if anything? I’d rather have that than coal anyway

tmjaea,

Modern windmills are almost completely silent.

Pietson,

Yes, but not much more than any other man-made construction. I can see windmills from my appartement and they have never even bothered me a little. However if my view was a beautiful tolkienesque landscape they probably would stand out like a sore thumb.

blackn1ght,

A little bit, in the same way that any man made structure does. But they’re quite peaceful to look at and compared to a nuclear or coal plant they’re way better to look at.

I wouldn’t like to see them in an area of outstanding beauty, but I’m cool with them anywhere else.

Slight nitpick: they’re wind turbines, not windmills. Windmills are used to grind things down, like wheat into flour.

slazer2au,

I would much rather the visual pollution of a windmill than the combined pollutions of fossil fuel based power plants.

There are 2 windmills not far from my place and they are a good point of reference for where you are.

OscarRobin,

Well they look farrr better than coal mines and plants and smoke plumes. Even beyond that I think they just look plain nice though, like when I rarely get to see some it makes me happy.

lud,

Nah, they are cool.

PonyOfWar,

No, I like them. They bring some variety to landscapes. Many people here hate them though.

angstylittlecatboy,

I’ve never seen a wind turbine in person but I’d imagine no more than buildings and a lot less than most other power sources.

TIMMAY,

Im not sure I even agree that visual pollution should be a real thing. People like to pretend that there is a divide between man-made structures and “nature” but humans are animals and we construct our environment out of natural materials. Humans ARE natural and the things we make are not separate from nature. Obviously that doesn’t remove our responsibility to avoid causing overall harm with toxic chemicals that pollute or structures that destabilize equilibriums, but that being said I dont think we should have this mentality about our structures being an inherent detriment to the area we make them in, and wind farms seem like a good example of good structures in a good environment to me. End rant.

jpreston2005,
TIMMAY,

okay yeah that is totally fair, societal pollution

dfc09,

I live in the middle of a sprawling wind farm. Every direction I turn, I can see wind turbines looking ominously over my neighbor’s houses. It’s awesome, and way more interesting than the hundreds of square miles of corn fields they otherwise occupy.

hawgietonight,

You get used to them, and in a way look very cool because of their use and what they represent. Although I wouldn’t like to see them in a natural reserve.

I have another neat use for them. Since I can see some out of my window and use this sight to check wind direction and plan my bike route to have tail wind on the end of the route!

A_Very_Big_Fan,

Wait, do they rotate to face the wind or something? If so, that’s awesome and I never noticed

macaroni1556,

Not always. Some are designed for areas with a prevailing wind and deal with smaller direction changes using pitch (angle) of the blades

Everythingispenguins,

Yeah they do. I live somewhere where they are adding a lot to the bluffs in the area it is not as pretty as it was before. But so does the giant ass strip mine nearby. It is just that the mine has been here longer than most of the people so they think of it as part of the landscape. Instead of the giant ass hole in the ground full of toxic water that it is.

Onii-Chan, (edited )
@Onii-Chan@kbin.social avatar

This complaint about wind power has always come across as the kind of thing people say because they heard somebody else say it. imo, it's just stupid people who desperately want to have an opinion on the topic weighing in with the only piece of criticism they've overhead some Sky News host parrot at some point in the past, and because that host had authority on the matter in their minds, it gives them some kind of false confidence to then go forward and proclaim the visual pollution argument, as if it has any real basis in anything.

afraid_of_zombies,

Like comic sans.

Zonetrooper,
@Zonetrooper@lemmy.world avatar

I have actually heard the “original person” complaining about this… but the original person is also the kind of person who wants a picture-perfect ocean view every single day. Wind turbines? Visual pollution. Ships passing by? Visual pollution. Their neighbor has too many holiday decorations up? Visual pollution.

They just genuinely expect the rest of civilization around them to comply to their demands for a fantasy-perfect oceanside existence.

bizzle,
@bizzle@lemmy.world avatar

At least they’re fair about it 🤷‍♂️

afraid_of_zombies,

Sounds like my dad. We don’t talk anymore. Remember his irrational anger to the idea that other people were using HIS highway when he was driving on it. Also he had a war against a neighbor who sublet to his cousin “cause it is zoned for single family and a cousin is a different family”. Just fucking admit you don’t want a brown family on your block, I would honestly respect honest bigotry more.

Pyroglyph,
@Pyroglyph@lemmy.world avatar

I would much rather look at wind turbines than smog.

MaxHardwood,

I think they look really cool. I can’t get the rage about a friggin’ giant electricity producing machine but they’re fine with billboards everywhere.

spittingimage,
@spittingimage@lemmy.world avatar

Once The Man figures out that windmills would make good persistence-of-vision displays to play adverts on, I’m going to start burning them down.

afraid_of_zombies,

They weren’t there was a big campaign against them in the 60s. Which led to the Highway Beautification Act.

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