Shock New Report Lays Out the Full Scale of Environmental Damage Caused by Onshore Wind Turbines
Fresh insights into the ecological devastation caused by onshore wind turbines around the world are contained in a shocking new paper published last month by a group of ecologists in Nature. The paper is paywalled and has attracted little mainstream media interest, but it highlights research that illustrates that the effect of utility-scale wind energy production “can be far reaching and sometimes have large and unexpected consequences for biodiversity”. An annual figure of around one million bats are killed in the countries with the highest number of turbines, but harmful effects are seen in many other parts of the ecosystem. The number of top predators such as jaguars, jungle cats and golden jackals can be changed by turbines in tropical forest gaps, leading to the “possibility for cascading effects” along similar latitudinal levels.
In short, the science team notes that turbines can kill birds, bats and insects, change animal behaviour, physiology and demography and alter ecosystems. The installation of wind turbines invariably results in habitat degradation, but it is regions rich in biodiversity with minimal existing infrastructure that suffer the most. The authors state that wind facilities “are recognised as an important driver for losses and degradation of irreplaceable habitats that are important for conservation.” Such areas, of course, can be found in the windy highlands of Scotland. For City-dwelling eco zealots, it is a case of out of sight, out of mind. Net Zero is all about money and power – bats and eagles have neither.
The Nature paper is a wake-up call about the increasing damage that is being inflicted on natural habitats by wind turbines that are steadily increasing in size and destructive potential. It is a summary of the latest findings about the effect of turbines and it is not sanguine about the future. “Perhaps the greatest unknown in predicting future effects of wind power on biodiversity lies in the scope of the potential expansion of the technology and the cumulative consequences of this expansion for species and ecosystems”. A 2021 USA report on the potential pathways to Net Zero emissions is noted and this suggests using up to 13% of the land area for wind farms. The new Trump Administration is likely to put a stop to this madness which the scientists observe could have “dramatic consequences for biodiversity”.
The BP Deepwater Horizon accident is generally considered the worse US offshore oil spill. Estimates vary but it is thought to have led to the deaths of around 600,000 sea birds and the incident led to widespread condemnation by environmentalists that continues to this day. Slightly less publicity is given to the 500,000 bats killed onshore in the US by wind turbines every single year. In the UK, 30,000 is the estimated annual kill number, with Canada at 50,000 and 200,000 in Germany.

Many bird species are also at risk, with large raptors a conspicuous example. It is admitted that limited information is available on population-level consequences, but available evidence suggests the turbines could threaten certain species with local extinction, particularly those at risk with low reproduction rates. Possible population collapse has been predicted for cinereous and griffon vultures in Europe and the Eurasian skylark in Portugal. Other predictions suggest population declines for hoary bats in North America, lesser kestrel in France and black harriers in South Africa. Population declines have been reported in central Europe for animals with high-collision risk such as the noctule bat, while nearly 50% of bird species evaluated in one study in California were said to be subject to turbine-induced population decline. Meanwhile, the mortality of golden eagles at Altamont Pass Wind Resource in California is said to be so frequent that local populations are sustained by immigrants. Finally, the authors report that the globally endangered Egyptian vulture in Spain has a lower survival rate, population growth rate and size in the presence of wind facilities.
Who really cares? The UK Bat Conservation Trust states that climate change poses a “significant threat” to UK bat populations. “We need energy-efficient housing and renewable energy to help mitigate for climate change for the benefit of bats, people and the wider environment”, it adds. It is fair to say that similar understanding is not extended to developers encountering the presence of bats other than ‘Green’ entrepreneurs.

The giant turbines regularly sweep the countryside of insects, and the report notes that fatalities can be great enough to contribute substantially to the build-up of debris on blades. In fact, one of the report’s authors, Professor Christian Voigt, has stated in earlier work that it was necessary to evaluate if fatalities added to the decline of insect populations “and potentially the extinction of species”. In a 2022 paper, Voigt reported that turbines can change the nearby microclimate, while vibrational noise may reduce earthworm abundance with likely cascading effects on soil quality and vegetation.
Mass slaughter of bats and raptors is already known, but this new report casts fresh light on the cascading effects on the natural world of increasing numbers of giant wind turbines. That said, the report admits that biodiversity impacts have been documented for only a few small taxa, but the impacts are “not negligible”. Proponents of wind power often claim that wind energy’s impacts on biodiversity will be less than climate change, it is noted. The authors find this “plausible”, but the assumption is said to be “untested”.
Yet another untested assumption driving the destructive madness of Net Zero, others may conclude.
Chris Morrison is the Daily Sceptic’s Environment Editor. Follow him on X.
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Jesus wept!
Sacrificial offerings to the Climate Gods. We might as well all be Aztecs, Druids and Troglodytes.
And yet we are supposed to be the climate-denying, science-denying conspiracy theorists… simply for pointing things out…
New Dark Age.
With no Electricity, when the wind drops, what else would we expect?
Each new turbine needs a new road to install it, and the vast majority of those cut through pristine habitat. That is bad enough here in the UK, but in a rain forest those roads will be used by people to hunt and for logging. The environmentalist grift has become so self perpetuating that it is destroying the thing it is supposed to protect, and under the guidance of our corrupt politicians.
The Bird-Killing Windmills kill birds. Who would have thought it?
Those pictures are absolutely horrific and show the devastating reality of what these godawful, useless, garbage eyesores do to our wildlife. 😢I think pictures like these should be plastered all over in prominent places, such as billboards, on buses, on the Tube etc, as required viewing by the Eco loons, sanctimonious vegans and Green dickheads ( fair amount of overlap, there ). Watch their brains explode out of their ears due to build up of pressure from all that cognitive dissonance. 🤯🤬
I think we can safely say that there is a worldwide pandemic of cognitive dissonance on numerous fronts. And to think that only a few short years ago, I had never heard the expression. Ignorance was bliss, but no longer.
It’s clear to all but the blindest of eco zealots that wind turbines harm nature. The pictures are dramatic. Less dramatic is the damage done to flora and fauna by the proliferation of solar farms, but logic dictates they they must be having a serious and growing environmental impact in the countryside. Hopefully there’s some research on the way for that particular problem too.
The sub-text of this piece is that politicians rarely look beyond their cities and care nothing for the countryside and its inhabitants, or the seas and oceans. It isn’t just ignorance, it’s wilful destruction by those who claim to represent the very planet they’re destroying.
Aside from this environmental disaster being launched in the name of “green energy”, it’s why the UK (along with much of the world) is relinquishing food security and why militancy (rather than so-called “climate change”) is tolerated to kill and drive MILLIONS off land they’ve farmed for generations (particularly in sub-Saharan Africa).
It does make me wonder whether the green zealots are really interested in environmental issues! Perhaps that’s why the cofounder of greenpeace, Patrick Moore, is now one of their critics.
The only founder of Greenpiss with a science education…
This isn’t News. For years various people have have been complaining about it – but these sacrifices have to be made to save the planet.
Exactly. So why now?
The arguments against this paraphernalia were well made more than a decade ago. Onshore turbines, due to there not being enough wind, often surpass the height of Salisbury Cathedral Spire. The Nations landscapes will be devoured by these insatiable monstrosities, as they bestride every County, whilst birds of prey are smashed apart into the path of mechanical forests of ‘Eco Blenders’.
A very important article by Chris Morrison showing the true horror of wind turbines. It’s not only raptors, but also song birds, because song birds migrate at night, and have zero chance of avoiding wind turbine blades in the darkness, especially over open stretches of ocean, where they cannot stop to rest. Starlings migrating ‘en masse’ from Scandinavia to Britain are particularly vulnerable, and their populations have sharply declined just as the number of wind turbines has increased. Where are the stunning murmurations of old?
One American study said,
“For now, there’s little data regarding bird deaths from offshore infrastructure or activities such as for oil and gas.
“It’s really hard to study offshore mortality,” Curley said. “If a bird collides with the structure, they’re immediately wind swept into the ocean. So it’s hard … especially when they’re migrating at night.”
Radar study shows when offshore turbines pose greatest risks to migrating birds
I’ve seen a video (presumably true) on FB of them being decommissioned after 25 years…
Toppled with explosives. Felled like trees.
The dismemberment shown in the first photo is awful. Yet the vegans don’t care. Cow farts are much worse. Quite revealing.
It’s not as though Cow Farts had anything to do with the Climate, apart from experiencing one when being in an enclosed space.
Excellent point about vegans not caring about this horrific slaughter.
Do not give any money to the RSPB or other so-called Eco/Wildlife Charities.
They ALL support the diversity-slaughtering windmills.
What blithering idiots these eco fanatics are. In their attempts to change the weather, they’ll kill off the environment!
Do these billionaires out to make money, money, money not realise or not care? They still have to live on earth….
Thank goodness for DJT. Even before he was POTUS he called “Windmills” out for killing whales on his very illuminating interview with Rogan. At least now he has brought this issue out into the open and is actively preventing more being built off Rhode Island….
Hear, hear!
This has been patently obvious for ages.
One tactic to reduce their mortality is to paint one blade of a wind turbine black, then the rotational blades are obvious and fewer birds fly into them. Shame that all wind turbines by every manufacturer are not differentially painted like this at the factory.