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Power Science

Bird Deaths Down 70 Percent After Painting Wind Turbine Blades (arstechnica.com) 95

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Something as simple as black paint could be the key to reducing the number of birds that are killed each year by wind turbines. According to a study conducted at a wind farm on the Norwegian archipelago of Smola, changing the color of a single blade on a turbine from white to black resulted in a 70-percent drop in the number of bird deaths. Previous laboratory studies have suggested that birds may not be very good at seeing obstructions while they're flying, and adding visual cues like different colored fan blades can increase birds' chances of spotting a rapidly rotating fan.

At the Smola wind farm, regular checks of four particular wind turbines -- each 70m tall with three 40m-long blades -- found six white-tailed eagle carcasses between 2006 and 2013. In total, the four turbines killed 18 birds that flew into the blades over those six years, along with five willow ptarmigans that are known to collide with the turbine towers rather than the blades. (Another four turbines selected as a control group were responsible for seven bird deaths, excluding willow ptarmigans, over the same timeframe.) And so, in 2013, each of the four turbines in the test group had a single blade painted black. In the three years that followed, only six birds were found dead due to striking their turbine blades. By comparison, 18 bird deaths were recorded by the four control wind turbines -- a 71.9-percent reduction in the annual fatality rate. Digging into the data a little more showed some variation on bird deaths depending upon the season. During spring and autumn, fewer bird deaths were recorded at the painted turbines. But in summer, bird deaths actually increased at the painted turbines, and the authors note that the small number of turbines in the study and its relatively short duration both merit longer-term replication studies, both at Smola and elsewhere.
The study has been published in the journal Ecology and Evolution.
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Bird Deaths Down 70 Percent After Painting Wind Turbine Blades

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Meow! Cats won't go hungry. Thank you.

    • by Cipheron ( 4934805 ) on Wednesday August 26, 2020 @08:05AM (#60442229)

      Even better idea: attach cats to the turbine blades.

      • by EvilSS ( 557649 ) on Wednesday August 26, 2020 @08:59AM (#60442467)
        That's way too expensive. You can't just slap any old cat to a turbine blade. They need to be calibrated cats, and those are expensive and hard to come by since most metrologists really don't like calibrating cats.
      • by Rufty ( 37223 ) on Wednesday August 26, 2020 @10:43AM (#60442813) Homepage

        How do you get'em up there? Cat-a-pult???

      • "Even better idea: attach cats to the turbine blades."

        Each cat kills more birds than 8 to a dozen of these rotors.

        The birds mentioned are about the blindest or stupidest that exist, they even fly right into phone-poles.

        One might think they calculate the direction and flight-duration then close their eyes and start.

        • And all these years I thought that 'bird-brained' was a complement....

          • And all these years I thought that 'bird-brained' was a complement....

            A complement to what?

            I've always thought of it as more of a compliment, but YMMV.

        • by Ksevio ( 865461 )

          Each cat kills more birds than 8 to a dozen of these rotors.

          No, that's nonsense. The cats that catch birds the most are the ones that live outside and need to hunt to eat

          • 'Each cat kills more birds than 8 to a dozen of these rotors.'

            'No, that's nonsense. The cats that catch birds the most are the ones that live outside and need to hunt to eat'

            You seem to be under the illusion that cats kill from hunger.

            Cats kill up to 3.7B birds annually.

            https://eu.usatoday.com/story/... [usatoday.com]

            • by Ksevio ( 865461 )

              Is this a joke? The article provides nothing to counter that some cats hunt for food. The study that came up with that number does some major extrapolation but it ends up with each cat living outside catching a bird every couple weeks. Turns out there are a lot of birds and a lot of cats

              • Since your Google seems to be broken again...

                "Wind turbines kill between 214,000 and 368,000 birds annually — a small fraction compared with the estimated 6.8 million fatalities from collisions with cell and radio towers and the 1.4 billion to 3.7 billion deaths from cats, according to the peer-reviewed study by two federal scientists and the environmental..."

              • "Is this a joke? The article provides nothing to counter that some cats hunt for food. "

                Nobody ever suggested that. But I have it on good authority, that my cat kills 1-2 birds per day and they are not missing a feather when she deposits them on my doorstep.

                • by Ksevio ( 865461 )

                  Your cat would be an outlier in that case (and likely the local bird population is very high). For a cat that lives inside and is fed, that's probably more common, but they make up a small minority of the cats included in the study

      • This [papercards.com] is what happens when you attach cats to turbine blades:

        Cat 1: Catch yer own frickin' birds, turbine boy...
        Cat 2: Yawn!!
    • by schwit1 ( 797399 )

      One of the ARS commenters posted this ...
      "I’m not sure the anti-renewables group will care much. While 300,000 sounds like a lot, the linked report from TheCornellLab in association with a several other organizations and agencies reported in 2014 that power line collisions lead to 25 million deaths, automobiles: 200 million, building windows: 599 million, and cats: 2.4 billion."

      • Re:Cats thank you (Score:5, Informative)

        by sycodon ( 149926 ) on Wednesday August 26, 2020 @08:30AM (#60442341)

        The issue isn't the number of birds, but the type of birds being killed.

        Californian Condors.
        Various kinds of Eagles.
        Other protected raptors.
        etc.

        • If a bird of prey whose eyes can pick out a small white rabbit in the snow from a mile away flies straight into a giant whirling blade in the sky and breaks its neck I'm going to blame the bird.

          • Re:Cats thank you (Score:5, Insightful)

            by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Wednesday August 26, 2020 @08:49AM (#60442431)

            Large whirling blades are something animals are not used to in nature. Why do deer stand in the middle of the road instead of moving out of the way? They don't understand the dangers.

            • Why do deer stand in the middle of the road instead of moving out of the way? They don't understand the dangers.

              They've had a century to figure it out, though. The answer is that they're just really goddamned stupid. Ravens are smart. They get out of the road when a car's coming. (Or at least hop off to one side so they're easy to avoid.)

              • by Anonymous Coward

                The answer is that they're just really goddamned stupid.

                The answer is that YOU'RE just really goddamned stupid.

                https://www.scienceabc.com/nature/animals/why-do-deer-get-transfixed-by-car-headlights-and-freeze-in-place.html

                • Your link doesn't contradict what I said at all. They keep staring into the light instead of saying to themselves "this thing that is blinding me might be dangerous", looking away, and running away. That's stupid AF.

                  They're also too stupid to realize that other deer get killed on the road, and then they stand around in the road. Which is fucking stupid.

                  Which brings us back to my original conclusion, deer are fucking stupid.

                  And so are you, whoever you are. Which I presume is why you post AC. You're just smar

              • Crows here put walnuts into intersections and my driveway to be cracked open by cars. If I crack one with my shoe, they are on it within minutes.
            • by flink ( 18449 )

              Large whirling blades are something animals are not used to in nature. Why do deer stand in the middle of the road instead of moving out of the way? They don't understand the dangers.

              The deer can't see the car coming. It was just wandering around in the forest without the benefit of artificial lights. It has just been blinded out of nowhere and its startle reflex is causing it to freeze and hope that its natural camouflage keeps it out of danger until the danger passes as it can't see where to run. From the deer's perspective, there is nothing to "learn", either it works or it is dead. I suspect not enough deer get killed by cars for it to exert any significant selective pressure.

              • by janeil ( 548335 )

                Well, I've had two deer just sprint directly into my car from off the side of the road, and after the second one I have no sympathy anymore at all! These deer went out of their way to ram me at full speed.

            • Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

            If a bird of prey whose eyes can pick out a small white rabbit in the snow from a mile away flies straight into a giant whirling blade in the sky and breaks its neck I'm going to blame the bird.

            Hell yeah! It's the birds' own fault for not evolving to detect/avoid wind turbines. I mean they've had, like, decades to do it. How long do they need?

            • by jabuzz ( 182671 )

              So exactly when did humans evolve to avoid turbine blades? Because I am pretty sure 99.9% of humans would get the hell away from any large fast spiny thing instinctively, on the basis of if that hits me it's going to either hurt like hell or I will be dead.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          All forms of energy generation kill birds and other wildlife. Wind was about on par with nuclear for bird deaths but has been getting lower over the years.

        • Are pidgeons on that list? If not, could they be? They are rats with wings. Asking for a friend.
        • Of course; everyone knows that California condors are immune to high voltage.
        • Re:Cats thank you (Score:4, Informative)

          by MobyDisk ( 75490 ) on Wednesday August 26, 2020 @12:14PM (#60443055) Homepage

          Can you post a citation for that? Your post implies that wind turbines are disproportionately killing those kinds of birds. That sounds concerning, but I'm not finding anything to corroborate that. I thought it was bats that were killed disproportionately, which the article in the summary confirms.

          I found this article, but despite the alarming headline it really doesn't blame the turbines [wind-watch.org] and presents lots of speculation. At one point it even blames the researches for *not* citing anything about condors. Here's one that speculates it could be a problem for condors [scientificamerican.com] because most of these condors are bred in captivity then released. So they don't know to avoid them and they are close to where the breed-and-release programs are.

          I didn't look up Eagles and Raptors, but it really looks like the only reason Californian Condors are of special concern is because they are basically on the brink of extinction and we are trying to save. Nothing to do with the turbines themselves.

      • It's just like how certain people raise a fuss about the resources to construct the turbines, or the prospect of slowing down the wind... these same people who haven't a slightest concern about every new high-rise doing the same thing x100.
    • Re:Cats thank you (Score:4, Informative)

      by ganv ( 881057 ) on Wednesday August 26, 2020 @09:26AM (#60442547)
      The cats angle on this topic is highly relevant. For anyone deeply worried about bird deaths, check out the graphics by David MacCay on much larger sources of bird deaths: https://www.withouthotair.com/... [withouthotair.com]
      • by cob666 ( 656740 )

        The cats angle on this topic is highly relevant. For anyone deeply worried about bird deaths, check out the graphics by David MacCay on much larger sources of bird deaths: https://www.withouthotair.com/... [withouthotair.com]

        I don't believe that cars ARE relevant in this discussion because the types of birds predominantly killed by wind turbines are not the typical type of birds that are killed by cats. Predatory birds are not typically killed by cats.

      • Painting my cat did nothing but annoying him.

      • by Ksevio ( 865461 )

        But that's like saying "Why worry about people dying from car crashes when heart disease kills way more per year?"

        If we can take some simple measures to prevent deaths, we might as well do it.

        I'm sure killing all predators would also help bird deaths, but that's a bit more controversial

    • Are cats scavengers? I thought they will not eat it if they didn't kill it themselves. Perhaps you should say the vultures will thank the turbines. Or maybe get hit themselves... perhaps hyenas ought to be imported?

      • My cats certainly eat canned cat food, and they didn't kill that. They'll also sneak off with fish at markets.

        I wouldn't call them scavengers, but they are definitely opportunistic.

      • Are cats scavengers? I thought they will not eat it if they didn't kill it themselves.

        That's not really the question. Domestic cats do extensive ecological damage [wikipedia.org]. There is a distinction between what cats kill, and what cats eat. The fact that domestic cats kill large amounts of wildlife, far more than wind turbines, is the relevant fact at hand; whether they eat what they kill is, to the prey and to this discussion, irrelevant.

        We can, of course, discuss the fact that wind turbines and cats kill different ranges of species.

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Skip the windmill and strap a piece of buttered bread to the cat's back. The dueling irresistible forces trying to turn the cats feet and the buttered side of the bread towards the floor could generate gigawatts.

      Caution, approach the cat with caution, he'll be pissed...

  • Sample too small (Score:5, Informative)

    by war4peace ( 1628283 ) on Wednesday August 26, 2020 @08:09AM (#60442239)

    The sample is so low, it's nearly unusable.
    4 turbines, 18 killed birds over 6 years - that's below statistical noise. What's also missing is the amount of birds in the area. If there were 18 birds and all were killed, that's a 100% fatality rate. If there are 18,000 birds and 18 were killed, that's 0.1% fatality rate.
    The study is flawed. The fix could incidentally work, but not because of the study.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      From the summary:

      the authors note that the small number of turbines in the study and its relatively short duration both merit longer-term replication studies, both at Smola and elsewhere.

    • The sample is so low, it's nearly unusable.

      Exactly- a sample that low for something like this is meaningless.

      And without statistical context (the number of birds in the area, etc etc) it's even more meaningless.

    • by pjt33 ( 739471 )

      It's worse than that.

      There are four "control" turbines and four "impact" turbines, and the first problem is the choice of turbines. They're four adjacent pairs, where in each pair one turbine is "control" and one is "impact". Two of the "control" turbines are at the end of their row, and none of the "impact" turbines. That does not look like a good control to me.

      Then when we look at the summary figures, the "before" period is actually 7.5 years and the "after" is 3.5 years. During the "before" period there

    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      We know that wind turbines are exceptionally lethal to big birds across the world, 18 deaths may not be much in this sample, but for areas with high prevalences in an endangered species could be devastating to the population.

      At the Altamont Wind Resource Area alone, more than 2,000 Golden Eagles have been killed by the wind turbines but what's worse, is that the only ones doing the counting are the consultants hired by "big wind" so the problem is probably far worse.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by cb88 ( 1410145 )
      There are around 50 total bird deaths in the study... the study is perfectly fine for the conclusions drawn and to bring attention to start a bigger study that can determine more factors, and answer more questions.

      The flaw is in your analysis of the study.... small sample size does NOT effect data in the way you claim, in fact medical trials often start out with sample sizes exactly this small. You only need larger sample size when you are trying to determine other if other factors are involved... if you ha
      • by pjt33 ( 739471 )

        if you have say 20 identical turbines with only the one thing changed between them.... thats a pretty goods study

        At least 2.5 times better than this one, in fact, which only had a total of 8 turbines between control and impact groups, and had more differences between them than just the headline one of painting one blade.

        There is also the fact that the death rate on the controls mirrored the historical record.

        I don't know what you mean by this. The death rate on the controls went up from 0.23 deaths per turb

    • Re:Sample too small (Score:4, Informative)

      by hey! ( 33014 ) on Wednesday August 26, 2020 @09:33AM (#60442573) Homepage Journal

      Actually that's 18 birds killed in the *control turbine* group during the treatment period. The total number of observed bird deaths (excluding willow ptarmigans) was 42.

      Control Before Treatment: 7
      Control After Treatment: 18
      Treatment Before Treatment: 11
      Treatment After Treatment: 6

      According the authors' analysis the result was *statistically* significant at p = 0.023 level. It might not be *practically* significant.

    • Toured one of these facilities in Washington state. Turns out, the building we were getting the tour in on the top of the hill killed more birds then the windmills. It was made of a lot of glass and the birds would fly into the building.

  • Fixing a non-problem (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 26, 2020 @08:13AM (#60442251)

    18 birds over 7 years is far, far less than the average outdoor cat manages. So spay/neuter a cat for each wind turbine you install and we're laughing in terms of bird numbers.

    The whole "turbines kill birds" thing is just a made up excuse to keep on with fossil fuels. These numbers show clearly that turbines are not a problem in any meaningful way.

    • I'm in the party of "Stupid birds fly their peanut-sized brains into giant obvious spinning blades that can be seen from miles away and removes itself from the gene pool"

    • Yep, less than one bird per turbine per year, hardly matches the idea of a constant rain of bird corpses that anti-environmentalists like to concern-troll us with. A regular glass door at my dad's old office had a much greater death toll than that.

      • Yep, less than one bird per turbine per year, hardly matches the idea of a constant rain of bird corpses that anti-environmentalists like to concern-troll us with. A regular glass door at my dad's old office had a much greater death toll than that.

        Also: Birds die where they live. The area around a wind turbine is usually prime hunting territory for raptors: Grassland or cropland with no trees and the like for small animals to hide under. So some of the bird deaths are not caused by turbine strikes, but

    • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

      The average outdoor cat doesn't kill white-tailed eagles.
      And if it does, I hope it isn't in my neighborhood.

    • Actually it is a response to the idiots that say turbines don't kill animals so are better than fossil fuels.

      The case to keep on using fossil fuels is science and economics.
    • by cb88 ( 1410145 )
      Cats don't kill raptors... they aren't called birds of prey for nothing.
  • by ilguido ( 1704434 ) on Wednesday August 26, 2020 @08:17AM (#60442271)
    I wonder if the bird population dropped by 70%, before they painted the blades...
  • by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Wednesday August 26, 2020 @08:20AM (#60442289) Journal

    How do we keep the birds from contracting Windmill Cancer?

    Someone should look into that very strongly.

    • Make the blades transparent, so the birds get killed instantly and painlessly, and don't have to go through agonizing years of chemo.

  • Everyone already knows Birds Aren't Real [birdsarentreal.com]!!!

    </sardonic>

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      Everyone already knows Birds Aren't Real [birdsarentreal.com]!!!

      </sardonic>

      Exactly. In fact, the wind turbines are all part of the plan. You see, the replacement drone birds can be programmed with the location of the wind turbines so they can avoid them. This lets the turbines take out any stray birds that have managed to avoid the government culls.

  • The blade tip whistles should be expertly designed to not sound like bird calls, tho. However, how do birds hear since they don't have big floppy human ears? Hmm, but what if they did? The human ear wax would probably prevent them from hearing the whistles. Never mind. And don't think about that a bird with human ears would be nightmarish.
    • by spitzak ( 4019 )

      I don't think making audible noise continuously is going to be a popular solution.

  • Paint them like candy canes so they look like barber poles. Then the birds should stay clear. The eagles are already bald.

  • The carcass collection methods seems unsuited to a thorough investigation of this important problem. Carcasses could be removed by other predators between checks, and birds could be hit by a turbine and thrown outside of the collection area. Also there is no method provided to determine which turbine the birds are being struck by, painted or standard. However a simple change to the experimental design would solve these problems and remove the experimental uncertainties introduced by the collection methodolo

    • by spitzak ( 4019 )

      I very much doubt the killed bird is able to be thrown the distance between the turbines. You seem to be using cartoon physics. From what I have heard even getting hit by the blade is unlikely, what kills birds is the sudden low pressure behind the blade.

  • Bird Deaths Down 70 Percent After Painting Wind Turbine Blades

    Do birds die less after painting other things too? So if I got some birds to paint my house would they live longer too?

  • willow ptarmigans that are known to collide with the turbine towers rather than the blades

    So what do they do with trees?

    Running into blades I can understand. But how does a bird not see something that is standing still?

    • Speaking from experience, ptarmigans take "bird-brained" to the next level. While working in the subarctic they would frequently fly into the sides of our tents. A good startle, considering that roaming bears were also in the area. They also love to burrow into snow, and pop out in a flurry when one walks a few feet away.
  • It may be less about seeing a rotating fan than it appears as a nebulous dark moving patch of a something about to attack. Zebra stripes are suspected of providing a similar thing as flies fly by it, making them not want to stick around.

    Why the hell are these white anyway? Less heat stress daily cycle?

    • by spitzak ( 4019 )

      The construction material is near-white so white paint looks better as paint loss is less visible. I've always wondered if they should be more visible, also why they are not required to put aircraft warning beacons on the ends of the blade (or perhaps on a pole that extends up past the height of the blades).

  • And, of course, we should strive to do better. There's plenty we could do to make life easier for not-humans. Windows and other shiny surfaces do a lot of damage to insects and birds. Blades do as well. And roads? Manufacturing? I am not against progress but we could do a lot better at no greater expense by just designing things with not-humans in mind.

A committee takes root and grows, it flowers, wilts and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom. -- Parkinson

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