Letters. Wind power - Environmental Science & Technology (ACS

Apr 1, 1974 - Wind power. Stephen Tarver. Environ. Sci. Technol. , 1974, 8 (4), pp 294–294. DOI: 10.1021/es60089a605. Publication Date: April 1974...
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Environmental Science & Technology

The BElR projections are perhaps the most reliable that can be made with present knowledge. However, risk estimates derivable from them should be viewed within contexts of the other risks generally accepted as part of living in a technological society. When this is done, those from man-made environmental radioactivity at current or anticipated levels seem vanishingly small. I t is well established that the principal effect of radiation is the production of leukemia and other forms of cancer. However, it is also obvious that many agents other than radiation must b e included in the current U.S. rate of some 325,000 cases per year. Contrary to the inpression created by the lead sentence in the article, the harmful effects of radiation on the population have been considered in far greater depth than those of any other potentially carcinogenic agent, natural or man-made, and generally abroad in the environment in small concentrations. Andrew P. Hull, Environmental Monitoring Brookhaven National Laboratory Associated Universities, Inc. Upton, L.I., N.Y. 11973 Wind power

Dear Sir: In our search for new sources of energy to meet our present shortage, it seems to m e that we are overlooking one of the most promising possibilities. It is clean, abundant, and inexhaustible. I ' m referring to wind power. Using the wind as a source of power is by no means a crackpot idea as most people obviously think it is, judging from the apparent lack of interest in trying to develop it. Until about 30 years ago, wind power was used on a majority of farms and ranches to pump water and generate electricity for those who had electricity. If it had not been for the money loaned, practically interest-free, by the Federal Government through the Rural Electrification Administration to build electric transmission lines; wind power would probably still be an important source of energy on the American farm and ranch. There are still mahy,windmills in use where electricity is not available and some even where it is. The windmill has always been, and still is, generally considered to be superior to the gasoline motor for pumping water for livestock. The people of Denmark, who have not been blessed with so much oil as the U.S., have been experimenting with wind power. They have built a wind-powered generator which has been successfully operating since 1957, producing electricity at the rate of some 200 k W or nearly 300 hP. A search for information on efforts made to develop the use of wind

power in this country will show that there has been almost none for the past 30 years, until recently. Recently Fairchild Industries has funded a project at Princeton to develop a more efficient windwheel to use on wind-powered generators. Also, a number of utility companies have recently contracted $132,000 with the Oregon State University to try to find a way to use the strong coastal winds to produce electricity. For many years Congress has given the oil industry a large tax incentive in the form of the so-called depletion allowance to encourage that industry to find oil reserves. Why not offer a similar tax incentive in the form of a production tax credit to manufacturers who produce and sell wind-powered equipment? (This is actually what the oil depletion allowance is.) This would be a strong incentive for industry to find new and practical ways to utilize wind power which is pollution-free, abundant, and inexhaustible. Stephen C. Tarver Gillette, Wyo. Disposing the undisposables

Dear Sir: I was much interested in the article (ES&T, Jan. 1974, p 18) which includes a description of Hoechst technology to convert chlorinated waste into carbon tetrachloride. There are a few minor corrections which I would draw to your attention concerning our affiliation and the name of the Hoechst process. The Hoechst-Uhde Corporation is the U.S. affiliate of Friedrich Uhde GmbH, a major international engineering and construction company whose headquarters are located in Dortmund, Germany. Our connection with Farbwerke Hoechst AG results from their 77.5% ownership of Friedrich Uhde GmbH. I can appreciate the difficulties in identifying the various processes that you have covered in your article, especially when it requires a title and generic references in the text of the article. I n any case, you should know that the technology which Farbwerke Hoechst AG developed is "chlorolysis" and this process has been publicized through a paper presented by our Dr. Weber at the ACS meetings in New York. The main purpose of my letter, however, is to alert you to other technologies which our company offers, which are of special interest in the environmental field. One example is our HCI electrolys,is technology which converts waste HCI into chlorine and hydrogen for commercial use. As you c a n imagine, this technology is receiving considerable attention due to environmental requirements which prohibit waste HCI disposal via deep well, ocean dumping, or into other bodies of water. Furthermore, the process is able to pro-