Health
complaints from people living around turbines shown to be psychological effect
of anti-wind lobby making people worry
guardian.co.uk,
Alison Rourke in Sydney, Friday 15 March 2013
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Windfarms do not cause illness, other than the alarm spread by opponents, an Australian study has found. Photograph: Danny Lawson/PA |
Sickness
being attributed to wind turbines is more likely to have been caused by people
getting alarmed at the health warnings circulated by activists, an Australian
study has found.
Complaints
of illness were far more prevalent in communities targeted by anti-windfarm
groups, said the report's author, Simon Chapman, professor of public health at
Sydney University. His report concludes that illnesses being blamed on
windfarms are more than likely caused by the psychological effect of
suggestions that the turbines make people sick, rather than by the turbines
themselves.
"If
windfarms were intrinsically unhealthy or dangerous in some way, we would
expect to see complaints applying to all of them, but in fact there is a large
number where there have been no complaints at all," Chapman said.
The report,
which is the first study of the history of complaints about windfarms in Australia,
found that 63% had never been subject to noise or health complaints. In the
state of Western Australia, where there are 13 windfarms, there have been no
complaints.
The study
shows that the majority of complaints (68%) have come from residents near five
windfarms that have been heavily targeted by opponent groups. The report says
more than 80% of complaints about health and noise began after 2009 when the
groups "began to add health concerns to their wider opposition".
"In
the preceding years health or noise complaints were rare despite large and
small turbined wind farms having operated for many years," it says.
According
to Chapman, when wind farms started being built in Australia about 20 years ago
some of the anti-wind lobby was driven by people who simply did not like the
look of them.
"Then
in about 2009 things started ramping up and these people discovered if you
started saying it was a health problem, a lot more people would sit up and pay
attention. It's essentially a sociological phenomenon," he said.
Giving the
illness a name like "wind turbine syndrome" and "vibro-acoustic
disease" had been a key feature in its spread, Chapman said. He accepted
that some people genuinely felt ill but "where you set up an expectation
in people that something in their environment is noxious, that can translate
into an expression of symptoms".
The
findings run against the claims of the Waubra Foundation, a national group that
opposes windfarms and says serious medical conditions have been identified in
people living, working or visiting within six miles (10km) of wind turbine
developments. The group says the onset of conditions including sleep
deprivation, hypertension, heart attacks and depression correspond directly
with the operation of the windfarms.
Chapman
said that if wind farms did genuinely make people ill there would by now be a
large body of medical evidence that would preclude putting them near inhabited
areas. Eighteen reviews of the research literature on wind turbines and health published
since 2003 had all reached the broad conclusion that there was very little
evidence they were directly harmful to health.
Chapman
cited a recent New Zealand study that exposed 60 healthy volunteers to both
real and fake low-frequency noise, similar to what is produced by wind turbines
and is sometimes known as infrasound. Half of the volunteers were shown
television documentaries about health problems associated with wind turbines
before they listened to the low-frequency noise; the other half were not. They
were then played a mixture of noises. Those who had seen the videos about the
adverse affects reported higher levels of symptoms whether exposed to the
genuine or fake audio samples.
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