Showing posts with label danager to humans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label danager to humans. Show all posts

Monday, January 9, 2012

Wind turbine blades fly off in storm

The blades, measuring almost 7ft, were blown across a busy road and could have hurt wildlife or caused damage to property as well as endangering life.
The huge turbine blades flew off three structures including one on the aptly-named Windmill Lane in Huddersfield, West Yorks.
The firm who made the damaged turbines in the Hepworth and Upper Cumberworth areas of the town has promised a full investigation.
Concerned villagers in Hepworth warned: "Someone could have been killed," after one of the blades was flung across a road.
Ryan Gill, of manufacturers Evoco, blamed the exceptionally strong winds for the damage.
The Evoco website claims the 10kw turbine has been "specifically designed to reliably deliver high generation performance in harsh wind conditions".
The windmill in Hepworth was ripped apart in the gale force winds. The blades on the 50ft mast are over 6ft long and one flew across a road.
Frances Barnes, who has 10 acres of grazing land for horses close to the Hepworth turbine, said: "It is worrying.
"People objected to the plans when they first went in - not because it is a windmill but because it is so close to a busy road.
"It is frightening to think what may have happened had one of the blades flown into the road and hit a car, or indeed if the wind turbine had come down."
The smaller turbines are increasingly popular as the Government is offering households and communities subsidies to build the structures.
Both large and small turbines have caused problems recently in high winds.
A 330ft £2m turbine burst into flame in Ayrshire last month in storms although it was not even spinning and thought to be an electrical fault.
Another structure the same size came crashing down in Coldingham in the Scottish borders during the December storms.
However Fraser McLachlan, the chief executive of GCube, a wind turbine insurer, said no one has been injured by a turbine in the last decade, when most of the wind farms were built.
“It does happen but by the very nature of where wind farms are - they are usually in very sparsely populated spots and therefore the risk of damage to property or to people risk is very very low,” he said.
Renewable UK, the trade association for the wind industry, said incidents of turbines causing damage are very, very rare around the world.

Monday, January 3, 2011

Lethal bird flu confirmed in S.Korea wild duck

SEOUL — One of five wild ducks found dead in South Korea this week was confirmed Saturday to have been infected with a lethal strain of the bird flu virus as the country battles its first outbreak in over two years.


Tests showed one of the five dead birds found in Sacheon City on December 26 had been stricken with the H5N1 virus, the agriculture ministry said in a statement.

The same strain -- which poses a risk to humans -- has also been detected in wild birds and their faeces at four other locations across the country since December 7, it said.

South Korea on Friday confirmed the outbreak of bird flu and more than 100,000 birds have been slaughtered as authorities seek to contain its spread.

Two poultry farms, one in the central city of Cheonan and the other in the southwestern city of Iksan, were confirmed to have been contaminated, the ministry said.

Health authorities placed a quarantine zone over a 10 kilometre (6.25 mile) radius, restricting movements of vehicles and people and carrying out emergency disinfection.

They have also stepped up inspections of wild birds and urged poultry businesses to take extra precautions such as erecting nets around their farms to keep wild birds out.

The avian influenza outbreak is likely to further strain the country's health system, which has already been struggling to contain swine flu and foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) cases across the country.

South Korea has been hit by bird flu three times, with the last outbreak in April 2008.

In 2008, South Korea had to cull more than eight million birds to curb the virus, resulting in damages estimated at 200 billion won (194 million dollars at the time).

Four people were confirmed to have been infected with the bird flu virus in late 2003 in South Korea but they showed few symptoms, health authorities said.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5j6RZqSGB3laVpjiY3BD9kWTH4oHA?docId=CNG.2ed0801c7a83ed76b6d4fc3f23c9c7a5.831

Lethal bird flu confirmed in S.Korea wild duck

SEOUL — One of five wild ducks found dead in South Korea this week was confirmed Saturday to have been infected with a lethal strain of the bird flu virus as the country battles its first outbreak in over two years.


Tests showed one of the five dead birds found in Sacheon City on December 26 had been stricken with the H5N1 virus, the agriculture ministry said in a statement.

The same strain -- which poses a risk to humans -- has also been detected in wild birds and their faeces at four other locations across the country since December 7, it said.

South Korea on Friday confirmed the outbreak of bird flu and more than 100,000 birds have been slaughtered as authorities seek to contain its spread.

Two poultry farms, one in the central city of Cheonan and the other in the southwestern city of Iksan, were confirmed to have been contaminated, the ministry said.

Health authorities placed a quarantine zone over a 10 kilometre (6.25 mile) radius, restricting movements of vehicles and people and carrying out emergency disinfection.

They have also stepped up inspections of wild birds and urged poultry businesses to take extra precautions such as erecting nets around their farms to keep wild birds out.

The avian influenza outbreak is likely to further strain the country's health system, which has already been struggling to contain swine flu and foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) cases across the country.

South Korea has been hit by bird flu three times, with the last outbreak in April 2008.

In 2008, South Korea had to cull more than eight million birds to curb the virus, resulting in damages estimated at 200 billion won (194 million dollars at the time).

Four people were confirmed to have been infected with the bird flu virus in late 2003 in South Korea but they showed few symptoms, health authorities said.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5j6RZqSGB3laVpjiY3BD9kWTH4oHA?docId=CNG.2ed0801c7a83ed76b6d4fc3f23c9c7a5.831