In terms of wildlife, wind projects are understood to have greater potential for risk than solar or energy storage projects, which are relatively low to the ground and don’t have moving parts. Fortunately, many of the issues seen with the first U.S. wind farms built some 40 years ago have been addressed and resolved.
In the same way that computers, cars, and many other aspects of modern life have advanced significantly over the past 40 years, so has wind energy technology. Today’s wind turbines have about as much in common with early-80s “eggbeater” turbines as iPhones have with kitchen wall phones.
The science around interactions between wind and wildlife has also advanced significantly since the early days. While there is still much more to know, communities and wildlife lovers can rest assured that projects developed in North America have undergone thorough environmental assessments as required under federal and state law.
These assessments guide project developers and the agencies that regulate them through a "mitigation hierarchy" designed to minimize the impact of a wind farm on the local environment. Under the hierarchy, the first goal is to avoid any potential adverse impacts; impacts that cannot be avoided should be minimized; and any impacts that cannot be avoided should be offset or mitigated. Sometimes developers voluntarily undertake mitigation actions, but in cases where mitigation is required, plans must be approved by the regulatory agencies involved.
“Mitigation” means reducing the adverse impact of something. If an environmental assessment of a planned wind farm shows that it might affect habitat for a sensitive species of wildlife, the project developer might seek approval from a regulatory agency to mitigate that impact by restoring a similar or greater area of degraded habitat for that species elsewhere to offset any potential impact from the wind farm.
A majority of wildlife scientists and conservationists say that climate change is a much bigger threat to wildlife and wildlife habitat than wind energy, and that renewable energy sources are essential in fighting the climate crisis.
At the same time, all forms of energy production affect wildlife, and wind is no exception. Here are four important things to know about the ways in which wildlife interacts with wind:
As noted above, most conservation organizations and wildlife specialists agree that renewable energy is one of the most powerful tools we have to protect sensitive species and their habitats by fighting against climate change. That said, the rapid expansion of renewable energy infrastructure needed to deliver a sustainable future and protect our planet must occur in ways that conserve wildlife and habitat.
Across the country, diverse stakeholders including wind and solar project developers, wildlife agencies, scientists, and conservationists, are working together to ensure that renewable energy project development is guided by a commitment to long-term sustainability so that renewable energy and wildlife can both thrive.
If there’s one thing to know about wind and wildlife, it’s this: the American Audubon Society considers climate change to be the single greatest threats to birds in North America (and around the world) – and that’s why they endorse responsibly sited clean energy projects as an effective tool for slowing climate change.
[1] A comprehensive 2020 study found that just three species of migratory tree bat accounted for 72% of all bat fatalities due to collisions with wind turbines.