Wind Turbines Are Quieter Than A Heartbeat, Acoustical Experts Find

Sign up for daily news updates from CleanTechnica on email. Or follow us on Google News!

Originally published on Climate Progress
by Ryan Koronowski

shutterstock_121569388-300x200
Credit: Shutterstock
One complaint voiced by wind turbine opponents is that the turbines create too much noise — even noise below the range of human hearing, known as infrasound. These concerns fuel claims about “Wind Turbine Syndrome,” which advocates say is a medical condition that involves mental health problems, heart disease, and vertigo.

A study by an acoustic engineering group in Australia found that that infrasound generated by wind turbines is less loud than the infrasound created by a listener’s own heartbeat. It found that wind turbine infrasound does increase as wind speed increases, but this is often masked by the natural noise of wind moving through the area.

The Association of Australian Acoustical Consultants said that “those investigations conclude that infrasound levels adjacent to wind farms are below the threshold of perception and below currently accepted limits set for infrasound.”

Those limits are levels of infrasound that people encounter already, created by natural sources like breathing, wind, and waves, as well as mechanical sources like aircraft, traffic, and fossil fuel industry. The study noted that wind turbine noise is all relative:

Our environment has lots of infrasound already in it, the levels generated by wind farms from our point of view are quite low in comparison and they’re no higher than what is already out there in the natural environment. … People themselves generate infrasound through things like their own heartbeat, through breathing and these levels of infrasound can be substantially higher than an external noise source.

Wind turbines outside of Atlantic City, NJ. (Photo: Donna Connor/AP)
Wind turbines outside of Atlantic City, NJ. (Photo: Donna Connor/AP)

It’s one thing to have conflicts about the placement of new infrastructure near homes, which can be mitigated by proper communication between residents and developers. But that is different than faux medical ailments involving infrasound.

study by the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection found that there was no evidence for “Wind Turbine Syndrome.” It also found no concrete evidence for the “flicker” of the shadows of rotating wind blades causing seizures or other symptoms.

So what is going on here?

Chip in a few dollars a month to help support independent cleantech coverage that helps to accelerate the cleantech revolution!

An experimental study in the journal Health Psychology found that people would report the experience of wind turbine syndrome caused by infrasound if they merely had the suggestion. Participants either experienced real infrasound or a fake alternative, and what determined if they experienced symptoms wasn’t the type of sound — it was whether they were told beforehand about the supposed dangers of infrasound.

The well-known placebo has a lesser-known opposite called a “nocebo.” This is the expectancy of the harm of something that most people have likely never heard of before experiencing it. The study by the acoustical experts removed another plank from “communicated disease.”

Right after President Obama was re-elected, Stephen Colbert spoke about the dangers of Wind Turbine Syndrome and concluded that “we should all just keep burning fossil fuels. That way the problem won’t be all in your head, it’ll be spread evenly throughout your lungs.”


Have a tip for CleanTechnica? Want to advertise? Want to suggest a guest for our CleanTech Talk podcast? Contact us here.

Latest CleanTechnica TV Video


Advertisement
 
CleanTechnica uses affiliate links. See our policy here.

Guest Contributor

We publish a number of guest posts from experts in a large variety of fields. This is our contributor account for those special people, organizations, agencies, and companies.

Guest Contributor has 4378 posts and counting. See all posts by Guest Contributor