Town Reinvents Self With Wind Power
CBS Evening News: After Losing Maytag's Factories, One Town Found A Big Energy Windfall
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Town Turns To Wind Energy
According to the Department of Energy, wind power could increase its share of electricity production ten fold by 2030. Dean Reynolds reports on a town that's already capitalizing on the market.
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The town of Newton, Iowa, used to be known for manufacturing Maytag appliances. But now the winds of change are blowing in, and it is making a new mark by manufacturing windmills. (CBS)
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"I think we hit the lottery," Allen said.
The source of his excitement is the brand new factory on the outskirts of town. And they have people lining up to work there.
"Yeah. We currently have several thousand applications for the few hundred remaining jobs we have open," said the plant's general manager, Crugar Tuttle.
It's an amazing turnaround for Newton - closely identified for a century with Maytag and its array of appliance. At its peak, Maytag employed one out of every five residents. But a year ago, the Maytag plant closed, and 1,800 jobs were lost. Failure was in the air.
"We worked so hard to keep that company alive, you know. And it seemed like you worked harder and harder as time continued yet you could just see it was closing down," said 18-year Maytag verteran Rick Miller.
Today, Miller works for TPI, the new company in town, making blades for new high-tech windmills.
"When I left Maytag, I didn't think that I would probably every get back into the manufacturing area again," he said.
The current economic downturn may have dented enthusiasm for alternative energy resources, but not in Newton.
Not only is a new plant operating, but the once-dormant Maytag factory itself has come back to life, too. A second company has brought more jobs to town, making the foundations for those windmills from TPI.
"It makes you feel like your just doing the right thing for your country, the right thing for this community, the right thing for, you know, yourself and the business," said Wayne Monie of TPI.
And Mayor Allen said, "The idea of having these jobs here in Newton builds everybody's confidence that we're going to get out of this."
And it's unlikely any of these jobs will be outsourced one day, because shipping one of the huge, 130-food-long blades from a foreign manufacturer all the way to the United States would simply be too expensive.
So they'll be built here, in America, by Americans.
In Newton these days, change is in the wind.
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Before CBS puts a story on their news broadcast they should perhaps RESEARCH a bit. I don''t, know I think research is a part of news?????? Perhaps I am wrong. Lets actually look at all sides and be critical thinkers.
FOR GREEN ENERGY AND AGAINST WINDMILLS!!!!!!!!!
Further Windmills are a supplemental power source. There will be times when one area will generate less energy due to lower windspeeds but that is the very reason we need multiple sources and multiple wind power locations.
Clearly you are one on the rabid anti groups that have sprung up with their half-bakes bird kill and noise tales designed to scare the public.
Please stop embarrassing yourself and go away.
ridgelines overlooking the windy Columbia Gorge between Washington & Oregon, and powering windy
Eastern Washington towns like Ellensburg.
GSCOTTH, first of all, if my post is scaring the public, then we have a very fragile public that needs to be scared. Obviously you live no where near the windmills or the noise. You obviously have not seen hillsides cut into and destroyed, you must not live on roads that are now over run with numerous trucks and semi-trucks, you must have never seen power stations that take up 2-3 acres per one station that glow all night long. You must not now that it takes more energy to switch between the energy we use now and the windmill energy. You must not understand that the windmills which use energy already produced will stop working when the power goes out on the grid they are hooked into because they dont produce enough to keep themselves going. You also must not have researched any of the countries that are now having problems with the wind towers, you must not know that some of the countries shut the wind towers off completly to save on energy. You must not realize that by using a canvas tote at the market everytime you go saves more energy then the windmills. Perhaps you should take a drive and take a real look at the destruction these windmills cause. Each wind mill needs 2 acres of land, they are taller then the Statue of Liberty and the blades when turning sound the same as jet engines. Perhaps you should check into this a little bit more before I scare you off.
Posted by windissuck at 12:41 PM : Nov 22, 2008
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No one said that energy generation would not take space and bring change. However, oil rigs, oil refineries, oil tankers, oil spills, coal mining, coal transport, coal burning, dams, hydroelectric stations, solar panels, all take up space and have some good and bad points.
Windmills turn wind energy into electrical energy and the land surrounding them is farmed. Windmills take advantage of wind energy in states that have that resource. It''s part of the energy equation, not the only solution.
Look at the Europeans, they are dropping ''wind power'' for nuclear and geo-thermol because it costs too much to the consumer.
Let`s get GREEN! Whether it be solar, nuclear, or wind power, anything is better than buying muslim oil. We need to decrease our oil dependency, to the point where we can tell the muslims, "ten bucks a barrel, take it or leave it".
When we no longer buy oil from them, terrorism will die out. Muslims will focus much more on killing other muslims, which will keep our Great Country safe.
muslims place no value on women, they are treated as property, worth abort 30 bucks. I detest this, all sexes are equal
The neo cons can''t stand it when something goes against their plan or if they can''t control it they will try to destory it.
Look at the Europeans, they are dropping ''''wind power'''' for nuclear and geo-thermol because it costs too much to the consumer.
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Posted by whitemale08
Wow, an energy expert who cannot even spell "geothermal" correctly?
Your "well informed views", as typical, are wrong. Wind energy costs about $45-50/MWhr, which is competitive with existing fossil fuel powerplant generation costs ($28-$55/Mwhr).
Those are facts, freely available to anyone who cares to do 20 minutes of research.
If wind power wasn''t economical, then private companies wouldn''t invest, period. They do not get tax breaks for installing wind plants; they only get tax relief for wind energy GENERATION. So if the plant doesn''t provide power, then there is no tax break. It''s very simple, if you care to learn anyting that is...
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by clathrate
November 23, 2008 6:38 PM PST
- Windissuck...
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Reply to this comment
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See all 15 CommentsWow, what a name. It lends you a LOT of credibility.
Let''s look at your argument...wind power is noisy. Well, not really. Modern turbines produce about 70 dB of low frequency noise at close range (about on par with a ski lift). About a mile away you can''t hear it. Furthermore, almost all wind turbines are NOT located in populous areas, so it''s a moot point anyway.
As far as energy storage goes...I think you''re revealing your total lack of technical knowledge here. NONE of the existing sources of power generation are coupled with much in the way of temporary energy storage. There are spinning reserves, but that''s not storage but rather a result of running at less than "full throttle": it''s an indication of short term "throttling" capacity.
None of your arguments are based on factual evidence or reality. I''m an engineer with 7 years of experience in the energy industry. You are basically pulling stuff out of your @ss.