FIRST DOMESTIC AND WILD CATS KILL WAY MORE BIRDS THAN ANY ENERGY SOURCE
America's cats, including housecats that adventure outdoors and feral cats, kill between 1.3 billion and 4.0 billion birds in a year, says Peter Marra of the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Washington, D.C., who led the team that performed the analysis.
The USA has about 97 million pet cats and there are several million more feral cats.
MADE UP STUFF ABOUT NUCLEAR ENERGY TO MISDIRECT FROM SPECTACLE IS SOLAR AND WIND FLAW
There are statistics online that alleging 0.269 avian deaths per GWh for wind turbines as compared to 0.416 for nuclear power plant.
The most dominant contribution to Sovacool's analysis of nuclear power impacts comes from uranium mining and milling operations which he claims "can poison and kill hundreds of birds per facility per year". In his first report, he supports this by focusing on two "uranium mining" operations "in Wyoming" where he charges that bird deaths are caused by abandoned open pits. The first is the Canon City Uranium Mine in Colorado (not Wyoming), a mine that operated from 1958 to 1979, and only intermittently since. The owners of the mine were ordered to pay a 40,000 fine when a kerosene spill killed 40 geese in 2008. The spill was a one time occurrence and the operators were required to take steps to prevent further spills. Sovacool assumes the death of 40 geese is a routine occurrence, assumes it happens annually at every operating uranium mine, then based on estimates of the peak uranium production.
CONCENTRATED SOLAR IS CLEARLY SETTING THE BIRDS ON FIRE IN MID-AIR AND WIND TURBINES CLUB BIRDS OUT OF THE AIR
Concentrated solar power has set hundreds of birds on fire.
More than 100 birds have been injured during testing of a new solar power farm. Biologists say 130 birds caught fire mid-air while entering an area of concentrated solar energy created by the 110-megawatt Crescent Dunes Solar Energy Project near Tonopah, Nevada. Experts believe the birds may have been attracted by the glow of the farm's tower, but the project's owners, SolarReserve, say they have found a way to reduce the fatalities.
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