this post was submitted on 06 Jul 2026
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Just out of curiosity, did you try to explain to him that it's the wind moving the turbine?
Some of the wind is converted into electricity, so the wind is reduced. Might not be a lot, but it could have some kind of an impact.
As far as I can tell from what I've been able to look up, that's not quite how it works. The wind itself isn't converted into electricity. The turbine extracts kinetic energy from the moving air and converts a portion of that energy into electrical energy. As a result, the air leaving the turbine is moving more slowly than the air entering it.
That reduction in wind speed is real, but it's localized. Atmospheric mixing continually replenishes the slower-moving air with faster-moving air from above and the surrounding area, so the effect largely dissipates as you move away from the wind farm. The amount of energy extracted is so small that it doesn't have any meaningful effect beyond the immediate vicinity of the wind farm.
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I don't know. It's alarming how many people don't even have a rudimentary understanding of basic scientific principles. We were taught the laws of thermodynamics in elementary school here in the states in the early '90s for me.