‘Everything has beauty, but not everyone sees it.’ – Confucius
Confucius was a man of great wisdom. And when it comes to wind farms, the Chinese philosopher’s thoughts on the nature of beauty are particularly relevant.
On one hand, supporters of renewable energy see modern wind mills as gentle giants that complement the landscape; Kinetic sculptures whose graceful movements produce clean, renewable energy for the community. On the other hand, there are some people who see them as a blight on the landscape. Not everyone sees the beauty in wind mills.
On person who does view wind turbines as beautiful is Dame Helen Ghosh, the new head of the UK’s National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty. Dame Ghosh told The Telegraph recently that wind farms are ‘rather beautiful’ and will one day be appreciated in the way as historic railways are today.
Here’s the whole story from The Telegraph:
National Trust director-general: Wind turbines are ‘beautiful’
The new head of the National Trust has described wind turbines as ‘beautiful’ and argued that in centuries to come they will be admired in the way railways are now.
Dame Helen Ghosh, 57, who succeeded Dame Fiona Reynolds as director-general of the National Trust in November, said: “Personally, I think a wind turbine in the right place is a rather beautiful thing. I think they can look graceful, and this goes back to thinking in centuries.
“If you think back to what the railways looked like to the 19th century mind, or indeed the 18th century when the canals were coming through, I think we have to have our minds open to how the wind turbine will appear to us in 100 years.”
The former permanent secretary at the Home Office made the comments in an interview with The Sunday Times in which she also said that the organisation will examine proposed turbines on a case-by-case basis, only objecting when they impact upon the historic landscape.
She said: “The National Trust, as an organisation, takes the view that in the right place – and because of the importance of renewable energy – we don’t object to them.
She added: “Wind turbines in the right place are fine. We object to wind turbines where they are a blot on our historic landscape.”
Dame Ghosh acknowledged that her views did not tally with those of the National Trust’s chairman Sir Simon Jenkins – an outspoken critic of wind turbines.
She said: “Simon has a fundamental, personal, aesthetic objection to wind turbines.”
Dame Ghosh, who read history at Oxford, joined the civil service in 1979 as an administration trainee in the Department of the Environment.
She was appointed permanent secretary at the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs in 2005, where she helped forge pro-wind policy until her appointment as permanent secretary at the Home Office in January 2011.
As director-general of the National Trust, Dame Ghosh oversees a staff of 5,000 and a volunteer staff of 65,000.
Around 19 million visits were made to National Trust lands and properties last year.