| # | Name | Comments |
|---|
| 151 | Brian Jenkins | |
| 152 | Anonymous | |
| 153 | Perry Vincent | |
| 154 | Anonymous | Once again people want to desacrate our small valley which has already been through the mining era which left many scars on the valley, years ago they even wanted to dam the valley now they want to erect these things around us and once again suffocate our small community, its got to stop. How Green Was My Valley goes out of the window and War Of The Worlds comes in as I liken these things to giant triffids. |
| 155 | Julie Rees | |
| 156 | Robert Rees | |
| 157 | Joan Williams | |
| 158 | Brian Williams | |
| 159 | Chris Chapman | The idea of festooning our hill and mountainsides with these grotesque, inefficient, money laundering, and dangerous aberrations is truly frightening.
The general public must be made aware of the burden which will accrue if these planning proposals are carried through |
| 160 | Alexander Kamande | |
| 161 | Colin Munn | The best anyone can say about wind turbines is that they are a very unsatisfactory solution to a problem unproven to exist. That tthese turbines are finding so much support from our politicians shows that they are either idiots or bent as nine-bob notes! |
| 162 | Anonymous | I totally oppose the development of wind farms in our valley. I am concerned about the visual impact these monstrosities have on our beautiful countryside and the noise and related health issues associated with them.
SAY NO TO TURBINES !!!!! |
| 163 | gabriel robles | hi, i need information, to what do i need to become a swatt member |
| 164 | colin evans | |
| 165 | Jeremy Clulow | Onshore wind farms are I believe just a conveniently high-profile con-trick promoted by the Government to deflect criticism of its failure to take more effective, but unpopular and expensive decisions on carbon emissions. They contribute next to nothing to combatting global warming and ruin some of the most beautiful parts of the UK.
The next generation will view them as we now view the tower blocks of the 1960's. A well meaning disaster. |
| 166 | Pauline Day | We won't save our environment by destroying it. Windfarms benefit nobody except the developers - and the few greedy locals selling out their communities for their own financial gain. |
| 167 | Ann Kibble | I wish I had known about the demonstration to the Welsh Assembly on 29th April. |
| 168 | Takuji Soyama | |
| 169 | Martin Roberts | |
| 170 | v.z.diffey | |
| 171 | k diffey | |
| 172 | Vikki-Siân Collins | |
| 173 | Max Mason | I want to save the Wales from extintion |
| 174 | Brigitte Schorn | The wind industry is a fraud and we all must work together to expose this fact and stop wind farm development. I am doing my utmost for the past 15 months to bring the truth about wind turbines to the attention of the public in Ireland. |
| 175 | jenna | SAVE THE WALES! |
| 176 | Anonymous | I think it is about time that the people of Gilfach Goch decide what we want in our valley, we have been walked all over for years and i think it is about time that we started fighting back! Well done to everyone who protested against them and i hope that there will be ongoing petitions and campaignes against these weapons of mass destruction! |
| 177 | J T Phillips | |
| 178 | neale phillips | I support the need for alternative energy supplies, but why should one area be targeted more than most |
| 179 | Anonymous | i am living in the proposed tam 8 development as proposed by welsh assembly i am not for such a development which would be a blot on the landscape of wales |
| 180 | Glenn Phillips | |
| 181 | Gareth Simpson | With reference to the recent planning application by ECO2 to build a wind farm in the heart of Glyncorrwg village in the upper Afan valley. On ECO2’s web site they state that one of the benefits of the turbines will be the ability to use them as an educational resource for local schools.
Presumably the lessons to be learned will be fourfold :-
1) How to vivisect large numbers of rare birds.
2) How to change a once beautiful landscape into an eyesore and essential ‘scupper’ the application for Glyncorrwg to be designated an
area of outstanding natural beauty.
3) Demonstrate how to impose noise pollution on a peaceful and unsuspecting rural environment.
4) How to take some misguided legislation (TAN8), undertake a cost benefit analysis and ensure that company profits are protected, circumvent previously good planning principles and practices, and then impose the solution on the local populous without any consultation with the local community stakeholders.
We should resist the imposition of these monstrosities upon thriving, but small, communities so that an intelligent discussion can take place before we destroy the valleys again. |
| 182 | Jane Faust | |
| 183 | gail puntan | i say NO to wind turbines. The health and wellbeing of the people should be considered above all else. There are health risks to living near wind farms and they are certainly a blot on the landscape! The wind farm companys will not care about us the people. I wonder if the company directors live near a turbine or can even see one through their kitchen window! |
| 184 | Janet Dubé | thanks for western mail letter |
| 185 | Robert L English | Turbines are only built to line the pockets of the wind energy companies and the people on the carbon band wagon set up to help them with our tax. |
| 186 | Anonymous | |
| 187 | I.Prudden | Why are they spoiling our lovely land, put theses monsters round London |
| 188 | I.Prudden | Why are they spoiling our lovely land, put theses monsters round London |
| 189 | Glenn Lewis | The best news this village has had in years to turn down the planning application for the wind farm in Glyncorrwg. Everyone in WALES should be against these as the are uneconomical and if they are to be built these in WALES put them out to sea some five miles out so you will not be ables to see them with the naked eye. |
| 190 | Sandra & Bill Devos | The Waleing has to stop.
Keep up the good work. |
| 191 | Martyn Powell | We need support for our campaign in Crynant, Neath I have started a petition but need further information for our argument. |
| 192 | Angelina | |
| 193 | mrsstellamanzie | Just looking at photos of gilfach now , and what the hell are those things on the mountain, what an ugly and out of place, for a turbine to be , spoiling the lovely view of the valley.Where i might add i was born in and lived there till i was 9 years old and due to ill heath my parents moved to where i am now.They are bad enough on top of ton hill going down into blackmill . am disgusted.
stella manzie(nee SIMPSON). |
| 194 | Anonymous | Comme on everybody save the wales!!!
It's for an AWESOME cause!!!
xoxoxxoo
I LOVE YOU WALES!!! |
| 195 | ANDY SERRES | Hi.
The goverment must absolutely prevent Japanese from destroying the wales because they don't have any valid reason to act thus while making fun of the whole world.
These Japanese culpabilished on nothing on this planet, they're only destructors.
Let us prevent them from continuing and congratulations for your work.These slaughters nauseate me.
Andy. |
| 196 | Charles Turpin | I feel sick at the Welsh Assembly Government's plans for unlimited windfarm developments in Powys, and support protest action. |
| 197 | Dianne Surrey | I walk opposite the Gilfach windfarm with my dogs for peace and quiet time -- everywhere you look the windmills are smack in your vision spoiling the landscape.I pity people who have to sit in their homes and look at these spinning monstrosities day in and day out.I can never understand how this farm was given permission as so many people have been affected by this visual enviromental disaster. |
| 198 | vaughan james | the ideal site to put them is on the garden of the ministers and mp's country houses,im sure when they life their snouts up from the trough the will love the improved view plus they will have a free supply of dead birds killed by the turbines |
| 199 | Barbara Hart | stop destroying the country by putting these grotesque things everywhere |
| 200 | jk | fg |