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1000 ft. Wind Towers To Provide Cheap Electricity

HAMBURG. Gigantic wind towers rising nearly 1000 ft. into the air with wind wheels over 500 ft in diameter may turn the landscape of the future into a AVellsian dream if Herr Hermann Honnef, a German engineer, has his way.

Herr Honnef dreams of harnessing the winds to produce cheap electric power on a large scale, thereby saving millions of tons of coal and oil a year. Well-known in Gexmiany as the architect of tall buildings—one of the most famous is the 888 ft, Berlin radio tower—Herr Honnef has proposed the construction on the banks of Lake Selenter, east of Kiel, of a large electricity works to be driven mainly by power derived from the winds.

He has submitted his plan, complete with all drawings and specifications, to the Schleswig Holstein Government. It is estimated to cost between £450,000 and £600.000. The plan is now being examined by a committee of 14 experts comprising engineers, scientists, ecpnomists and financiers.

In his efforts, Herr Honnef has a sympathetic and influential backer in Herr Karl Luedermann, the Premier of Schleswig Holstein, himself an engineer. who is anxious to find a solution for the extensive unemployment in his State due to the enormous influx of refugees from Eastern Germany. Cheap Electricity for North Cheap electricity would, it is believed, enable Schleswig Holstein to be industrialised and to absorb hundreds of thousands of workers. Under Herr Honnef’s plan, that energy would be derived from turbines driven by wind wheels erected on a number of tall steel masts, each 867 ft. high and constructed on the same principles as the Eiffel Tower, which has stood the, stresses of wind and weather for 60 years The wheels would be about 530 ft. in diameter. That this ambitious plan is not purely an engineer’s dream on the drawing board is shown by. the fact that Herr Honnef has already built eight smaller wind-driven electricity plants in various parts of Germany. To supplement the output of electricity, Herr Honnef proposes to combine his wind-driven electricity works with a hydro-electric station. The wind wheels, in addition to producing electricity themselves, would pump water continuously. Backers believe that Herr Honnef’s combined wind and water driven electricity works would be so commercially successful that repayments of the loan necessary for its construction could start after three years. Asked for his own views upon the prospects of his plan, Herr Honnef said: “My ideas will arouse many enemies, like all new projects which involve revolutionary changes; but sooner or later it will be successful throughout the world.”

More Matches Expected Some relief for the present match shortage is expected towards the end of next month with the arrival of a shipment of English matches. Monthly shipments are expected to follow. Production of matches in New Zealand continues to be held up by the shortage of labour, normal output being down by approximately one-third because of this factor.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GISH19490518.2.38

Bibliographic details

Gisborne Herald, Volume LXXVI, Issue 22949, 18 May 1949, Page 5

Word Count
493

1000ft. Wind Towers To Provide Cheap Electricity Gisborne Herald, Volume LXXVI, Issue 22949, 18 May 1949, Page 5

1000ft. Wind Towers To Provide Cheap Electricity Gisborne Herald, Volume LXXVI, Issue 22949, 18 May 1949, Page 5

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