@Remus2
That however, doesn't mean they could not stand the test of time if properly designed and maintained. Proper design, maintenance, and profitability are not mutually exclusive either.
Profitablity is mutually exclusive with grid scale wind power.
1. wind is intermittent, sometimes it doesn't blow, sometimes it blows too hard.
2. Because of the intermittency, if your customer base is used to a 24/7 reliable power grid, you need 100% backup from nuclear or fossil fuel sources. In the US the largely means coal or nuclear. But Coal and nuclear are designed for base load, the are all on or all off. A coal plant takes days to cold start, a nuclear plant takes weeks. This means to act a backup for a wind farm, they have to be kept hot and the turbines running at full speed even if no electricity is being supplied to the grid.
3. Grid scale wind is more capital intensive than even nuclear. Mostly because of land. An 1800 MW nuclear plant requires around 1,100 acres of land. A similar capacity coal plant would be around the same footprint.
Grid scale wind on the other hand requires 60 acres per MW of name plate capacity, or 108,000 acres (169 square miles) for a name plate capacity of 1800 MW. Two orders of magnitude more land than coal or nuclear for the same capacity.
Then you have to account for the Capacity Factor. CF is actual production over time / NP capacity * the same time interval. Average annual CF for US coal plants is around 50%, Nuclear is 90% (and individual well maintained and operated Nuclear plants can run at 100% CF for up to 18 months), Grid scale win CF is only 30%
4. Maintenance costs for grid scale wind will always be significantly higher than for other fuel sources, because of the land area issue + number of moving parts
For the 1800 MW nuclear plant mentioned above, that's 3-5 reactors, 3-5 steam turbines, and 3-5 generators.
On the other hand, for a single wind turbine you have the electric generator, a transmission gear box to transfer rotational power from the rotor to the generator, the rotor itself, the angle of each individual blade of the wind turbine needs to be adjustable for different wind speeds, the Nacelle that houses all the other moving parts has to be able to rotate to keep the rotor assembly facing into the wind. so significantly more moving parts (even if they are smaller). The most common size grid scale wind turbine in the US is around 2.5 MW the largest available are still under 6 MW.
To match the total capacity of the 1800 MW nuke plant, you will need 720 2.5 MW turbines or a little over 300 of the largest turbines available, spread over a minimum of just under 170 square miles.
The only ones making money on this deal absent relatively massive subsidies are the people manufacturing the turbines.
5. Without profits, PM is the first thing that will get cut (or ignored all together) to cut costs.