Need a Windmill? You Could Spend Millions
Sunday, October 05, 2008 7:52 PM
Symbols: GE, SI
(Source: Commercial Appeal, The)trackingThe Associated Press invites news-related questions and answers them periodically.

Q: On a recent trip through eastern Oregon, we saw hundreds of new windmills generating electricity. Where are windmills like these manufactured? How are they shipped to their sites? And what does a windmill cost?

- Fran Gilleland, Portland

A: Denmark's Vestas Wind Systems A/S, the world's largest wind turbine maker, has its North American headquarters based right there in your home city of Portland. Vestas manufactures its blades at a plant in Windsor, Colo., and the company recently picked Pueblo, Colo., as its site to build the towers.

GE Energy, part of General Electric Co., builds turbines at a manufacturing and assembly facility in Tehachapi, Calif., and buys blades from multiple suppliers.

Spanish company Gamesa Corporacion Tecnologica SA operates a blade manufacturing plant in Fairless Hills, Pa., Germany-based Siemens AG last year opened a blade plant in Fort Madison, Iowa, and Mitsubishi Power Systems Inc. christened a new blade and vane manufacturing center this summer in Orlando, Fla.

The huge turbines and blades are typically delivered to sites by truck, which is quite a sight to see.

Although large commercial wind turbines can cost several million dollars apiece, you can buy a small wind turbine for a home or farm for $6,000 to $22,000 installed.

- Dirk Lammers, AP

Q: Whenever police make a drug bust, they always assign a dollar value to the captured stash. How do the authorities know the value of an illegal drug? Pot and cocaine don't have price stickers, do they? And don't the values fluctuate depending on scarcity?

- John Simcoe, Mount Wolf, Pa.

A: Law enforcement authorities use their own knowledge of the market to assign "street" values to drugs they seize. For one thing, they are often involved in making the purchases as part of undercover investigations. Informants also tell them how much drugs are selling for.

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration keeps regional statistics for each quarter on cocaine, heroin, marijuana and other drugs being sold in different parts of the country. In Miami, for example, prices of marijuana are between $2,500 and $4,000 per pound. The DEA takes the lower-middle road and places a "street" value of about $3,000 per pound on pot. The same concept applies to other drugs.

- Curt Anderson, AP

Q: Does the U.S. still have troops in Bosnia? If not, when were they withdrawn?

- David Yontz, Los Angeles

A: The last 150 U.S. troops left Bosnia in 2007, although a handful of Americans - mostly intelligence officers - remain at a NATO base near Sarajevo, the capital. They're focused on the search for war crimes suspects.

The U.S. had about 15,000 soldiers deployed among the 60,000- strong NATO-led peacekeeping force as of 1995, when a peace agreement ended the Bosnian war. The number of troops in Bosnia gradually declined until 2004, when a European force took over from NATO.

- Dusan Stojanovic, AP

Have questions? Send them to newsquestions@ap.org.

Originally published by Associated Press .

(c) 2008 Commercial Appeal, The. Provided by ProQuest LLC. All rights Reserved.


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