They should. But the installations are much more expensive and more difficult to maintain.
People have constructed wind turbines to harness (not collect) the energy from wind(s). In some areas, there are wind turbine "farms" with windmills set up across hillsides and the landscape.
Mitochondria produces energy, so think of energy producers... people's jobs? windmills? river dams? power plants?
it started with the sailing ships back in Egypt, and then windmills up to Europe
A windmill produced electricity while the wind blows. It may produce energy when the wind blows and people don't need it. People don't need all the energy a windmill produces all the time but they may need energy when the wind is not blowing. Windmills are therefore linked up to battery systems and charge the batteries when the wind is blowing, energy is being produced, and nobody is using it. When people need energy and the wind is not blowing (no power is being produced) they use power from the batteries.
Windmills help people in many ways. In olden times they used it to grind wheat for bread. Now we mostly use it to harness the power of wind energy and converting that into electricity. In netherlands, they use windmills to pump water away thereby leaving land for urbanization. Even today, most of the netherlands is below sea level.
The rotating blades can kill birds, and space will have to be cleared for the windmills. It's also bad for people's health.
I believe they were used for irrigation. definitely to pump water out of the ground whether for crops or not.
you shouldnt.
We shouldnt
Mainly gas and coal, a lot of items were needed for energy so mainly anything we use for energy. Another thing was windmills.
100% of the people who have to live near them
Dutch people and windmills