What to do with old windmill blades. Is this photoshopped?
(media.greatawakening.win)
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They can be recycled, but it's much more expensive to recycle them than it is to simply cover them with dirt.....
And there's no businesses at this time, that are correctly and properly equipped to do the Recycling in a Safe manner, that doesn't directly place their Workers at risk of Lung Cancers and other such deadly illnesses, on top of the dangers of getting crushed by Large pieces, and the Metal Bases....
I wonder if they could be stuck in the sea floor to create a substrate for coral reefs.
They tried that with a bunch of tires off the coast of Ft. Lauderdale in the 70's.
It was a huge fail and I don't think anyone is ready to take on an experiment like this again.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osborne_Reef
too buoyant I'm guessing. fiberglass tends to float...
The density of fiberglass is about 2.6 gm/cc. The density of water is 1.0 gm/cc. Fiberglass does not float; it sinks.
most yachts and small boats are built of fibreglass.
I dunno then, maybe...
at the very least, it's worth a shot.
...and maybe it'd protect some old bits of history from being scuttled for reefs...(I can dream, can't i?)
Yes they can be.....
But basically, all they are is Huge Fiberglass tubes.....