OK WM I will accede to your wish to use the term "windmill" to define 21st century wind power technology. So long as you don't mind my mentioning that modern wind turbines have sod all to do with the visual image of the medieval windmill and produce levels of power usually seen in on land power stations.
I know you are not a climate change denier. But those who are use the words of the community for their own ends. Windmill is used to set an expectation that these turbines generate a few teaspoons of energy and are offline most of the time, making them useless.
In fact the 50GW of UK wind turbines we will have by 2030 will produce more energy than our entire current and proposed Nuclear generation (46% net energy gives 23GW real power). So I'm a little bit sensitive about it. Messaging is a big problem and the denial group latched onto that very early and also onto the integrity of the scientists in the field. So they would ask loaded questions like "Was this storm as a result of Global Warming" to which the scientist would immediately say that you can't allocate any single weather event to Global Warming. Which ordinary people translates as a NO it was not driven by Global Warming. There was a lot of education going on about 2 decades ago and the science community were told how to respond. "If I turn that question around and ask if this storm would have occurred without Global Warming, the answer is almost certainly not". Which the ordinary person translates as Yes it was driven by Global Warming.
Hence my nitpicking.
Interesting news on the wind turbine front. The CFD (contracts for difference), on the latest 7GW of wind farms is down to £37.5 per MW/h. Which means if it drops below £37.5, the government pays the wind farm company but if it goes over £37.5 the wind farm company pays the Government. Hinckley Point C, 3.2GW, has a CFD of over £90 per MW/h. Expect a large amount of whinging about the cost of Nuclear. BTW I'm still in support of it.
Finally the National Grid released a report, yesterday, on how they are going to factor in the new wind farms (100gw by 2050 but this one is only for the 50GW by 2030), by building offshore connection hubs and making wind farms connect to them instead of building their own custom offshore/onshore connector. £54bn. The sad point is when they tell us how this will save us money. £5.5bn. Good eh?
(£2.18 per year for every British energy consumer) <sigh>