Source: http://artamanen.tumblr.com/post/102725968849/wind-of-change-green-energy-in-the-third-reich
„Der Nationalsozialismus steht
vor der Aufgabe, seine umwälzende und neuformende Kraft auch auf dem Gebiet der
Energieversorgung in den deutschen Ländern zu beweisen. Er wird diese Aufgabe
mit derselben Entschlossenheit anpacken und lösen, mit der er alle die anderen
Probleme gelöst hat.“
„The National-Socialism faces
the challenge to prove his revolutionary and reformatory power in the field of
energy supply, throughout the German lands, too. He will deal with this
challenge as decisive as with any other problem in the past.” — Walther Schieber, „Energiequelle Windkraft“, 1941.
After the meltdown at the
Soviet-era, nuclear power plant in Chernobyl, in 1986, and the subsequent
radioactive fallout that affected large parts of Europe and beyond, many people
around the world started to feel concerned with the means used to generate
energy. While ideas for using alternative sources of energy – water, sunlight,
and the wind – circulated among the “Green Movement” for decades,
the powers-that-be in politics and industry kept relying on fossil fuel – oil,
gas, and coal – or nuclear power to satisfy the ever increasing energy demand
of our thoroughly industrialized, urban societies. Only after the World started
to witness gruelling wars fought over resources like oil and gas, and the
devastating effects of contaminating the air by burning fossil fuel, the
alternative sources of energy were taken into consideration in earnest. When a
massive earthquake hit Fukushima in Japan, in 2011, and destroyed the nuclear
power plant in this city, the German government decided to abandon nuclear
energy altogether, and to use wind turbines - among others - as compensation.
If you are driving on a German Autobahn nowadays, you can hardly miss the many
wind farms scattered all around Germany in an attempt to generate “clean
energy” and also to become more independent from oil and gas imports,
considering that the global resources of fossil fuel are anything but infinite.
However, what you might be
unaware of is that the idea to build wind farms in Germany is not a novelty,
at all. As a matter of fact, this idea originated in the Third Reich and
was put forth, among others, by WALTHER SCHIEBER in his
manifesto “Energiequelle Windkraft”, in 1941. Schieber was a German
chemist who occupied various posts during the Third Reich; for example, he
served as deputy of Albert Speer, in his position as Minister of Armaments,
responsible for the wartime production of the German industry. Schieber was,
like many other influential Germans of that time, a far-sighted man who
realized that the German Reich remained vulnerable to its many enemies for as
long as it had to rely on – and import – oil and coal to generate energy,
instead of looking for ways that would use the replenishable resources
available to Germany at home: water, sunlight, and – wind.
He wrote: “Inzwischen hat der Krieg die
enorme Bedeutung von Kohle und Öl mit der ihm eigenen Deutlichkeit in fast
jedes Hirn gehämmert. (…) Nicht selten mußte sich die Strategie des Krieges
nach den Möglichkeiten einer Mobilisierung von Kohle und Öl richten. Schon
daraus geht hervor, daß der in die Zukunft denkende Wirtschaftler und Politiker
nach Kraftquellen Ausschau halten muß, die weniger für die Bedürfnisse des
Krieges als für die Erfüllung friedlicher Zwecke nutzbar zu machen sind.“ (Translation: “Meanwhile, the
War has hammered the huge importance of coal and oil into almost every mind
quite drastically. It wasn’t exceptional that the strategy of war had to be
designed according to the availability of coal and oil. That in itself
demonstrates the need for every economist and politician, who is concerned with
the future, to look out for alternative sources of energy that can not only be
used in war but for the productivity in times of peace, as well.”)
Additionally, Schieber voiced
a sentiment that would echo in our society only many decades later: The concern
for the many grave, ecological issues caused by the rapid use of fossil
fuel. National-Socialism was an ideology, and a movement, profoundly
caring for the Ecology. In that sense, the Third Reich was the
first “Green Nation”, ever. Schieber wrote: “Wahrscheinlich werden sich die Menschen späterer
Epochen über (die) Verschwendung von Bodenschätzen genau so entsetzen, wie wir
uns ein Kopfschütteln über jene Zeiten leisten, in denen verantwortungslose
Geschäftemacher die Wälder ganzer Gebirgszüge und Ländereien abholzen ließen,
ohne jemals danach zu fragen, ob spätere Geschlechter die furchtbaren Folgen
dieser Maßnahmen zu tragen hätten.” (Translation: “Most likely, people of later
times will be as aghast at the waste of fossil fuel as we shake our heads in
disgust over times of yore, when irresponsible merchants had cut down entire
forests of the mountains and countryside without ever wondering if later
generations must bear the horrible consequences of their decisions.”) For
Schieber, it was imperative that Germany would actively seek and find new ways
for generating energy that do not have any adverse effect on Ecology.
In Germany and elsewhere,
water was already used to propel power generators at a grand scale. However,
you only have so many rivers that can be used to that end. Thus
Schieber advocated the use of wind energy, because conditions for building
wind farms could be found anywhere. In a first step, he envisioned the building
of wind turbines on remote farms and outposts in Germany that were not yet
connected to the national energy grid. In 1941, the German Army was still
advancing towards the East, conquering vast stretches of fertile soil intended
to provide living space for German settlers and farmers in future. Schieber
realized the urgent need for such future colonies to be independent from a most
likely hostile environment, and thus he proposed to make future German
settlements in the East thriving on wind energy by design. Furthermore, in the
long run he hoped to make the entire German Reich independent from fossil fuel
by a joint venture of wind — as well as water energy. “Vielleicht ist es späterhin
möglich, unsere gesamte Energieversorgung nur auf die sich stetig erneuernden
Energiequellen Wasser und Wind aufzubauen, wobei in den Talsperren unserer
Wasserkraftwerke willkommene Speicher vorhanden sein würden, um die
Minderleistung der Windkraftwerke bei schwachen Winden auszugleichen. Es würde
dann ein Energieaustausch der ausbauwürdigen Wasserkräfte Großdeutschlands mit
den Windkraftwerken des windgünstigeren Norddeutschlands über die vorhandenen
Hochspannungsleitungen in Frage kommen.“ (Translation: “Perhaps at a later stage it will be possible to switch our
entire energy supply to the ever replenishing energy sources water and wind.
The river dams of our hydroelectric plants would make an excellent storage
facility to compensate the lesser output of our wind farms in calm times. There
would be an exchange of electric energy between our improvable hydroelectric
plants in Greater Germany and the wind farms in the favourable conditions of
North Germany, by the means of our high-voltage power lines.”)
Walther Schieber was not an
eccentric indulging in a pipe dream, in his book, he presented many
calculations to build cost-effective wind farms, and he discussed the various
designs for wind turbines and which one would serve the desired purpose at
best. Powerful and influential circles in the Third Reich were interested in
ways to make Germany an independent, strong and resilient nation that could
rely on her own powers and resources, and become truly autarkic, at last. Moreover,
the Ecology was a prime concern of National-Socialism and Adolf Hitler
himself contemplated on how to make an entire nation – if not, mankind at all!
– live in accord with the fragile Ecosystem on Earth. It is thus safe
to say, that, if the war would have taken a different course with a different
outcome, the proposed plans of Walther Schieber could very well have been
adopted by the German leadership and put to use accordingly.
Instead of having the Soviets
build the nuclear power plant in Chernobyl, in the Ukraine, which blew up
almost 30 years ago as a grim reminder on man’s hubris when he intends to use
the solar fire of the Gods, Ukraine and East Europe could have been littered
with wind farms 70 years ago: Generating green and clean energy that won’t ever
run dry, that neither harms Man, nor contaminates Nature. Germany, under the
guidance of National-Socialism, could have saved and changed the World and make
it a better place for future generations. As we know, alas, Germany was
vanquished and National-Socialism remains vilified up until today. And we
continue to shed blood over resources that soon will be gone for good; and we
continue to live in an environment tainted and polluted by our insatiable
hunger for energy; and we still look up to the sky fearfully whenever a nuclear
power plant fails and radioactive fallout contaminates the air.
National-Socialism was – and
remains to be – the most traditional yet modern ideology, ever conceived by
man. It is an ideology that has the final solution to the existential question
of man, seventy years ago, just as well as today. Because the question remains
the same, and so does the answer. And it is still not too late to acknowledge
who the ones were coming up with the solution in the first place. Not some
think-tank of the United Nations, in the 21st century, or elsewhere; it was
Germans like Walther Schieber, who believed in the positive power of National-Socialism.
We can’t be wrong if we do the same.
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