Movie of the Week: April 28, 2025: Dollars & Destruction: How Renewables Harm Our Farms & Cost the Earth

Claire Viadro
April 26, 2025

Movie of the Week

Dollars & Destruction

How Renewables Harm Our Farms & Cost the Earth

April 26, 2025

“I don’t think a lot of it really comes down to the environment at all; in fact, I don’t think any of it does.”

~ Rural Australian interviewed in Dollars & Destruction

Movie of the Week

Dollars & Destruction

How Renewables Harm Our Farms & Cost the Earth

Dollars & Destruction: How Renewables Harm Our Farms & Cost the Earth is a 48-minute Australian documentary released in late 2024 that powerfully and poignantly illustrates the dark side of wind and solar energy, highlighting, in particular, the negative impact on rural communities and landscapes. The film was made by independent political group ADVANCE Australia, which is working to refocus attention on the mainstream values of freedom, security, and prosperity.

In a montage of interviews with farmers, community activists, wildlife specialists, energy experts, and more, the documentary skillfully leads viewers to the inescapable conclusion that renewable rhetoric and reality don’t match up. This comes across in quotes such as:

  • “Renewables are not the cheapest form of energy, they’re the most expensive form of energy.”
  • “You don’t clear forests to fix the climate.”
  • “We’re poisoning the planet to save the environment.”

As the film’s protagonists explain, the wide-ranging and often irreversible adverse impacts of industrial-scale wind and solar include diminished human, animal, and soil health; impaired sleep; fractured families and communities; ruined businesses and livelihoods; “A-grade, food-producing land” taken out of production (with dire implications for the food supply); greater dependence on other nations (90% of Australia’s solar panels come from China); and, ironically, more expensive and less reliable energy.

Although none of the protagonists specifically uses the words “land grab,” their comments reveal a gradual realization that the renewables agenda represents an attack on property rights and property ownership. The film also provides context for the ambitious energy plans of MP Chris Bowen (who joined Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s government in 2022 as Minister for Climate Change and Energy), referencing globalists’ implacable 2050 “net zero” targets.

Bowen’s “globetrotting” recently earned the scorn of a public that condemned his visits to 10 countries in 55 days as emitting “13 times more CO2…than the average Australian does in an entire year.” There is also a “growing revolt” of the business community against Bowen’s “renewables-only” energy strategy. In March, businessman and MP Ted O’Brien gave voice to citizens’ and entrepreneurs’ complaint:

“Three years ago, Anthony Albanese and Chris Bowen promised cheaper power bills. Instead, they’ve delivered among some of the highest electricity prices in the world…. Bowen is driving up power prices, pushing businesses to the wall, and leaving Australians worse off.”

The lessons shared in Dollars & Destruction are applicable everywhere that the “green” agenda is rolling out, making the film well worth a watch.

Links

ADVANCE Australia

Media Statement – Chris Bowen’s energy failure deepens—Australians can’t afford three more years of Labor

Chris Bowen slaps down business leaders over fear his 82 per cent green power goal is unrealistic

Climate change minister Chris Bowen under fire over unbelievable amount of carbon emissions produced after two months of globetrotting at the taxpayer’s expense

 

Related at Solari

Industrial Wind Turbines: Renewable Energy or Stealth Weapons in the Omniwar? with Elze van Hamelen

More Plunder: Wind Turbines

2nd Quarter 2023 Wrap Up: Dutch Farmers and Fishermen – PDF Now Available!

Movie of the Week: April 8, 2024: Climate: The Movie (The Cold Truth)

 

 


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3 Comments

  1. Ooh, thanks for the short clip warning. Terrible script and acting. F__k!!!!! lol. I would not be able to sit thru it. I don’t disagree with the general idea, they suck, but it’s Hollywood.

  2. First of all I want to assure you I am not in favor of the wind and solar “thing”, to use an all encompassing term.
    I worked in it for over 20 years, starting in the late 1980’s at a legacy company, part of the first in Caifornia for the State tax credits, and worked with many of the other early companies that survived even thru today. I got to see first hand all of the aspects, from prospecting to development/construction to management of the contracts and assets and turbine providers and service crews, insurance, banks, lawyers, landowners, utilities, you name it.
    I only saw the short of More Plunder: Wind Turbines and wonder who the developers were using such tactics, who the states were that allowed this, the lawyers for the landowners, that would allow such a crazy scenario to unfold. I never saw or heard of anything like it. The only complaint I will agree to is the damned blinking lights required by the FAA for pilots dumb enough to invade a windfarm at night. They do ruin the view. I didn’t hear anything about the birds and insects impacted, which is very real. The farmland is fine with a good lease.
    As to the rest, the strongarm tactics and 99 year contracts without recourse and so forth could only happen if the locals were complete fools and nobody reached out for education.
    That being said, I don’t doubt this is all plunder. The dollars are huge for the upstream, pay is good below that level, nobody believes globaloney, the rationales for it all are bogus, the utilities hate managing it, and we just don’t need this garbage littering the landscape. The lobbyists are all dependent on developer dollars to keep blathering their propaganda. I’m sure I left out a lot I could complain about

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