I work as a wind turbine technician at an industrial windfarm in northen Iowa. Our site has over 230 wind turbines installed on approximately 180 square miles of Iowa prime farmland. I don't particularly like the sight of 260' wind turbines stretching to the horizon, but that is the American model of development. I've also worked on them in Ireland and England and their sites tended to be in remote locations (like on mountains or highlands) with typically less than a dozen machines. I prefer that model of development but differences in land ownership complications and expectations of corporate profits give rise to these mega projects. It does cast an industrial aura to a rural landscape, but in all honesty northern Iowa already is industrial - industrial agriculture. The creeks have been straightened; trees and brush removed from their banks, virtually every bit of arable land is plowed. Hog confinement buildings are numerous and the concentrated odor from the excrement of hundreds of pigs carries on the breeze.
I have worked at the Iowa site more than a year and have seen only one animal obivously killed by the turbine and that was a bat. Most people assume the spinning blades confuse the bat's echolocation abilities and they fly into the blades, but there is a recent study that indicated it was the difference in air pressure between the front and back side of the blades that ruptures the bat's lungs.
I've been exposed to several designs of turbines and have never seen one with a diesel engine in it to get it started spinning. I would like to know more about that model. In my experience the wind is usually sufficient to get them turning. Our model begins producing at wind speeds of 4 m/s, and cuts out if the wind exceeds 25 m/s for ten minutes. So that's a pretty fair operating range.
Gixer's idea to install them at 36,000 feet would handicap their production a great deal, owing to the much less dense air at that altitude. I do like his suggestion to do away with the national grid in favor of decentralization (the way it was when I grew up). Interconnecting regional grids, privatizing producers and turning electricity into a commodity to be traded has put alot of pressure on our grid, and also allowed for price manipulation schemes like the one that caused the California energy crisis in 2000-2001.