PHOTO: Erico Guizzo
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The Galápagos Islands, a cherished haven for nature
lovers and a rarefied ecosystem where Charles Darwin
drew inspiration for his theory of evolution, is not the
place you’d expect to find a multimillion-dollar
cutting-edge engineering project.
So when IEEE Spectrum Associate Editor Erico Guizzo
learned that the Ecuadorian government, with help from
the United Nations and an international consortium of
utility companies, planned to build three massive wind
turbines on San Cristóbal, the Galápagos’s easternmost
island, his first thought was: This I have to see.
Guizzo contacted the organizers of the project, and
late last year he found himself on a 32-hour-long
journey—involving three planes, two taxis, one bus, and
a three-and-a-half-hour open-ocean boat ride—to reach
the archipelago, some 1000 kilometers from mainland Ecuador.
“It was really tiring, but when I saw San Cristóbal
emerging on the hazy horizon, I knew this was a special
place,” Guizzo says. “And I can attest to its remoteness!”
On the island, he watched a team of engineers struggle
to get the three 800-kilowatt turbines into operation.
He also learned about the many other challenges the
project faced as part of an effort to free the
Galápagos from fossil fuels. [See Guizzo’s full account,
“Wind
Power in Paradise,” in this issue.]
Guizzo also took some time to check out the local
wildlife, including the famed giant tortoises [see
photo]. “You can’t help feeling a bit like Darwin when
you walk around this place and marvel at these
otherworldly creatures,” he says.
But as Darwin noted more than 170 years ago, the
uniqueness of the archipelago’s ecosystem means it’s
also extremely fragile. The survival of its distinctive
plants and animals, many of which are endangered, now
depends on finding ways to protect them from foreign
species—including us.