Right, building the access road, excavating the pit, hauling the dirt, mining iron, producing steel/rebar, hauling that around, cooking the cement, mining the gravel, mixing, transport and pouring hundreds of tons concrete...
Imagine how much diesel you've to burn to make the foundation for only
one bloody turbine...
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Then fabbing the (steel) tower, the generator (build from rare ores -> more critical mining), holding around 800 gallons of (mineral!) gear-oil (annual loss ~80 gal), the transformer substation (more ores and oil), inverters, controls, and of course the masts plus the power lines connecting the shebang to the grid... trucks, massive cranes, more diesel power...
And then those blades, continuously weathering down, shedding GFK particles into the environment around them, contaminating soil and any produce in the vicinity for millennia...
Not to mention the environmental hazard from an oil-spill by a blown gearbox...

Max lifespan of an onshore turbine are about 25~30 years max... then it has to be blown up and disposed... much of it as hazardous waste...
Sure, individuals stuck in the belief that 'electricity comes out the wall-socket', rather choose to ignore the reality behind...