First, Cem,
Congratulations on a well observed and contained scene and framing. The composition can withstand no cropping nor requires any additions. It's very efficient and handsome. But there's more than morsels for the visual cortex. The image presented has social import.
There form of the potentially polluting power plant, is like an innocent cloud, but every so often, radioactive gases will be bled off. So we have a seemingly "natural cloud" which can be potentially hazardous, and the clean wind turbines themselves looking like industrial megaliths.
This, as are your other photographs shows the apposition of the better part of life and the obvious industrial polluters. It's a different "shock" effect in each picture you've shown, but this is especially interesting.
The paradox here, Cem, is that to get the wind turbines, to have copper wire smelted and drawn to wires and wound into coils in generators of electricity, requires a giant industrial infrastructure. One needs the most advanced factories as well as abundant sources of energy. So there's likely a significant carbon footprint to "clean energy" like this.
I am glad to have you put before us, not only pictures that can stand as photographs worthy of collection, but also works that leverage on our education and intelligence and not just pluck our heart strings! These pictures, (no doubt, as a series), could one day serve as documentation as to how we merely "brushed against" confronting damage to our own habitat.
Asher