Well, I have to 'fess up
to having made an error regarding the output characteristics of
modern day Industrial Wind Turbines.
A silly mistake at that.
But possibly a mistake that also reveals some interesting possibilities with wind turbines. Especially related to reducing their size, noise and increasing useful power output.
Crack Pottery? Possibly. But I've not been at the cider yet. (honest)
A silly mistake at that.
But possibly a mistake that also reveals some interesting possibilities with wind turbines. Especially related to reducing their size, noise and increasing useful power output.
Crack Pottery? Possibly. But I've not been at the cider yet. (honest)
First, in order for this post to make sense, let me summarise some things that ARE true.
- The energy in the wind is a cube of the speed. In other words if you double the wind speed – wind contains 8 x energy. Halve wind speed- wind contains one eighth the energy.
- The theoretical maximum amount of this raw wind energy that can be harvested is 59.3% (Betz's Law)
- In reality the most efficient turbines manage about 45% (at a wind speed of around 7-8 m/s).
All of the above are correct. (Or I really am in trouble!)
My mistake in some earlier posts was to assume the efficiency of a wind turbine was roughly constant across the operational wind
speed range (up to maximum output).
Sadly this is nowhere near true.
In reality the
efficiency (or how much energy the wind turbine can actually suck out
of the wind) drops like a stone as the wind speed increases.
For most industrial
wind turbines the highest efficiency (at around a wind speed of 7m/s)
is about 45%. But as the wind speed increases, the efficiency falls
to around 10% at a 90% loading.
The overall effect of
this is to roughly linearise the power output to the wind speed. So
instead of getting eight times the power out when you double the
wind speed you only get double the power out. The rest is spilled.
So what does this
matter if the
thing is only as efficient as a 19th century steam engine when confronted with a high wind?
It matters a lot.
Way back in 2002 at the
Lee Ranch wind turbine research facility in New Mexico, it was
discovered that 50% of the annual energy output of a wind turbine was
delivered in 15% of the time.
My own analysis done back in 2011
showed that for a three month period the whole UK wind turbine fleet
delivered 50% of its energy in 25% of the time. But remember that was
for the whole distributed fleet.
It would be reasonable to assume
that for a single facility, the Lee Ranch figures are roughly correct
for the UK too. Also, there is no reason to think any design change to wind turbines since 2002 will have significantly affected these Lee Ranch findings.
In order to harvest the
50% of the energy that is smeared out over 85% of the year you have
to compromise the turbines efficiency at higher wind speeds. The result today is an
enormous unreliable monster.
So, for a moment, let
us forget about the grindingly low 50% of energy generation that gets
smeared over 85% of the year. Let us concentrate on the other 50% that
arrives in 15% of the time (currently at an efficiency of a measly
10-15%).
For arguments sake, let us design a turbine
that may not cut in until the wind speed is 12 or 14 m/s but then
delivers an efficiency of 40%. It will (MWhr for MWhr) be very much
smaller, simpler and more robust than a conventional turbine.
OK
it will only operate for 15% of the time and it is truly intermittent. But
all wind is intermittent. Remember a conventional turbines output
during 85% of the year is pretty derisory anyway. Often it is so low
that it might as well not be there.
So, build smaller more
efficient turbines. Crucially, in order to make these turbines more efficient, they only operate at higher wind speeds. We then rely on gas backup for the rest. More predictable, less
environmental impact and more reliable (due to narrower operating
domain).
Tell me where I'm
wrong. (Seriously - I may well be)
Of course this is
still all window dressing. This (and the rest of RE) is just Care Bear fluff. Nuclear plant (with some gas) is the ONLY viable option to cut
GHG and air pollution.
But I hope that this is at least “interesting” fluff.
4 comments:
Posted a link here...
http://tallbloke.wordpress.com/2014/08/06/danish-university-fires-professor-who-criticised-wind-turbines/comment-page-1/#comment-85519
there is also Hellman's Exponent which deals with interference of wind from nearby foresty, buildings, hills and so on, no mention of that on planning apps!
Thanks Billo - just doing a short RE course and the cube ref helped.
But are you saying that all the money being spent on windfarms is just as a result of bad consciences? Out here in South Africa fledgling windfarms are getting praise even from Eskom that is seriously invested in coal.
patrick@wessa.co.za or below
Thanks for the comment Mountainman,
The "better part" of the driving force behind the current wind turbine obsession is a laudable concern for the environment. But instead of being science based with realistic targets, it is a mix of technical ignorance and wishful thinking. A dream of "It'll come right in the end" is no way to run an energy policy especially when the major issues surrounding wind turbines have no solution.
But the driving forces behind wind turbines also have a "worst part". This is the avaricious pursuit by greedy companies and individuals based around huge government inducements. They are people with no morals and will trample over anyone and anything to get their gold.
Many of the corporate monsters we associate with putting people second to their profits are heavily invested in wind - mainly to get their hands on the subsidies and perhaps greenwash/greensmoke their main activities as well.
Wind turbines certainly do have uses - mainly niche applications. But the current obsession with huge ineffective monsters in (say) the UK is a road to nowhere. It simply lines the pockets of the landowning rich while penalizing common folk who end up with higher bills.
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