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Friday, December 22, 2006

Wind Turbine Troubles By Dr. Jimmy Tragle, Part I

Part I

Increasing concern about the environment has been emerging over the last few years and attempts to decrease green house gas emission are being put forth. The installation of large industrial wind plants has been occurring at an increasing rate over the last few years as one attempt to bring one cleaner source of electricity to meet growing demand. This push for placing large numbers of wind turbines in various locations has been met with resistance and support and the disagreement between both factions is growing stronger. This is becoming a relevant issue for Delaware as there is talk of placing an offshore facility in the waters off the Delaware coast. Several topics will need to be considered in order to form an informed opinion.

Both sides have been busy compiling a list of myths they claim the other side has put forth to support its position.

Before going on I must confess that at one time I thought wind energy was a good idea. After extensive reading on the subject I am no longer of that mind. I make no apologies for this as I am certain my bias will show through most if not all of the time.

First a little about the wind turbines themselves. The current trend is to build taller wind turbines. Modern turbines use a pole type tower, usually three blades, and a generator situated atop the tower that the turbines are attached to. The generator is housed in a structure known as a nacelle. The generator contains several hundred gallons of oil for lubrication and cooling. Blades on the some of the newer ones are about 135 feet in length and the hub height for the nacelle is in the neighborhood of 265 feet above the ground. The blades on such a turbine will sweep an area from 130 feet above the ground to 400 feet above the ground (or ocean surface for offshore turbines). That translates to each turbine covering an area a bit greater than one acre in the blade swept area. The blades tend to turn relatively slow, around 15 to 20 revolutions per minute (RPM) at optimum speed. For perspective this will give a blade tip speed somewhere around 180 MPH. Nacelle and blade assemblies usually weigh in excess of 90 tons.

Modern turbines have a nameplate capacity of around 1.5 to 2.0 MegaWatts (MW). For Comparison there is a nuclear fired plant in California that generates 555 MW.

Nameplate rating refers to what the generator would produce if the wind were blowing at optimum speed all the time. Turbine proponents claim about a 30% factor on this issue and experience in other countries with larger numbers of them has been limited to about 15 to 16%. Depending upon which figures used a 1.5 MW turbine will produce either about 0.5 MW or 0..24 MW on average. The reasons for this reduction are that below optimum wind speed production falls off and above optimum wind speeds turbines must be locked down to prevent damage.

For an installation to be worthwhile on a commercial basis there must be several turbines situated on it. I believe a minimum of 20 or so, and developers tend to prefer 40 or more.An attempt is made to site turbines in areas where winds blow often enough to validate siting. This may include vast open stretches or ridgelines extending above other topography, and of course coastal waters. Each of these locations will have peculiarities specific to layout patterns, but there is a minimum distance between them in terms of placing them on a site. Turbines cannot be placed close together as the efficiency will be lost if they are too close together. I believe turbulence off the blades is a big factor. As an example I know of a siting proposal on a ridge in West Va that amounts to 44 1.5MW turbines covering a 6.4 mile stretch of ridge line. One must realize that additional acreage is demanded for transmission lines to get the power to a substation (17 miles for this project) and access roadways.

Battles rage over many issues and with Joe's grace along with any evidence of interest I'll bring those forward bit by bit over the next few days or weeks. Those issues include:

I. Impacts on wildlife, livestock, and humans. These can further be divided into construction phase issues as well as operational phase issues.

A. Construction issues:

1. Damage to cave ecosystems.
2. Damage to spring water sources.
3. Forest habitat destruction and fragmentation.
4. Water runoff due to forest clearing.
5. Carbon emissions due to manufacture, transportation, and construction of turbines and their components.

B. Operational events include:

1. Blade strikes to birds and bats.
2. Blade throw and other accidents.
3. Noise pollution - various sounds emitted from a variety of sources.
4. Strobe effect - light reflection off blades when the sun is near the horizon.
5. Shadow flicker - shadows from blades when the sun is near the horizon.
6. Stray voltage - issues primarily for livestock in situations where metal objects like gates and fences may cause electrocutions when animals contact them.

II. Property Values

A. Altered viewsheds.
B. Health effects.

III. Whether or not the turbines can actually contribute to the production of electricity on an appreciable level. Electrical grid complexity and wind intermittence are key concepts.

IV. Economical Controversy surrounding the development of industrial wind facilities.
A. Availability of temporary jobs to local workers.
B. Availability of permanent jobs to local workers.
C. Financial advantages for local municipalities and county governments.
D. Tax incentives for developers.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

absolutly wind power is part of the soulution. To give up on wind power before it begins in this country is pretty ridiculous. Look at Holland. They have used the wind for over a hundred years to successfully keep the sea at bay for reclaiming the land. Wind generators will work in a coastal situation because of the microclimate that exists on the coast. Breeze is almsot always blowing in from or out to sea. Simply not to try to find an alternative to fossil fuels is to give up and pass the buck to the next generation. Some resolve please we are Americans after all.

Wind technology is a great suppliment to other alternative energy sources. The problem is that most people do not look at the bigger picture when it comes to energy policy. For instance, right now the US doesn't get all its oil from the same place. We have a pretty diverse portfolio of where our energy comes from. The same philosophy has to be applies to the concept of alternative energy. We will not get 100% of our energy needs from the wind turbines, maybe 15%, but then we need to figure out how to 30% from solar, is there an environmentally safe was to harness hydrotechnology? When I look at a country like Norway, which gets upwards of 70% of its energy from hydroelectricity, I have to think they know something we dont because you dont hear baout them getting flooded out. maybe hydro only works in certian geographical situations.

Its a lot to figure out. I am for the wind farm off the coast. There are some things conservative types will not like about it, but saying bats are going to be killed from a turbine balde is pretty dumb. If they can dodge my 12 gauge shotgun, I think they can avoid a turbine blade. Yeah some birds may get smacked, but what birds? Will piping plovers be mysteriously drawn to the blades of death off shore? I don't know, but something tells me no.

Agreed that there is no simple solution out there. But there has to be one. And there will be one. It may not be what you want to happend, but like RUmmy says " you dont always light your house with the energy you wish you had, you light it with the energy you got." and when that well runs dry and we are all holding the bag in the dark, I can't wait to point fingers. But hell, i am ready. Small investments every year in solar technology has me ready to produce enought electricity to sustain my family. So I say bring on the dark ages. If it gets to warm, we all be moving north anyway.

Still the biggest issues everyone is still skirting when it comes to global warming and all that is the displacement of humans. Look at well prepared we were for Katrina. Or Ivan, or Charlie, etc etc. You get the point. There will be an environmental disaster of biblical proportions in our life times. And you will se how quickly hundreds of thousands of people will die because they have no shelter or food or water. We have no plan for a million displaced people. What happens when a freak hurricane walks over Miami and puts over 2 million people all over the country? Going to be interesting forsure.