Studies Show that Wind Power Could Electrify the World

15 Sep, 2012

by Charles Q. Choi, Inside Science News Service

An offshore wind turbine, part of the London Array wind farm site, located in the outer Thames Estuary, about 70 miles east of London. Image credit:  phault via flickrThere is enough energy for peo­ple to reap from the wind to meet all of the world’s power demands with­out rad­i­cally alter­ing the planet’s cli­mate, accord­ing to two inde­pen­dent teams of scientists.

Wind power is often touted as envi­ron­men­tally friendly, gen­er­at­ing no pol­lu­tants. It is an increas­ingly pop­u­lar source of renew­able energy, with the United States aim­ing to pro­duce 20 per­cent of its elec­tric­ity by wind power by 2030.

Still, there have been ques­tions as to how much energy wind power can sup­ply the world, and how green it actu­ally is, given how it pulls energy from the atmosphere.

To learn more, cli­mate sci­en­tist Katherine Marvel at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, in Calif., and her col­leagues devel­oped a global cli­mate model that ana­lyzed how wind tur­bines would drag on the atmos­phere to har­vest energy from winds at the planet’s sur­face and higher alti­tudes. Historically, peo­ple have built wind tur­bines on the ground and in the ocean, but research sug­gests kite-borne tur­bines could gen­er­ate more power from stead­ier, faster high-altitude winds.

Adding wind tur­bines of any kind slows winds, and Marvel and her col­leagues found that adding more than a cer­tain amount of tur­bines would no longer gen­er­ate more elec­tric­ity. Still, their sim­u­la­tions sug­gest that at least 400 ter­awatts — or 400 tril­lion watts of power — could be gen­er­ated from sur­face winds, and more than 1,800 ter­awatts could be extracted from winds through­out the atmos­phere. In com­par­i­son, peo­ple glob­ally cur­rently use about 18 ter­awatts of power.

Simulating a century’s worth of amped-up wind-energy pro­duc­tion sug­gests that har­vest­ing max­i­mum power from these winds would have dra­matic long-term effects on the cli­mate, trig­ger­ing major shifts in atmos­pheric circulation.

“However, it’s impor­tant to under­stand that these amounts are far, far big­ger than cur­rent or pro­jected global energy demand,” Marvel said.

In con­trast, extract­ing enough wind energy to sat­isfy cur­rent global power demands would only have min­i­mal cli­mate effects, as long as wind tur­bines were spread out. Doing so might affect sur­face tem­per­a­tures by about 0.1 degree Celsius and affect aver­age pre­cip­i­ta­tion by about 1 percent.

Independent from Marvel’s research, atmos­pheric sci­en­tist Mark Jacobson at Stanford University in Calif. and wind power researcher Cristina Archer at the University of Delaware, in Newark, used a 3-D com­puter model that ana­lyzed inter­ac­tions between the atmos­phere, land and oceans on a global scale, includ­ing fac­tors such as chem­istry and water-vapor con­tent. They esti­mated the amount of energy tur­bines with hubs located a con­ven­tional height of 330 feet off the ground could extract, based on man­u­fac­turer data on how tur­bines con­vert wind to power. They also sim­u­lated tur­bines 6 miles above the ground, the typ­i­cal alti­tude of the jet stream.

They found the amount of wind power avail­able at the height of most mod­ern wind tur­bines before the point of dimin­ish­ing returns is about 80 ter­awatts on all con­ti­nents minus Antarctica and near their shores, and more than 250 ter­awatts if wind tur­bines could be placed across the entire sur­face of the planet, includ­ing the oceans. At heights of the jet stream, about 380 ter­awatts appears available.

Click here to read the rest of this arti­cle at Inside Science News Service.

GD Star Rating
load­ing...
GD Star Rating
load­ing...
Studies Show that Wind Power Could Electrify the World, 5.5 out of 10 based on 2 ratings

About the author

Related Posts

QR Code Business Card