Renewables & efficiency - May 14
by Staff
Click on the headline (link) for the full text. Many more articles are available through the Energy Bulletin homepage
The Rated Capacity of a windmill is similar to how fast your car could go if you ran it at top cruising speed. We all have speedometers that lead us to believe our cars are "made to go" somewhere over 100 mph. However, we don't actually drive that fast. Sometimes we drive 45 mph, sometimes 75 mph -- and we get where we need to go. If every time you got in your car, you floored it and cruised only at top speed, your car would have a Capacity Factor of 100%. However, with the way you actually drive, it wouldn't be uncommon if your average driving speed was somewhere around 30% of the "Capacity" that could have been delivered at top cruising speed. This does NOT mean you were only able to use your car 30% of the time. The same is true for a wind generator. A 30% Capacity Factor does not mean the generator is dead stalled 70% of the time, and operating at full Rated Capacity 30% of the time. Rather, in the very windy locations where wind farms are built, the wind blows almost all the time. The wind turbines therefore operate almost all of the time, but over a range of speeds and power outputs. Power Increases by CUBE of Wind Speed Increase. This physical law which is at the heart of wind turbine operations helps put a "30% Capacity Factor" into perspective very dramatically. The 30% is actually a very impressive figure. Most wind turbines will begin producing power ("cut in") at about 12 miles per hour, and reach their maximum Rated Power Output at about 25-29 mph.
First, easily accessible fossil fuels will run out, so we will eventually have to get our energy from elsewhere. Second, burning fossil fuels is having a measurable, and very probably dangerous, effect on the climate... ...There is no shortage of advice on how to “make a difference”, but the public is confused, uncertain whether the schemes proposed are fixes or fig leaves. People are rightly suspicious when companies tell us that buying their “green” product means we have done our bit. They are equally uneasy about the national energy strategy. Are wind farms merely a gesture to prove our leaders’ environmental credentials? Is nuclear power essential?... ...Where numbers are used, their meaning is often obfuscated by enormousness. Numbers are chosen to impress, to score points in arguments, rather than to inform. In contrast, my aim is to present honest, factual numbers in such a way that the numbers are comprehensible, comparable and memorable... Sustainable Energy – Without the Hot Air, by David MacKay, is published by UIT Cambridge, priced £19.99. (10 May 2009)
Wind is a free source of fuel. When the wind blows the UK’s electricity system has access to this free source and the power generated is automatically accepted onto the system. That electricity system is a combination of generation plants using different fuels and technologies, each with its own marginal cost. Operators bring plants on line in an ascending order of marginal cost and employ the same methodology when reducing output. In short, the most expensive plants, such as open cycle gas, are the last to be brought onto the system and the first to be shed... |
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