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Science Technology

Plan For World's Largest Wind Farm 23

ClockworkPlanet writes: "A Hebridean island (North of Scotland) is set to become the global capital of renewable energy with advanced plans for the world's largest onshore wind farm acting as a catalyst to attract wave and tidal power stations. This article spills the juice."
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Plan For World's Largest Wind Farm

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  • "If the development does take place it will put a major spoke into the wheel of nuclear power."

    Perhaps this has a different meaning in UK english...

    Sounds like a great project, tho. Perhaps if it is a success, they can consider seriously shutting down the N-plant on their east coast [bbc.co.uk] that the norwegians keep complaining about.

  • by Cy Guy ( 56083 ) on Monday November 26, 2001 @01:29PM (#2614083) Homepage Journal
    • The government is working towards providing 10% of Britain's electricity supplies from renewable sources by 2010; at present, they provide 2.8%.
    • Britain is Europe's windiest country but has only 880 operating wind turbines, based on 61 wind farms. They produce less than 1% of the country's needs. World leader Denmark gets 15% of its power that way.
    So in nine more years they'll only be at two-thirds the level of where Denmark is today. Hardly sounds like a groundbreaking achievement.

    I wish the article would talk about the technology used in the cable itself as that seems to be the big breakthough that will enable this project. Will it use superconducting technology such as is already being tested in the US [slashdot.org] and in Denmark [slashdot.org]? If we can produce 350 mile long undersea cables, then maybe we could harness heat from undersea thermal vents to generate electricity? or perhaps the thermal mass of the great sargassos sea? Or put Oil and Gas fired plants on current offshore drilling platforms so the energy is being transported not the oil and we won't have to worry about another Exxon Valdez disaster.
    • ...put Oil and Gas fired plants on current offshore drilling platforms so the energy is being transported not the oil and we won't have to worry about another Exxon Valdez disaster.
      The problem with that is that you are throwing a lot of the energy away. If you need space heat instead of light, converting the fuel to electricity on a platform loses 50% or more; you can't use cogeneration to improve your return on a given amount of fuel, either.

      The real penalty would be in transport energy. We currently use oil because it makes fuels which are compact and easily transported. If you convert the fuel to electricity on the platform you have to convert the entire vehicle fleet to batteries, with all the range limitations this implies. You also lose all the flexibility you get with pipelines and storage tanks; if you lose one cable, you can wipe out a large part of the transport network as well as the industry and whatnot. Storable fuels provide a valuable buffer against supply and transport disruptions, and any nation which ignores this in a push to go "green" is risking trouble on a scale which would make California's blackouts look trivial.

      • If you convert the fuel to electricity on the platform you have to convert the entire vehicle fleet to batteries,

        My suggestion was only for sea-based oil platforms, obviously the idea gets less apealing when you apply it to land based rigs, especially those that are in the middle east since then you would need thousands of miles of cable, not hundreds, or say land-based Texas oil wells where production per well is low and transportation costs for the oil are considerably less. But as for North Sea oil rigs, often the rigs can't be accessed due to rough seas, this would be irrelevant to an undersea cable. Also, some of the co-generation could be used to harvest methane-hydrates from below the sea floor, or just to inject steam into the oil wells to increase output.



        BTW, love your sig. I'm a big Trout Fishing In America [amazon.com] fan as well.



  • From what I understand, the Saharra is a pretty windy place. It also has tonnes of sunshine for the taking. With advancements in superconducting cables(1 [slashdot.org],2 [slashdot.org]), maybe the deserts of the world might someday soon be an un obtrusive place to put some of these land scape marring reneuable resource adsorbing systems.
  • by Spamalamadingdong ( 323207 ) on Monday November 26, 2001 @01:51PM (#2614192) Homepage Journal
    Said the article:
    If planning permission is granted Britain will more than double its renewable energy capacity. Environmental campaigners say a new generation of nuclear power stations may not then need to be built.
    Why not eliminate an older generation of coal-fired plants instead, and eliminate their carbon emissions? Wind cannot replace nuclear by itself, because there is no cheap way to store wind power. There will remain a need for constant supplies of power to feed the base load, and that power will have to come from some kind of energy store such as fossil fuel or nuclear. The only one of these which doesn't emit CO2 is, of course, nuclear. Given the concern over global warming I am amazed that elimination of nuclear power is still a Green priority; it is vastly easier to sequester a few thousand tons of spent fuel every year than billions of tons of diffuse gas.
    • Removing coal-fired stations would throw a lot more people out of work. New nuclear plants can be made virtually fail-proof and remain at zero CO2 emission level. Renewable is great, when it can be had and when enough power can be generated. It is far-fetched to imagine replacing nuclear power though.
  • More Open Space (Score:3, Insightful)

    by n-baxley ( 103975 ) <nate@baxleysIII.org minus threevowels> on Monday November 26, 2001 @02:24PM (#2614393) Homepage Journal
    The biggest complaints about wind power seems to be the unsightly appearance of the towers dotting the landscape. Well, why are there not more wind farms in remote places? There are certainly many "remote place" around the world. Is the cost of transporting that power to the places it's needed just too great for this, or is the cost of producing power from wind too great in and of itself? It seems solar power might be simpler since there are no moving parts like a wind turbine. I'm pretty uneducated about this type of thing. What's the general concensus?
  • ...what we really need is rain power. Roofs covered in tiny hydroelectric turbines, and a dam in every gutter. It's the British answer to solar panels!

    • > rain power. Roofs covered in tiny hydroelectric turbines, and a dam in every gutter.

      Good thinking! Though you don't need to dam a water flow to take energy from it - turbines in place and small diversions are sufficient and dont silt up like dams.
      • and dont silt up like dams.

        A great topic on it's own, in fact. It's some scary shit to think about how much red mud is backed up behind the Glen Canyon and other major dams that hold back the Colorado river, for example.

    • Let's see. If you live in a nice, wet place where you get 30 inches of rainfall per year, and 1000 square feet of roof, that's 2500 cubic feet of water. Call it 20,000 pounds. If the roof is 20 feet above the ground, that makes 400,000 foot-pounds of work per year. I make that out to be about 540 kJ/year, or about 150 watt-hours; over the course of a year you'd be able to run a 20-watt compact fluorescent for a bit less than 8 hours (assuming no losses in conversion).

      A 40 watt-peak solar panel on the roof would be able to run the same light for 8 hours a day, most days. The roof would accomodate quite a few of those panels. You can build your gutter-micro-hydro systems. Please do, I can always use a good laugh!

      • This is what I love about Slashdot, though - people actually do calculate this sort of thing, and come up with interesting results.

One man's constant is another man's variable. -- A.J. Perlis

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