Optimize Offshore Wind Farms Using Weather Modeling 111
An anonymous reader sends this excerpt from a Stanford news release:
"Politics aside, most energy experts agree that cheap, clean, renewable wind energy holds great potential to help the world satisfy energy needs while reducing harmful greenhouse gases. Wind farms placed offshore could play a large role in meeting such challenges, and yet no offshore wind farms exist today in the United States. In a study just published in Geophysical Research Letters, a team of engineers at Stanford has harnessed a sophisticated weather model to recommend optimal placement of four interconnected wind farms off the coast of the Eastern United States, a region that accounts for 34 percent of the nation’s electrical demand and 35 percent of carbon dioxide emissions. ... Among its findings, the Stanford model recommended a farm in Nantucket Sound, precisely where the controversial Cape Wind farm has been proposed. The Cape Wind site is contentious because, opponents say, the tall turbines would diminish Nantucket’s considerable visual appeal. By that same token, the meteorological model puts two sites on Georges Bank, a shallows located a hundred miles offshore, far from view in an area once better known for its prodigious quantities of cod. The fourth site is off central Long Island."
You can't have it all, guys (Score:5, Insightful)
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Don't forget Pennsylvania... those billboards along the Penn Turnpike keep saying how clean it is too....
It isn't WV nor PA coal (Score:4, Informative)
Coal burned in the ISONE (New England minus a tiny bit of northern Maine) comes almost exclusively from South America -- Columbia and Venezuela. It turns out that shipping it by barge is easier than getting it past the railway congested New York City area.
That written, given the current prices of delivered gas and coal, gas is on the margin, not coal. That means additional wind generation likely displaces natural gas generation for most hours of the year. However, given that natural gas prices continue to fall, the dispatch order may switch within the next few years or sooner, especially in non-winter months, relegating coal to peak hours during the week in summer and winter regardless of the wind projects.
Don't get me wrong -- I'm all for installing wind and displacing fossil fuel generation in New England, New York, and (more importantly) PJM (DC to Newark to Chicago triangle, roughly). However, understand that at this point, wind isn't likely to displace coal in New England.
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Then theres the rest of the country on Nuke, natural gas and a bit of coal with a smidgen of hydro just beginning to be peppered with wind power.
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So, it's okay in somebody else's back yard, but not his
I don't understand this perspective. I live in Germany where there are quite a few wind farms, and I think they are great. I wish I had one in my backyard. Giant cool epic piece of technology generating power for me, and the government pays well for the land. Also, in a century or two they will be old fashioned and trendy like the windmills in Denmark, and property values will rise anywhere near them. It is win win. Give me a windmill!
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The water in this particular spot is 20 feet deep. If you go 12 miles offshore from Cape Cod, it's around 80 feet deep in most places. You can build wind turbines in deep water, but it's much more difficult and expensive.
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The water in this particular spot is 20 feet deep. If you go 12 miles offshore from Cape Cod, it's around 80 feet deep in most places. You can build wind turbines in deep water, but it's much more difficult and expensive.
nah, not much more at all, oil rigs go much deeper, the tech to anchor stuff 80ft is very simple to say, i dunno, an oil rig........
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The wind pushes *much* harder on a turbine than on the oil rig -- getting pushed on by the wind is what a turbine is designed to do. You can anchor one in deep water, but it's not cheap. Wind turbines cost a few $million, while a deepwater oil platform is worth about half a $billion:
So you're trying to solve a more difficult engineering problem with a tiny fraction of the budget. I'm not saying it can't be done, but it ain't trivial.
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It's not a race to the bottom, or in your case, a race to see who can abase himself and sacrifice more. Europe has neither pristine landscapes or a non-petrol economy, so how's that working for you?
Re:You can't have it all, guys (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes you can. It is called nuclear energy.
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All that waste has to go somewhere. We still need mines to dig up the fuel in the first place. You can't build a nuclear plant off-shore. And, most importantly of all, for many countries nuclear isn't an option because they don't have the infrastructure, don't want to be reliant on other countries for material and expertise or we simply don't trust them with it (non-proliferation).
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An endless supply of cooling water. No NIMBYs. and in case of a meltdown, just drop it . . .
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You can't have pristine landscapes, a non-petrol economy AND several kilowatts of electric power at your fingertips, to be switched on whenever you come home. We here in Europe are making choices. We know we have to. So will you, so will you.
Of course you can have all of those things.
Nuclear.
Re:Offshore wind farts (Score:4, Insightful)
"As I understand it, the problem with offshore wind is not the weather, but the insanely high costs of maintenance."
Will it need thousands of armed people spending a trillion in foreign lands?
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Taxes were never raised to pay for it, so it must be 100% free!
Right?
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Re:Offshore wind farts (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, running your AC is about a perfect application for solar PV. You need it most when the Sun is shining the hardest.
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Electric Already Feasible (Score:5, Insightful)
First, many people can afford a 100% electric vehicle right now and never pay another dime for gas to commute to work. The Zero XU [zeromotorcycles.com] has a removable battery that I can use to charge at work and at home. The range is sufficient for me to get to work on a single charge. It only costs $0.16 per charge and that's 16 cents that I won't even be paying since I'm going to charge it under my desk at work. The total cost for the bike is less than $8K and it is available for purchase right now.
Second, the ARPA-e independently validated Lithium Ion breakthrough [gigaom.com] is going to be commercialized in a few years and then Electric cars are going to really be into play for all classes of vehicles including trucks.
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The reality is that the day of cheap energy in the form of BTUs are over.
Simply untrue.
Nuclear.
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A good design, mass production of it and improvements to the fuel cycle could make it competive with other forms of energy as those other forms slowly increase in expense, but that takes work instead of the sitting around and whining that is all the US nuclear lobby can be bothered to do.
For now "cheap nuclear" is science fiction, but it's SF that could become reality if some resources are commited to it. In the last few years we've finally seen the full develop
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Current nuclear is cost competitive. [world-nuclear.org] It is not science fiction. Please educate yourself.
Please read before insulting (Score:2, Informative)
It's an interesting subject and you can do a hell of a lot better than the watered down propaganda at t
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d00d, my grandfather was a nuclear chemist at ORNL from '48 to '77, and worked on the MSR experiment. I may not be as knowledgable as my grandfather was but I do know about the subject.
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You're showing that you're out of your depth, or willfully ignorant. I'm guessing both. No form of energy production is without government support and subsidy. None.
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Also you've shown either a vast amount of contempt for me or perhaps innocent ignorance by directing me to that progaganda site. "Claim salting" by putting a few tiny nuggets of truth to sell a pile of bullshit is a dishonest practice that can be seen at work there. Those "educated" even a tiny bit in re
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Name one energy production method in one country that is not subsidized by a government.
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Also, why reply to the least important bit of the above post? Did you even read beyond the second sentance? Why show me such contempt if you are trying to "educate" me?
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Because you can't help it.
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It's a big world out there and looking no furthur than your own tiny little horizon and canned propaganda is just going to make you look ridiculous when you step out of your comfo
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Kettle black.
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If not, at least try to stay on subject and make sense.
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d00d, you natter on about how many assumptions I'm making, blithely unaware of your own. It maketh me giggle.
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You assume that I insulted you and felt contempt for you. Yet you keep coming back for more. Are you as bored as I am? I'm currently in a crowded theater waiting for a midnight showing of "The Hunger Games" to start. What are you up to?
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See, there you are with the rhetorical "present your opponent with a false dichotomy, both ends of which display them in a negative light" trope. I'll bet you have a "don't be childish and evasive and answer my question" response all ready when I don't fall into it, or other such response. And there's even an interesting self contradiction: you talk about presenting me with multiple possibilities when much of your attack rhetoric falls into the binary choice pattern.
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Not even close to what I think. Matters not.
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Straw man. Attribution of false motivation.
Lame.
Done. Go back to your self satisfied existence.
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That's the silly lie I can see as a lie through my involvement in the energy and mining (including Uranium recently) industries. You made it and not some strawman. Also how does this line:
inspire this?
If I'm asking for your motivation how can I be accused of
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Of course (Score:4, Funny)
Authors on the West Coast propose wind farms on the East Coast ;-)
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There are physical limitations - like the Pacific shelf being much more like a cliff than the Atlantic's. Where practicable in the W., go ahead and install wind turbines. I believe; however, that the E., as a whole, is better with wind as a renewable where the W. is better off with solar.
And if you think a wind turbine is an eye sore, think about those acres and acres of mirrors involved in large scale solar. We might also have to relocate some endangered species of tortoises and cacti for true wide spre
Re:Of course (Score:5, Informative)
I'm from southeast Massachusetts, and I agree with the authors: the east coast is the best location. Here's why: 10 miles offshore from Cape Cod, the water is 25 feet deep. 10 miles offshore of Los Angeles, the water is 2000 feet deep.
More from the Oxymoron Dep't (Score:2)
cheap, clean, renewable wind energy
Won't. Happen.
Wind is diffuse and intermittent. If it really were "cheap", there would be a sound business case for it. As it is, the costs of storage are forever elided.
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The necessity you imply just ain't so.
Reserve is always carried because even nuke and coal and gas plants go off line unexpectedly: I think our (near) biggest nuke in the UK may be running at a capacity factor of ~60% over the last couple of years having tripped out again very recently; only twice as much as wind for example. We don't cover every nuke plant with 100% gas backup.
We have to learn to cut our suit to fit our cloth better: learn to use energy when it's abundant and trim our usage when energy is
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But you have to cover wind with 100% backup capability, full stop.
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No.
Wind is good for 10%--15% baseload IIRC.
So at most you need to cover about 90%; there's demand management, etc, too.
Rgds
Damon
Re:More from the Oxymoron Dep't (Score:4, Insightful)
The base load problem is a myth. It's an artifact of the fact that today, renewables are a small fraction of the total power stream. If you have a diverse enough set of large enough, widely-spaced enough power sources, you can ensure that at least a few are producing enough power to run the country. Any minor gaps can be filled in by voluntary demand reduction and intermittent / pumped hydro.
The myth of the "myth" (Score:4, Insightful)
If there were a real business case for this, we would already be switching over to it.
This is no "myth", it is a real consequence of energy diffuseness and intermittance. All pitches for renewables for baseload always end in the punchline, "And we could do it today, if only we find the political will." N.b., the key word "political". That is, the author wishes to force their ineffective, uneconomic solution upon everyone else.
Hidden from view, of course, is the fact that switching to these energy sources will impoverish anyone dumb enough to use them.
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If there were a real business case for this, we would already be switching over to it.
You are conveniently ignoring externalities here and direct and indirect (like wars) government subsidies. Noone is denying it will cost more right now. But you know what? There's more to life than money.
Hidden from view, of course, is the fact that switching to these energy sources will impoverish anyone dumb enough to use them.
That's hyperbole. You are not going to be impoverished from switching to other energy sources. Some renewable sources are not that far from being competitive these days. And the price is going down.
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All pitches for renewables for baseload always end in the punchline, "And we could do it today, if only we find the political will." N.b., the key word "political". That is, the author wishes to force their ineffective, uneconomic solution upon everyone else.
Which is the same punchline nuclear pitches end with. What is your point? Aside from coal and gas pretty much all sources of energy need subsidy.
Hidden from view, of course, is the fact that switching to these energy sources will impoverish anyone dumb enough to use them.
Germany rolled the dice, let's see if that happens to them in the next decade, shall we?
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Not my pitch. Mine ends with the punchline: "and we would do it today, if only fossil fuel weren't so cheap."
We can argue all day about "political will", but I can say with absolute certainty that fossil fuel won't always be this cheap.
Re:More from the Oxymoron Dep't (Score:4, Insightful)
What people seem to forget is that this was also politically-fashionable in the 80's for a while too, there's plenty of rusting turbine hulks in California and Hawaii -- albeit of less efficient machines. When wind finally runs out of subsidies, it will die another death -- just like the last time.
There are better, more efficient, sustainable sources of energy out there. Just all the money's being wasted on wind right now, because that's where the free lunch is. This is not a good thing.
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Not sure which better, more sustainable things there are. Solar? Nuclear? We've already damned up just about every river, so there's not much more hydro to utilize.
Sources I know about: coal, natural gas, oil, hydro, geo-thermal, nuclear, solar - both mirror based and "traditional" solar cell based, wind. Feel free to supply any I've forgotten.
Coal, even "clean" coal is generally looked at as a dirty energy source. We're about tapped out on Hydro, far as I know, and it has significant environmental imp
Re:More from the Oxymoron Dep't (Score:5, Insightful)
The interstate highway system wouldn't have been built without govt money, but I think people find it useful now. Once there are enough turbines generating power people will probably forget who built the farms, like they seem to forget who built the roads, and the sewers, and GPS, and etc., etc.
Just because it's costing taxpayer money now doesn't make it bad. Not to mention that apparently the oil industry is still getting handouts from the govt which they don't need.
Re:More from the Oxymoron Dep't (Score:5, Informative)
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what do you do for power when its not windy?
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The subsidies are far lower than nuclear. 60+ years down the line and it still isn't economically viable without government support. Wind, on the other hand, will cross the threshold for non-subsidised profitability within a decade by most estimates.
Most major new tech needs government support to get going, but some of it never learns to walk on its own.
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Re:More from the Oxymoron Dep't (Score:4, Interesting)
From the point of view of the UK National Grid, wind is NOT considered intermittent. But nuclear is. Why?
From a grid management perspective, if your wind farms are generating 2GW of power now, they will likely be generating 2GW or very near that in 20 minutes time, and it's very predictable over the next few hours what the wind generation is going to do.
However, Sizewell B could go offline in 2 minutes time meaning the grid suddenly loses well over 1GW of generating capacity in one sudden, enormous hit. This never happens with wind, because it's generated by thousands of small generators instead of one huge one, and the wind never *suddenly* stops, it always takes a few hours for the wind to slow down so you have plenty of notice. But you won't have any notice of a sudden shutdown of a large coal or nuclear power station, so you must keep enough spinning reserve online to cope with the possible sudden failure of one or more large power stations. If you don't have enough spinning reserve, well, you end up with something like the great north east blackout a few years ago in the United States if a large power station goes offline.
NIMBY (Score:5, Interesting)
As always, nobody wants this stuff where they will have to look at it. Then there's the political brilliance in the linked article: "...the advantage of sharing costs across several states, potentially increasing political support for the plan." Yeah, a bunch of New England states are gonna jump at the chance to pay for something that benefits other states.
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How do you know? Cape Cod isn't a single person. Maybe the people who don't want a wind farm anywhere near it are the "drill baby drill!" crowd.
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Lots of people like how wind farms look. Rich north eastern Americans seem to be an exception, not the rule.
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This AC is not rich, lives on Cape Cod about five miles from proposed site, and is not a fan of the plan. Even if it did "look nice" the idea of my already-high energy rates going up because private entrepreneurs came up with yet another get-rich-quick scheme at our expense displeases me. It comes down to this: public waters given away to private individuals who will receive buckets of our cash for it. And in a decade when wind power is made obsolete by better technologies, they're gonna hand us the bag.
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The people who say wind farms are eyesores are the same people who call CFL bulbs "pigtails". It's just propaganda. The fact is wind farms are much nicer to look at than supertankers leaking crude.
Other windspeed data sources (Score:5, Interesting)
Beauty in the Beholder's Eye (Score:1)
This overwhelming sense of peace and contentment is probably because I have a mansion in Nantucket with a private pier.
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Exactly! I for one cannot simply understand why Wind turbines look "ugly". You mean to tell me that coal-based, smoke spewing plant looks less ugly?
They didn't use weather modeling (Score:2, Informative)
They used weather statistics to model their theoretical windfarms.
Just make sure... (Score:2)
...that it is nowhere near Cape Cod, or Ted Kennedy's ghost will haunt you for ruining his view!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cape_Wind#Controversy [wikipedia.org]
You mean.. (Score:3)
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What about Lake Michigan? (Score:3)
This map indicates that Michigan has wind resources consistent with community-scale production. The map shows that the land-based community-scale wind resources in Michigan are concentrated along the immediate shores of the Great Lakes (especially Lakes Michigan and Superior) and on islands. The Great Lakes themselves have good-to-outstanding wind resource.
http://www.windpoweringamerica.gov/maps_template.asp?stateab=mi
Chicago (and Northern Illinois, Northern Indiana, Southern Wisconsin, and Western Michigan) would certainly benefit from these wind farms in Lake Michigan; they could be placed far enough from shore so that there is no 'Nantucket problem'.