|
To
download this factsheet on wind power in
pdf format please click here
Introduction
Wind
power has been used for thousands of years
to mill grain and pump water. Now modern
wind power uses the energy in the wind to
turn turbines, which convert this energy
to electricity. Wind has the potential to
produce substantial amounts of green
electricity, and small-scale wind power
has a genuine role in achieving this.
Wind
is a free fuel, it will not run out, and
the cost of producing electricity from it
can be highly competitive. At the moment
wind power is the most advanced and
economic of all forms of renewable energy,
yet it does come with visual impacts, and
alleged noise and health problems, which
need consideration. A good small-scale
wind scheme will have zero annual fuel
costs, low running costs, a long lifetime,
high reliability and availability, be
completely automated and have a very low
environmental impact.

Figure
1
: Single Small
Turbine
As
the wind blows it will turn the blades of
a wind turbine, rotating a shaft inside
the generator, which produces electricity.
The amount of power generated depends upon
the size of the blades, the wind speed and
the wind availability (how often the wind
blows). Large turbines and the generator
will be mounted upon a rigid steel tower
set in concrete foundations. Small-scale
turbines are generally mechanically quite
simple, reliable, and require little
maintenance. They align themselves to the
wind using either a tail-vane or a simple
downwind alignment, and they also have
simple mechanical means of dealing with
high wind speeds that could damage the
turbine.
1.
The site
The
U.K. has the best wind resource in Europe,
and any exposed windy site has the
potential for economical wind power. The
power available from the wind is
proportional to the size of the swept area
of the blades and the cube of the average
wind speed. (Doubling the wind speed gives
eight times the power). The wind speed is
adversely affected by a friction effect
close to the ground so the higher a
turbine can be sited above ground level
the better.
The greater the available wind
resource in terms of average wind speed
and wind availability, the more
electricity the site will be able to
produce – the economics of a site will
be heavily influenced by the Annual Mean
Wind Speed (AMWS).
Because the
power available increases by the cube of
the wind speed, a small difference in AMWS
can mean a significant difference in power
output. Turbines at a site with an AMWS of
8m/s (metres per second),could produce up
to 80% more electricity than the same
turbines at a site where the AMWS is 6m/s.
For small turbines, at lower
heights, factors such as buildings and
trees can affect the wind speeds, and
considering these factors and choosing a
site with unhindered wind will help to
maximise the power output. The most
dependable method of assessing the wind
potential of a site is to measure it over
a twelve month period using an anemometer
raised on a mast at the same hub height as
the proposed turbine. For smaller turbines
the cost of data logging can be
disproportionate for the potential energy
capture.
For a small-scale installation
Meteorological Office data or even local
knowledge of a ‘windy’ spot, may be
enough to warrant more detailed
investigation – look for good elevation,
exposure to the elements, and other signs
of wind (such as trees growing off in one
direction). Small scale turbines will have
a cut-in wind speed of 2.5-4m/s, and an
optimum wind speed of 10-12m/s. Turbines
will have a power rating which denotes
their maximum output. However due to
varying wind speeds, as a rough guide a
good site will produce an average output
of 30% of the rated capacity of the
turbine.
2.
Grid connection
Wind power can be particularly
suitable for sites that are not grid
connected, and where such connection would
be expensive. Here the power is used to
charge a bank of batteries to store the
electricity. A back up generator might
also be necessary, to provide emergency
cover for times when the batteries are
exhausted.
The
power supplied by the batteries will be
direct current (DC), so an inverter will
often be needed in order to convert the
battery power to useful mains 240 volt
alternating current (AC). A controller is
also required in order to ensure that the
batteries are not over or under charged, and ideally when the batteries are
full to divert electricity to other useful
sources such as space or water heaters.
Sites that are connected to the
grid can also be viable. Here the power
will be fed through an inverter back into
the grid, where a two way meter can
measure power exported to the grid, and
power imported from the grid. If the wind
turbine produces more electricity than a
site uses, then selling some electricity
back into the grid will further help the
economics of a site.

Figure 2: A single Larger
Turbi
ne
3.
Environmental issues
Wind power can provide a source of ‘clean’
renewable energy with minimal adverse
environmental effects. Because of their
size and need to be located in an exposed
position, wind turbines can have a visual
impact in the landscape – but this is
not an “environmental” impact –
simply an impact on the mind of the
beholder. Generally nature goes about its
business un-effected by wind turbines.
Noise used to be an issue with
previous generations of turbines. Direct
drive turbines have no gearboxes so
completely eliminating that noise source,
and the blade tip noise has been
dramatically reduced by using a blade
profile that rotates more slowly.
Bird fatalities have all but been
eliminated by not locating turbines close
to bird migration routes.
Planners
may suggest placing a turbine in an
inconspicuous situation, but a poor site
could make an installation uneconomic. Wind availability should always remain
the key consideration in siting.
Similarly, the possibility of
health problems from low frequency noise
and shadow flicker are barely applicable.
Small-scale wind turbines can be placed
close to, or even on inhabited dwellings
without problem.
Sites can be re-instated at the
end of a turbine’s useful life with
little or no discernable impact. Also the
energy used in the manufacture of wind
turbines is only about 6 months worth of
the electricity they produce in their
lifetime.
4.
Cost
The
wind power industry has invested heavily
in research and development and the cost
of wind power is now cheaper than
conventional power.
Typically,
for each MW of installed capacity,
large-scale turbines cost about £600,000
and will generate about 2,000 MWh of
energy per annum. At current electricity
prices (£70/MWh) the value of energy
produced from each MW would be about £140,000
per year. After maintenance, insurance,
business rates and loan repayments are
met, and over a 25 year life, large scale
wind turbines more than pay the
investment.
Generally
small-scale turbines don’t enjoy quite
the same economies of scale because
smaller turbines cost more per unit energy
output to manufacture. Notwithstanding
small scale wind can be economic over the
medium to long term. In an off grid
location small scale wind can be economic
compared to the cost of a grid connection.
The
installation cost of domestic scale
turbines is likely to be competitive given
the number of market players. But pay back
times will be site specific dependant upon
the local wind speed. A 1-1.5 kW turbine
is likely to cost in the region £2k - £5k.
A 6-8 kW turbine will be somewhere in the
region of £15,000-25,000 A well sited 6kW
system will produce a significant amount
of power displacing the amount of
conventionally produced electricity, and
this will result in savings that offset
the initial costs and pay back the
investment.
If
electricity is being sold back to the grid
this will also help offset costs, with
electricity produced by renewable sources
attracting competitive rates due to the
governments Renewable Obligation
Certificates that guarantee the price of
renewably generated electricity.
|