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  • Wind farm up local temps

    WSJ....

    BUSINESS Updated April 30, 2012, 2:09 p.m. ET
    Large Wind Farms Increase Temperatures Near Ground


    Large wind farms slightly increase temperatures near the ground as the turbines' rotor blades pull down warm air, according to researchers who analyzed nine years of satellite readings around four of the world's biggest wind farms.

    The study showed for the first time that wind farms of a certain scale, while producing clean, renewable energy, do have some long-term effect on the immediate environment.

    Using sensors aboard a NASA satellite, researchers at the University at Albany-State University of New York, and the University of Illinois systematically tracked a cluster of wind farms in central Texas as the installations grew from a few dozen turbines in 2003 to more than 2,350 by 2011.

    On average, the nighttime air around the wind farms became about 0.72 degree Celsius warmer over that time, compared with the surrounding area, the scientists reported Sunday in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Climate Change.

    "The warming trend corresponds very well with the growth of the wind turbines," said wind-energy expert Somnath Baidya Roy at the University of Illinois, who was part of the research group. "The warming is going to level off when you stop adding more turbines."

    Despite long-standing interest in the environmental impacts of such large-scale alternative-energy installations, this is the first time anyone has measured how wind turbines can alter local temperatures over the long term, the scientists said. So far, the scientists don't know if these higher temperatures affect local rainfall or other weather patterns.

    "We don't know whether there is a change in weather due to the temperature change," said atmospheric scientist Liming Zhou at the University at Albany, who led the study, which was funded by the National Science Foundation. "The temperature change is small."

    As wind farms become popular and much more widespread, however, they "might have noticeable impacts on local-to-regional weather and climate," Mr. Zhou said. But more research is needed, he said.

    The researchers didn't identify the companies operating the wind farms in the region where they monitored temperature changes. To track the growing numbers of wind turbines in the area, the scientists used records kept by the Federal Aviation Administration of construction projects that might interfere with air safety.

    Texas has more wind-turbine capacity than any other U.S. state, with many large commercial wind farms. Typically, these commercial wind turbines each sit atop a tower about 250 feet tall, capturing the wind with rotor blades that are about 100 feet long, Mr. Roy said.

    Normally, the nighttime air is a layer cake of cool and warm air, caused as hot air rises and cold air sinks, with the coolest air closest to the ground. As the giant rotor blades churn the air, they draw the warmer nighttime air down to the surface.

    "If you have a wind turbine spinning, there is a lot of turbulence in the wake just like a boat in the water," said Mr. Roy. "The turbine pulls warm air from aloft and pulls it down and takes cooler air underneath and pushes it up. That creates a warming effect near the surface."

    Although the researchers detected some daytime warming because of the wind farms, the temperature changes were highest in the predawn hours, when the air normally is still and not so turbulent, the researchers said.
    Dr. Mordrid
    ----------------------------
    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

    I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

  • #2
    For some reason this made me laugh. Not because I'm opposed to windfarms but just because of the irony. We appear to be screwed no matter what we do. If we came up with a super-efficient solar panel, the materials would be so insanely toxic we wouldn't be able to have it anywhere near human habitations.

    If they do build solar collectors in space, who wants to live near a megawatt-scale microwave beam receiver? And how will it contribute to global warming?

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    • #3
      The important thing is to know the real effects and face up to them.
      Then you can make the informed compromises that are required.
      Chuck
      秋音的爸爸

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      • #4
        These actually lower tempratures at between 250-350 ft altitude.
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        • #5
          Interesting, but it is rather simplistic in its explanation. A lot of ground level research has been done on the subject with confusing results. This was instigated by determining the optimum spacing between turbines. To put it simply, imagine two turbines in line with the wind direction. The upwind one extracts kinetic energy from the wind and converts it to electricity. The wind to the leeward would embody less energy with an obvious lower windspeed but also with a small mix of adiabatic and isothermal decompression. This will result in air being pulled in from the undisturbed streams that had passed freely either side of the front turbine, so that the turbulence eventually dies down into a near-streamline again, ideally where the second turbine should be placed. With large farms, the turbine placement becomes a nightmare, as wind direction varies and there is a tendency to space the turbines farther apart than the optimum for a prevailing wind direction. The adiabatic decompression causes a small temperature reduction but this is partially compensated for by the re-compression as the stream becomes less turbulent. This is a very complex subject but there is a potential flaw in the argument presented here. Yes, pre-dawn layering does occur, but only in low wind velocity conditions, when the blades don't turn! I see this consistently with my own weather station, when temperature inversion occurs, there is no convection and the warmer ground temperature causes a small rise in surface air temperature, often less than 1°C. This occurs with low wind velocities, typically under 1-2 m/s. It must not be forgotten that any obstruction (building, tree, hill etc.) can cause turbulence in a wind, not just a turbine.

          This study may add one more tiny piece of info if the science (1%?) is separated from the journalistic junk (99%) and thermal maps are published showing the temperatures in and around the farms. A pipedream, but to extract the science needs control "farms" with static blades. This is not far-fetched, as comparisons could be made with real farms which have the blades braked deliberately for a few days. My guess is that there would be pretty much the same temperature pattern.
          Brian (the devil incarnate)

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