Overall Criticisms of Wind Turbines - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Overall Criticisms of Wind Turbines

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Overall Criticisms of Wind Turbines ... Onshore- within 30km of the shore line Near shore -within 3km of the shoreline or 10 km offshore ... large construction ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Overall Criticisms of Wind Turbines


1
Overall Criticisms of Wind Turbines
  • wind power is an intermittent power source. The
    production from a wind turbine may increase or
    decrease dramatically over a short period of time
    with little or no warning. In the absence of
    large scale energy storage, the balance of the
    grid must be able to quickly compensate for this
    change. A proposed solution is a super grid of
    wind farms.
  • Economics high quality wind resources are often
    located in areas inhospitable to people,
    logistics and transmission capacity can introduce
    significant obstacles to new installations.
  • The impact of wind turbines on wildlife has often
    been cited as a disadvantage of wind
    installations. Wind turbines can pose a danger to
    birds and bats, though the magnitude and gravity
    of this danger may be much less than threats such
    as house cats or plate glass.

2
Wind Turbine Syndrome
  • A condition which may be related to prolonged
    exposure to the low frequency sound waves
    (Infrasound) that come from wind turbines.
    Symptoms of wind-turbine syndrome might include
  • headaches
  • sleep problems
  • night terrors or learning disabilities in
    children
  • ringing in the ears (tinnitus)
  • mood problems (irritability, anxiety)
  • concentration and memory problems
  • issues with equilibrium, dizziness and nausea
  • NO conclusive evidence that this is real. Note
    that all of these symptoms are also produced by
    not sleeping well

3
Infrasound
  • Sound at frequency lower than 20 hz.
  • Humans do not hear this, but the ear senses it.
    Known to cause feelings of awe and fear in
    humans.
  • No agreement among scientists as to the extent
    and impact of such noise from wind turbines.
  • Modern turbines are being engineered with
    dampening systems to reduce such noise.

4
Wind Farms
  • A group of turbines in the same location
  • 3 types
  • Onshore- within 30km of the shore line
  • Near shore -within 3km of the shoreline or 10 km
    offshore
  • Off shore -more than 10Km from land
  • Noise is a big issue for onshore and near shore,
    as is aesthetics

5
Offshore wind farms
6
Offshore wind farms
  • less obtrusive than turbines on land
  • apparent size and noise is mitigated by distance.
  • the average wind speed is usually considerably
    higher over open water.
  • Offshore installation is more expensive than
    onshore
  • Offshore towers are generally taller than onshore
    towers once the submerged height is included.
  • Offshore foundations may be more expensive to
    build.
  • Power transmission from offshore turbines is
    through undersea cable
  • Offshore saltwater environments also raise
    maintenance costs by corroding the towers, but
    fresh-water locations such as the Great Lakes do
    not.
  • Turbine components (rotor blades, tower sections)
    can be transported by barge, making large parts
    easier to transport offshore than on land, where
    turn clearances and underpass clearances of
    available roads limit the size of turbine
    components that can be moved by truck. Similarly,
    large construction cranes are difficult to move
    to remote wind farms on land, but crane vessels
    easily move over water.
  • Offshore wind farms tend to be quite large,
    often involving over 100 turbines.

7
Cape Wind Project
  • Approved offshore wind farm off of Cape Cod, MA.
  • 130 wind turbines would produce a maximum of 454
    MW enough
  • power for 420,000 homes.
  • Would provide 75 of the electrical needs to Cape
    Cod. and the
    Islands
  • Concerns included ruining the views from people's
    private property.
  • Views from public property such as beaches (even
    though it would be about twenty or so miles
    offshore, people complained it would ruin their
    views of the horizon).
  • decrease property values.
  • ruining popular areas for yachting.
  • the proposed wind farm would be located near
    shipping lanes.
  • Local fishermen, cite the fact that for many of
    them, up to 60 of their annual income comes from
    catch caught on Horseshoe Shoals, which they
    claim would disappear and would have to be
    replaced by steaming to fishing grounds farther
    out to sea if the project is completed.
  • Some who oppose the project are concerned about
    the corporate privatization of public
    property.
  • Geological testing of the offshore site has begun.

8
Interesting co-generation idea with cars and wind
turbines
  • Turbines suspended over highways.
  • Each turbine can light a medium size apartment

9
TVA wind farm near Oak Ridge
10
Ocean Thermal Energy
  • Energy is available from the ocean by
  • Tapping ocean currents
  • Using the ocean as a heat engine
  • Tidal energy
  • Wave energy

11
Energy from ocean currents
  • Ocean currents flow at a steady velocity
  • Place turbines in these currents (like the gulf
    stream) that operate just like wind turbines
  • Water is more than 800 times denser than air, so
    for the same surface area, water moving 12 miles
    per hour exerts about the same amount of force as
    a constant 110 mph wind.
  • Expensive proposition
  • Upkeep could be expensive and complicated
  • Environmental concerns
  • species protection (including fish and marine
    mammals) from injury from turning turbine blades.
  • Consideration of shipping routes and present
    recreational uses of location
  • Other considerations include risks from slowing
    the current flow by extracting energy.

12
VIVACE-Alternate to turbines
13
The ocean as a heat engine
  • There can be a 20 difference between ocean
    surface temps and the temp at 1000m
  • The surface acts as the heat source, the deeper
    cold water acts as a heat sink.
  • Temperature differences are very steady
  • Florida, Puerto Rico, Hawaii and other pacific
    islands are well suited to take advantage of this
    idea.
  • Called OTEC (Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion)
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