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Hull Wind I

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Title: Slide 1 Author: Malcolm Brown Last modified by: astern Created Date: 7/9/2005 4:14:42 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show Other titles – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Hull Wind I


1
Hull Wind I
2
Hull Wind I
Presentation on the first Urban sited, Industrial
sized Wind Turbine in the United States
  • Brief overview of wind power in the U.S.
  • Hulls success
  • Future projects
  • Awards
  • Questions

3
Why Wind?
  • Development of just 10 of the wind potential in
    the 10 windiest U.S. states would
  • Provide more than enough energy to displace
    emissions from the nation's coal-fired power
    plants.
  • Eliminate
  • the nation's major source of acid rain
  • reduce total U.S. emissions of CO2 by almost a
    third
  • and help contain the spread of asthma and other
    respiratory diseases aggravated or caused by air
    pollution in this country.
  • American Wind Energy Association

4
Top 10 States for wind
  • 1. North Dakota 1,210 Billion kWh/yr
  • 2. Texas 1,190
  • 3. Kansas 1,070
  • 4. South Dakota 1,030
  • 5. Montana 1,020
  • 6. Nebraska 868
  • 7. Wyoming 747
  • 8. Oklahoma 725
  • 9. Minnesota 657
  • 10. Iowa 551

5
Wind power in Hull, MA
  • Wind used as far back as 1820 by Henry Tudor who
    pumped seawater into wooden vats, allowed it to
    freeze and harvested the salt

6
Wind Works
  • In 2004, the AWEA estimated that wind plants in
    the U.S. generated 16 billion kilowatt-hours.
  • If instead, the average utility fuel mix were
    used to generate that much electricity,
  • 10.6 million tons of CO2
  • 56,000 tons of sulfur dioxide
  • 33,000 tons of nitrogen oxides
  • would be released into the atmosphere.
  • American Wind Energy Association

7
How much energy can wind supply to the U.S.?
  • Wind energy could supply about 20 of the
    nation's electricity.
  • Wind energy resources useful for generating
    electricity can be found in nearly every state.
  • North Dakota is theoretically capable (if there
    were enough transmission) of producing enough
    wind-generated power to meet more than one-third
    of U.S. electricity demand.

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10
C.A.R.E. group started
  • Small group of concerned citizens start Citizen
    Advocates for Renewable Energy in 1998
  • A study of repowering wind turbine site at Hull
    High School
  • Presented to Town Selectmen
  • Public forum in June 2000 added strong support
  • Spring 2005 I-CARE formed in Ipswich after public
    meeting there with CARE speakers

11
Vestas V-47 Turbine
  • Danish manufacturer Vestas was selected
  • V-47 machine 660 kW 700,000.00
  • 50 m tower 75 blades 28.5 rpm

12
Production to date
  • Commissioned on December 27, 2001
  • 1293 days of generation 20710 hrs (net)
  • 5,502,674 kWhs

13
It looks like this from the air
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Happy campers ribbon cutting June 29, 2002
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Who is next?
  • Ipswich (2006 ?)
  • Mattapoisett
  • Hingham (2006 ?)
  • Yarmouth
  • Orleans
  • Princeton (2006 ?)
  • Name of your town here
  • Buzzards Bay (2006 ?)
  • Bourne
  • Marblehead
  • Provincetown
  • Quincy
  • Dorchester (yes ! 2005)

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23
Awards
  • Congressional Recognition
  • EPA Environmental Merit
  • DOE Award
  • Clean Air Cool Planet
  • Mass Municipal Association

    2003
  • AWEA Utility Leadership

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Where is Hull
29
Hull Wind II comes next
  • The town of Hull voted (Oct 2004) to install 1
    more turbine on land.
  • Sited at the town dump, a capped landfill. First
    of this landfill siting in the U.S.
  • Vestas V80 1.8 MW machine selected.
  • Installation could begin by end of summer.
  • 2.7 X the output of Hull Wind I

30
1984-1996
  • Hull installed a 40 kW Enertech machine
  • 78,000.00
  • Saved the town over 70,000.00 in electricity
  • Decommissioned in 1996

31
Hole for the foundation is dug
32
Forms are set
33
More forms.
34
Delivery of the nacelle
35
Crane lifts tower.
36
Financials
  • Turbine cost 700,000.00
  • Over 20 years 35,000.00
  • Maintenance/Warranty 8,000.00
  • Insurance 8,000.00
  • Total Year Fixed price 51,000.00
  • 51,000.00 / 1,500,000 kWhs 0.034
  • 3.4 cents / kWh

37
Financials
  • Credits
  • RECs 0.030/kWh
  • REPIs 0.018/kWh
  • 0.048/kWh

38
Financials
  • Hull generates revenue from the turbine
  • 0.048/kWh - 0.034/kWh 0.014/kWh
  • Annual Savings
  • 1,500,000 kWhs X 0.08/kWh 120,000.00
  • 1,500,000 kWhs X 0.014/kWh 21,000.00
  • OVER 140,000.00 savings per year over 20 years
    or over 3,000,000.00 for the town.

39
Additional incentives
  • Federal Level
  • PTC Production Tax Credit
  • or
  • REPI Renewable Energy Production Incentive
  • 1.5 cents/kWh adjusted to 1.8 cents

40
Additional incentives
  • Green Certificates or RECs price varies
  • MassEnergy purchases RECs from Hull at 3 cents
    kWh or 30.00 MWh.

41
Awards
  • EPA Environmental Merit
  • DOE Award

42
Awards
  • Clean Air Cool Planet 2003 Climate Champions
    Award 2003
  • Mass Municipal Association 2003 Utility
    Leadership Award

43
MIT Professor John Deutch
  • Many experts believe that nonrenewable fuels, in
    particular oil and gas, will eventually become so
    scarce and therefore so expensive that they will
    no longer be practical largescale energy sources.
    Moreover, the use of coal and other fossil fuels
    imposes major enevironmental burdens. Therefore
    it is prudent to develop energy techologies based
    on renewable energy sources and introduce them
    commercially if and when the become economically
    competitive.

44
Steps to your own wind turbine
  • Local Champions
  • Select a site, preferably on town owned land
  • Near transmission lines - clearings, ridges, away
    from structures
  • Commission a wind study, usually 1 year.
  • Work with town officials
  • Identify a utility load that can be offset

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