Windmills Keep on Turning, but Idyllic Notions Blow Away
Jun 15 - Commercial Appeal, The
Mike Bergey is sailing along in his silver sedan with the "WINDPWR" license plate, streaming toward one of the electric windmills he has seeded around central Oklahoma's prairie, when a warning siren howls out of nowhere.
En route to check it again today, he considers the charcoal sky, then wheels
around. "I'm not superstitious," he mutters, "but I'll take my
chances this way."
For more than 25 years, Bergey has been trying to outguess the vagaries of
the winds. They fluctuate hourly here, sway and buckle metal, and in tornado
season, sometimes transplant windmill parts in a neighbor's field.
In central Oklahoma, a little wind turbine designed for a single home or
small business can generate enough electricity to pay half its yearly bill, and
pay for everything in a windy spring. Giant commercial-scale machines can churn
out enough power for hundreds of homes.
Yet the United States gets merely three-tenths of 1 percent of its
electricity from wind. Even the American Wind Energy Association, a trade group,
predicts no more than 6 percent by 2020.
In other words, wind power works, but probably can't carry the burden when
fossil fuels start running thin.
Why so few?
At its core, wind power is low tech and old tech. Blades catch passing winds
to spin a generator.
Most systems forgo expensive batteries that can store power for times when
winds are still. In the more common on-grid systems, wind power flows into an
existing electrical box and home outlets. Any surplus flushes into the local
power line for credit. When winds calm, the power line takes over.
To cut down on moving parts and upkeep, Bergey's turbines are built with
neither gearbox nor bearings needing periodic lubrication. With patience, a
manual, a few helpers and a crane for some models, a buyer with the ambition can
assemble one himself, mounting its 23-foot-span blades on a 100-foot tower
bolted to a concrete pad.
Since the early 1980s, 37,000 wind turbines sold by dozens of companies have
sprouted across the country, the industry estimates. The bigger commercial ones
produce by far the bulk of the electricity. Sleek and modernistic, they poke
from California ridges or alternate with oil rigs on the wide Texas horizon. A
battery of 130 has been proposed for choppy waters off Cape Cod.
While less powerful, little turbines for single homes and small businesses
are more abundant. Bergey Windpower has sold about two dozen in the Norman area
alone.
Why aren't there even more around the country?
First, the winds don't blow hard or steadily enough in many places.
Then, there's the aesthetics: Even small turbines may whew-whew- whew
ceaselessly, thrumming through a restless night like a distant freight train.
Also, in many towns, windmills violate height restrictions.
There are infrastructure problems, too. To make full use of wind power, the
Midwest, for example, would need an expensive web of high- voltage lines between
wind sites and cities, industry advocates say. Commercial farms pay penalties
for power interruptions from variable winds.
In the late 19th Century, thousands of windmills made farming practical in
Oklahoma, mechanically pumping water for livestock and settlers who swarmed here
in the Great Land Rush. The technology had been eclipsed when in the early
1970s, with oil supplies short, an engineer decided Oklahoma's winds could again
be harnessed.
That engineer, Mike Bergey's father, Karl, was teaching aircraft design at
the University of Oklahoma, in Norman. He had co-designed the popular Piper
Cherokee light plane.
With just $40,000, he and his engineer son founded Bergey Windpower Co. in
1977. It was a quixotic idea. No market for small turbines existed then.
"When Mike graduated, I asked him a simple question: 'How little can you
live on?' " recalls his father, who is now CEO. His son is president.
Within three years, Bergey Windpower put its first turbine - a one-kilowatt
generator, a tenth as powerful as most of today's - on a tower beside Karl
Bergey's house. They soon sold dozens more, with the help of federal and state
tax credits worth up to $7,500 for each turbine.
While simple in theory, a durable turbine is tricky to design. The blades
pivot edge-on to let storms slip by, but must be stout and slightly flexible so
they don't snap in ordinary gusts.
The first Bergey blades were made of sheet metal and tested on a machine that
gave them an energetic workout of flexes and twists. It wasn't enough. Subjected
to buffeting by real winds, the blades cracked. They were replaced at company
expense. The blades are now made of tough fiberglass.
Their shape also needed refining, including wind tunnel tests. Not everything
worked. Filling the hollowed bottom of an early blade design did little to quiet
its pulsating whoosh.
The sound of the turbine on Karl Bergey's second tower, installed on a
hillock beside his home, bothered his wife, Jimmie, at first.
"At night, I felt like there was a jet plane sitting over the house.
It's just this huge, white noise," she recalls.
Over time, she got used to it.
"Now," she says, "I don't even hear it."
Blade design has since been transformed by computer software that simulates
air flow. The result at Bergey Windpower is slightly thicker, harder-working
blades, shaped more like airplane wings. The new design smoothed the leading
edge, built up a little ridge in front, and tapered the back - all to mute the
rush of air past blades that can whirl at 200 mph.
Making sense
The Bergey turbine at Jim and Helen Driscoll's kept cranking for more than 20
years, with few breakdowns.
When a tornado knocked their roof into a field in 1988, the 100- foot-high
wind tower stayed put. Its cracked blades kept rotating.
"I think if I were to evaluate that machine with all the machines I
have, that's the most perfect," says Jim Driscoll.
In plains on the rural outskirts of Oklahoma City, Delbert Thornhill's
turbine also survived a monster 1999 tornado, which sank a neighbor's tractor in
a pond. But he has come to a different conclusion about his unit, which was
cycling on and off in recent weeks for no apparent reason.
No longer does Thornhill recommend it to inquisitive passers-by.
"When I tell the truth, it don't sound very good. It's not making what
they said it'd make," he says.
Harold Klusmeyer's little Bergey broke down twice within the first couple of
years. He could have replaced parts for several hundred dollars, but it was only
saving about $350 a year in electricity, he figures. He eventually traded in the
generator for a photovoltaic system that converts sunlight into electricity.
Jim Hames was saying morning prayers one day when he was jolted by a crash. A
guy wire on his wind turbine tower had snapped in high winds. About 40 feet of
steel had come thwacking down in his pasture. The sleek turbine nosed into the
dirt like an airplane engine.
Hames felt oddly liberated.
"At the time it went down, it hadn't worked in, say, six months. I was
relieved to get rid of it."
Bergey is working on a new, more powerful model, but the company's systems
already cost around $40,000. Even saving more than $1,000 a year in electricity
in some windy spots, they can take more than a generation to pay for themselves.
Without Oklahoma or federal tax incentives, and with electric lines near most
homes, hardly any of Bergey's Norman employees have installed wind units of
their own. Even Ken Craig, Bergey's vice president, acknowledges that at this
point, "it doesn't make economic sense."
To prevail in the long run, some experts say, wind energy must drop well
below the price of conventional power.
"If it's not cheaper than the fuel, why use it?" asks Robert
Thresher, director of the National Wind Technology Center in Golden, Colo.
Shifting prospects
The vagaries of economics and energy policy have compounded those of the
winds. After the oil embargo passed, tax credits for alternative power fell away
in the 1980s. Many wind firms withered; Bergey Windpower lost about 90 percent
of yearly sales.
Over time, it began sending more battery-equipped turbines to customers in
developing countries with crude electrical networks. It now does about half its
business abroad, especially in China. It employs almost half of its 50 workers
there.
Other areas have outpaced the United States in spreading wind power. Germany
has built up three times more capacity, and Denmark derives more than 15 percent
of its electricity from the wind. The United States has installed only about 15
percent of the 40,000 megawatts of world wind capacity.
Still, over the past five years, U.S. wind power capacity has more than
tripled, virtually all from bigger commercial machines. They can beat the
economics of conventional power in extraordinarily windy places, like a point on
Boston Harbor where a 150-foot colossus whips out 3 percent of the power for one
suburb, Hull, Mass.
Bergey Windpower has rebounded to $4.5 million in annual sales, says Mike
Bergey. It has gotten a lift from new state subsidies in California and some
other places.
But he admits the company "goes in and out of profitability."
Prospects remain changeable - like the wind. For far more extensive news on the energy/power
visit: http://www.energycentral.com
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