November 21, 2007 The power of multiples: Connecting
wind farms can make a more reliable - and cheaper - power source
Wind power, long considered to be as fickle as wind itself, can be groomed
to become a steady, dependable source of electricity and delivered at a
lower cost than at present, according to scientists at Stanford University.
Wind is the world’s fastest growing electric energy source, according to
the study’s authors, Cristina Archer and Mark Jacobson. However, because
wind is intermittent, it is not used to supply baseload electric power
today. Baseload power is the amount of steady and reliable electric power
that is constantly being produced, typically by power plants, regardless of
the electricity demand. But interconnecting wind farms with a transmission
grid reduces the power swings caused by wind variability and makes a
significant portion of it just as consistent a power source as a coal power
plant.
“This study implies that, if interconnected wind is used on a large scale, a
third or more of its energy can be used for reliable electric power, and the
remaining intermittent portion can be used for transportation, allowing wind
to solve energy, climate and air pollution problems simultaneously,” said
Archer, the study’s lead author and a consulting assistant professor in
Stanford’s Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and research
associate in the Department of Global Ecology of the Carnegie Institution.
It’s a bit like having a bunch of hamsters generating your power, each in a
separate cage with a treadmill. At any given time, some hamsters will be
sleeping or eating and some will be running on their treadmill. If you have
only one hamster, the treadmill is either turning or it isn’t, so the
power’s either on or off. With two hamsters, the odds are better that one
will be on a treadmill at any given point in time and your chances of
running, say, your blender, go up. Get enough hamsters together and the odds
are pretty good that at least a few will always be on the treadmill,
cranking out the kilowatts.
The combined output of all the hamsters will vary, depending on how many are
on treadmills at any one time, but there will be a certain level of power
that is always being generated, even as different hamsters hop on or off
their individual treadmills. That’s the reliable baseload power.
The connected wind farms would operate the same way.
“The idea is that, while wind speed could be calm at a given location, it
could be gusty at others. By linking these locations together we can smooth
out the differences and substantially improve the overall performance,”
Archer said.
As one might expect, not all locations make sense for wind farms. Only
locations with strong winds are economically competitive. In their study,
Archer and Jacobson, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at
Stanford, evaluated 19 sites in the Midwestern United States, with annual
average wind speeds greater than 6.9 meters per second at a height of 80
meters above ground, the hub height of modern wind turbines. Modern turbines
are 80-100 meters high, approximately the height of a 30-story building, and
their blades are 70 meters long or more.
The researchers used hourly wind data, collected and quality-controlled by
the National Weather Service, for the entire year of 2000 from the 19 sites
in the Midwestern United States. They found that an average of 33 percent
and a maximum of 47 percent of yearly-averaged wind power from
interconnected farms can be used as reliable, baseload electric power. These
percentages would hold true for any array of 10 or more wind farms, provided
it met the minimum wind speed and turbine height criteria used in the study.
Another benefit of connecting multiple wind farms is reducing the total
distance that all the power has to travel from the multiple points of origin
to the destination point. Interconnecting multiple wind farms to a common
point and then connecting that point to a far-away city reduces the cost of
transmission.
It’s the same as having lots of streams and creeks join together to form a
river that flows out to sea, rather than having each creek flow all the way
to the coast by carving out its own little channel.
Another type of cost saving also results when the power combines to flow in
a single transmission line. Explains Archer: Suppose a power company wanted
to bring power from several independent farms—each with a maximum capacity
of, say, 1,500 kilowatts (kW) —from the Midwest to California. Each farm
would need a short transmission line of 1,500 kW brought to a common point
in the Midwest. Then they would need a larger transmission line between the
common point and California—typically with a total capacity of 1,500 kW
multiplied by the number of independent farms connected.
However, with geographically dispersed farms, it is unlikely that they would
simultaneously be experiencing strong enough winds to each produce their
1,500kW maximum output at the same time. Thus, the capacity of the
long-distance transmission line could be reduced significantly with only a
small loss in overall delivered power.
The more wind farms connected to the common point in the Midwest, the
greater the reduction in long-distance transmission capacity that is
possible.
“Due to the high cost of long-distance transmission, a 20 percent reduction
in transmission capacity with little delivered power loss would notably
reduce the cost of wind energy,” added Archer, who calculated the decrease
in delivered power to be only about 1.6 percent.
With only one farm, a 20 percent reduction in long-distance transmission
capacity would decrease delivered power by 9.8 percent—not a 20 percent
reduction, because the farm is not producing its maximum possible output all
the time.
Archer said that if the United States and other countries each started to
organize the siting and interconnection of new wind farms based on a master
plan, the power supply could be smoothed out and transmission requirements
could be reduced, decreasing the cost of wind energy. This could result in
the large-scale market penetration of wind energy—already the most
inexpensive clean renewable electric power source—which could contribute
significantly to an eventual solution to global warming, as well as reducing
deaths from urban air pollution.
Source: American Meteorological Society |