Wind Farms Can Provide Surplus Clean Energy
The wind energy industry
has seen a lot of development over the past few years, and has become a foremost
source in the renewable energy industry, up against traditional heavyweights
like solar. Public support for wind is growing with each year, and leading wind
companies are developing more efficient wind turbines. Now, a new study by a renowned institute researchers has shown
that wind energy can create three days of uninterrupted power for storage on
top of what is immediately consumed, enough to get through even the worst lull
in weather.
“Whenever you build a new technology, you have to invest a large
amount of energy up front,” said Michael Dale, a research associate at
Stanford, referring to the development and manufacturing costs of any new
technology.”Studies show that wind turbines and solar photovoltaic installations
now produce more energy than they consume. The question is, how much additional
grid-scale storage can the wind and solar industries afford and still remain
net energy providers to the electrical grid?” In a report for the journal Energy & Environmental
Science, Dale and his colleagues from Stanford detail their research
which has shown that the wind industry can provide more than three days of
uninterrupted power.
“We looked at the additional burden that would be placed on the
solar and wind industries by concurrently building out batteries and other
storage technologies,” said Dale, the lead author of the study. “Our analysis
shows that today’s wind industry, even with a large amount of grid-scale
storage, is energetically sustainable.
The Stanford team considered a variety of storage technologies to
work in conjunction with wind energy, including batteries and geologic systems
such as pumped hydroelectric storage.
“Wind technologies generate far more energy than they consume,”
Dale said. “Our study showed that wind actually produces enough surplus
electricity to support up to 72 hours of either battery or geologic storage.
This suggests that the industry could deploy enough storage to cope with
three-day lulls in wind, common to many weather systems, and still provide net
electricity to society.” Surprisingly, at least from this author’s perspective, onshore
wind farms were the favourites in this scenario, over offshore wind: “We found that onshore wind backed by three days of geologic
storage can support annual growth rates of 100 percent – in other words, double
in size each year – and still maintain an energy surplus.”
“These results are very encouraging,” said study co-author Sally
Benson, a professor of energy resources engineering and director of the Global
Climate and Energy Project (GCEP) at Stanford. “They show that you could create
a sustainable energy system that grows and maintains itself by combining wind
and storage together. This depends on the growth rate of the industry, because
the faster you grow, the more energy you need to build new turbines and
batteries.” Sadly, the same could not be said for the solar industry, which
was also evaluated in the report. According to the Stanford researchers, the
solar industry can only afford approximately 24 hours of energy storage,
“because it takes more energy to manufacture solar panels than wind
turbines.” According to Dale, “the solar industry can also achieve
sustainable storage capacity” but only “by reducing the amount of energy that
goes into making solar photovoltaics.”
“Our analysis showed that, from an energetic perspective, most
photovoltaic technologies can only afford up to 24 hours of storage with an
equal mix of battery and pumped hydropower,” Dale said. “This suggests that
solar photovoltaic systems could be deployed with enough storage to supply
electricity at night, and the industry could still operate at a net energy
surplus.”
Read more at cleantechnica
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