World's Largest Wind Farm Gets Green Light 388
cliffski writes "According to the BBC website the UK govt has just given the go ahead to two large offshore wind-farm projects.
Between them the schemes would produce enough renewable electricity to power about one million households.
The larger London Array project covers 144 sq miles (232 sq km) between Margate in Kent and Clacton, Essex and will be the world's biggest when it is completed. The £1.5bn scheme will have 341 turbines rising from the sea about 12 miles (20km) off the Kent and Essex coasts, as well as five offshore substations and four meteorological masts"
144 mi^2 !=232 km^2 (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:144 mi^2 !=232 km^2 (Score:5, Funny)
It was invented solely for the purposes of this article, and has yet to reach widespread use.
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144 mi^2 != 103.5 mi^2 (Score:3, Informative)
The larger London Array project covers 90 sq miles (232 sq km) between Margate in Kent and Clacton, Essex.
The second wind farm, called the Thanet scheme, will cover 13.5 sq miles (35 sq km) off the north Kent coast.
I'd call it 103.5 sq miles (267 sq km).
What about our fine feathered friends? (Score:2, Interesting)
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Re:What about our fine feathered friends? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Many environmentalists do! (Score:3, Insightful)
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First of all, Three Mile Island was a success -- the containment system did exactly what it was supposed to do.
Second, we have better reactor designs (e.g. pebble-bed reactors) now that can't fail that way.
Re:What about our fine feathered friends? (Score:4, Insightful)
I can see the blades spinning...
Re:What about our fine feathered friends? (Score:4, Insightful)
Really, when you look at the numbers overall, turbine birdstrikes are not much of an issue at all.
Re:The question nobody's asked. (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.eoearth.org/article/Energy_return_on_i
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Re:The question nobody's asked. (Score:4, Informative)
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*breathes*
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I wouldn't be a bit surprised to learn that birds adapt very quickly to windmills. We built skyscrapers, and birds die when they fly into them, yet we haven't torn down our buildings. The stupid ones either die, breed in sufficient numbers to replace those lost, or adopt behavior such that they do not fly into them.
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Re:What about our fine feathered friends? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:What about our fine feathered friends? (Score:4, Insightful)
Typically in order to find out what the Unintended Consequences are things have to be built first, and while wind farms aren't exactly new neither are they common. As with most things the more widespread they become the more effort will be focused on correcting whatever problems they have.
A friend and I had a similar discussion about cell phone towers while hunting this weekend. He was complaining that the woodcock population has been down lately, and I mentioned that one factor might be the continued proliferation of cell phone towers in our area. Towers were going up with solid beacon lights that screwed up the navigation systems of some migratory birds. A simple change to blinking beacons seems to be fixing the problem. Of course we had to find piles of woodcocks dead around cell phone towers before we even knew it was necessary.
Re:What about our fine feathered friends? (Score:5, Informative)
Mans activity contributes to a vast number of bird deaths every year:
In December of 2002, the report "Effects of Wind Turbines on Birds and Bats in Northeast Wisconsin" was released. The study was completed by Robert Howe and Amy Wolf of the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, and William Evans. Their study covered a two-year period between 1999 and 2001, in the area surrounding the 31 turbines operating in Kewaunee County by Madison Gas & Electric (MG&E) and Wisconsin Public Service (WPS) Corporation.
The report found that over the study period, 25 bird carcasses were found at the sites. The report states that "the resulting mortality rate of 1.29 birds/tower/year is close to the nationwide estimate of 2.19 birds/tower.16- The report further states, "While bird collisions do occur (with commercial wind turbines) the impacts on global populations appear to be relatively minor, especially in comparison with other human-related causes of mortality such as communications towers, collisions with buildings, and vehicles collisions."
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I know when it's time to clean the window then the outline of said bird is left on the window.
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I'm much more curious to know the impact to the waters. Hundreds of pillars built into the sea floor might affect sea life or water currents.
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What about the climate effects of sucking that much energy out of the wind?
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wind_power [wikipedia.org]
"An estimated 1% to 3% of energy from the Sun that hits the earth is converted into wind energy. This is about 50 to 100 times more energy than is converted into biomass by all the plants on Earth through photosynthesis." This gives you an idea of the scale.
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Fluffy the neighborhood kitty kills way more songbirds, exotic birds, rare land mammals, rare land reptiles than any wind tower every will yet there is no one bitching about that.
Radio antennae for Clearchannel do the same damn thing, nobody ever complains about them.... not to mention glass covered sky reflection having every goddamn downtown in every goddamn city on the planet kill more birds in a friggin day than all the wind towers in the world in a single day.
Yeah, because t
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Wait, wait, I know what you're going to say, but it's obvious that youtube video was a fake.
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Re:What about our fine feathered friends? (Score:4, Funny)
NO TERRIER
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I say yank them down and replace them with more modern, more efficient, less bird-hungry turbines.
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Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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I don't know which is worse... the use of the term "renewable" (from an energy/mass-there-is-only-so-much-of-it point of view) or the use of the term "renewable" when you're talking about wind. The tides aren't renewable. Geothermal isn't renewable. Solar isn't renewable. These are all forms of energy that are simply used.
Trees are renewable. Oil is renewable (um, if you're really patient). How can we expect to get people to think more critically
Re:"renewable" energy? (Score:4, Insightful)
First off, language is about communication, and requires transmitter and receiver to agree on the meanings of symbols/words. "Renewable energy" is a well recognised term, and does its communciation job perfectly well, even if it doesn't quite match your idea of what "renewable" means. "Kick the bucket" similarly communicates an idea, despite having a meaning unrelated to do with kicking or buckets.
Secondly, the word "renewable" is entirely justifiable in "renewable energy". It refers to energy souces which are constantly renewed, so that extracting energy from them depletes the source only for a short period of time (months or years for hydroelectric, hours for tidal, possibly minutes or hours for wind.)
Finally, why should it be that harnessing solar power by photosynthesis is renewable, but harnessing it by photoelectric cell is not?
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There's nothing at all wrong with language evolving. What I don't like is when it devolves - when two distinct words/phrases used to make the distinction between two similar but importantly different concepts are replaced wit
Such specific numbers, blah. (Score:4, Insightful)
How about a MW output. That's a specific number that can be compared to other forms of electric generation.
Is that one million homes in the late spring (mildest time of year), when no one is running a/c or heat?
Or is that one million homes in the middle of summer when whole power grids collapse from the strain?
Specifics please.
Re:Such specific numbers, blah. (Score:4, Informative)
How about a MW output.
1.3GW according to the Register article.
Re:Such specific numbers, blah. (Score:5, Funny)
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I'm confused. What is that in megaelephant square football field lengths per cubic femto-femto universe ages?
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This should mean that the new media mesurement of 1Hp (House power) is equal to 1.33KW peak power....
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Actual power isn't quite as snappy in the brochure.
Re:Such specific numbers, blah. (Score:5, Informative)
> be compared to other forms of electric generation.
According to the Register, it's 1.3GW
> Or is that one million homes in the middle of summer when
> whole power grids collapse from the strain?
You are confusing US power requirements with UK. Vast majority of UK homes don't have A/C so you don't see that massive summer energy consumption spike, in fact quite the reverse, with fewer houses needing heat and daylight from 6am-10pm (give or take) the electricity requirements in the UK typically drop during the summer.
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Re:Such specific numbers, blah. (Score:5, Insightful)
What I don't understand is that a wealthy and educated country like America sees air-conditioning as the solution to being too hot and not quadruple glazing. Insulation keeps you cool too (and makes it cheaper to run said air-conditioning if nothing else).
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Still, the first thing I did when I bought my new house was to put another layer of insulation in the attic, and get a quote for having
Re:Such specific numbers, blah. (Score:4, Interesting)
In Georgia, however, the nights are almost as miserable as the days because the humidity in the air traps the heat...it's literally like a sauna...and leaving your AC off for hours means it has to work harder to cool things back off when you finally cave in and turn it on. It's probably still a net savings, but in July I don't even consider it.
I'm always interested in better insulation...The house has too many damn windows though, and I'm not planning on living there long enough to make my money back on replacing them, which is an issue. I've still done a few, but it's ~200.00 per window, not counting installation, so I'm not in any hurry.
Re:Such specific numbers, blah. (Score:4, Informative)
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At high altitudes in AZ, you can get away with passive cooling if you have excellent insulation. You can open the doors and windows at night, and close them during the day, and keep your house livable. At low altitudes like Phoenix, however (~1500'), that's a fool's e
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Mobile Farms (Score:5, Interesting)
Barges covered with solar cells. And reverse-gyroscopes that generate power from waves and currents. They anchor landmines, don't they?
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Hmm, maybe you should have read the submission text, let alone the article. Let me quote for you:
According to the BBC website ehe UK govt has just given the go ahead to two large offshore wind-farm projects
Offshore, meaning, you know, not on land. On the water.
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Side point: solar/gyro. Power stations capturing all the power passing through its point, not just the wind.
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I believe that the additional cost of installing windmills on a barge would not be economically feasible.
To mount a windmill on a seaworthy barge is no small feat. These windmills are very, very heavy and require a very stable surface to be mounted on. Most large windmills require thousands of tons of concrete as a base. You would require the same foundation for a barge with a windmill on it.
To relocate thousands of tons of windmill x 1000 windmills as the seaso
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I'm not so sure that the windmills can't retain generating efficiency while bobbing up and down, so long as they're facing the wind and remaining perpendicular to its direction. If anything, it's just more engineering to accommodate the extra degrees of freedom of motion for capturing its energy.
As for relocation energy, they ca
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We have the technology.
But I do think that windmills all suffer from electric transmission losses (up to 30-50%), located far from the humans who consume their power. It's one reason I prefer coating every roof with solar panels, in a localized grid that minimizes transmission.
But I wonder whether these windmills could be more efficient driving seawater and air through a cracker to generate ethano
Tides (Score:5, Interesting)
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However I also beleive that there is a huge engineering challenge in order to anchor the generators effectively and economically
Re:Tides (Score:5, Insightful)
Unfortunately I think most devices capabale of turning tidal energy into electricity tend to need to be built on a pretty large scale to worth while and this tends to totally destroy the eco systems in the immediate vicinity.
At least that is what I learned in Geograpgy lessons 15 years ago so things may have moved on since then !
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Re:Tides (Score:4, Interesting)
There is tidal power being generated in the Bay of Fundy, there has been a 20MW generator operating for the last 20 years. However, it is expensive (operating in salt water isn't the most friendly enviromnent), and expanding it would put a large strain on the ecosystem.
This isn't a lot of power though. 20 large windmills could produce the same or more power, for much less cost. Incidentally, Nova Scotia, which borders half of the Bay of Fundy, has some of the world's strongest and most consistent winds.
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No, but there is a lot of it.
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Maybe that's part of the problem. Building a structure that can withstand tidal forces for 30+ years, including watertight compartments for the electrical parts, isn't cheap.
Um. (Score:2, Informative)
Doh.
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Don't worry - the windmills aren't actually that efficient, nor do they cover a large percentage of vertical cross-section. They're spaced quite a bit apart and aren't that tall, vertically speaking. Chances are they don't end up being more disruptive to air currents than, say, the skyscrapers in NYC. And the weather in Brooklyn isn't *that* different than in the rest of the region.
-b.
Horror movies? (Score:2)
"Sheltered from the destroying wind by the turbine farm, the flesh eating larva thrived in the darkness created by the solar panels, coming out at night to feast on human flesh...."
ehe UK govt (Score:2)
Another Idiotic decision... (Score:2, Insightful)
Talk about immediate environmental impact. WAKE UP people - wind farms take energy directly out of a very complex self-regulating system. Let's see how long it takes the greenies to realise this is NOT a long term solution,
As I have repeated said, energy efficiency is the only soultion to our energy problems. Until manufacturers are required to produce more efficient products, we are on the wrong path.
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What, Pray Tell ... (Score:2)
The Problem with Wind Energy (Score:3, Interesting)
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Not when the wind turbines are in different places
and unlikely to match demand
Cold winds -> lots of electricity to heat houses. Plus, UK houses can turn their heating on and off when the electricity company sends them a radio signal, which means you can modify the demand whenever you want.
Essentially, this means that wind farms have to be backed up with other, reliable, fast-switching power sources.
Like Dinorwig power station? (hydroelectric,
Wind power NOT significantly harmful to birds (Score:3, Informative)
Rather birds tend to fly into ordinary power lines and die. Climate change and pollution are also big threats to birds as other wildlife too, and their effect is often global.
Furthermore, bird enthusiasts even in America are supporting wind power, here is a link to a statement from the Audubon Society:
http://personals.salon.com/blog/1976/post_32241.h
It's one of the perpetual myths against wind power that surface every time the public discusses about it, I was sure it'd pop up here on slashdot...
Now just waiting about the "will the turbines ever recoup their construction energy cost?" (They will in a few months.)
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They're also a great place to get "chicken" burger. Catch it before it hits the ground, so you know it's fresh.
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Personally I think they're great when I'm sailing along as they usually mark sand banks and make navigation much easier. I like the look of them too.
disagree (Score:5, Insightful)
The alternative energy solution is "all of the above", solar, wind, geothermal, biofuels, etc, etc, all of it in total. There will probably not be any one solution any time soon, we need the combination of vastly more energy efficient buildings and vehicles (really the number one place we should be working on) combined with alternate sources of energy combined with the traditional energy sources. That's the only silver bullet. Backyard mr. fusion is here if you recognize that the Sun works, it just works, and it is our only practical fusion power. Solar PV, Solar thermal, biofuels, and wind are all mostly factors of the Sun's output. If you are waiting for man-made ITER type reactors to save you you'll be shivering in a cold dark house for decades to come. Not to say we shouldn't still try and develop it, but reality indicates we need solutions to start now, not wait until it hits OMG crisis mode.
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Not to mention the question of what to do on a no wind day... or worse several days of no wind (since for short term lapses gavity batteries using hydro electric generators could be used, pumping water up hill when power is plentiful, using it when power is needed, a system already used to provide peak power boost in the UK)
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Wind farms are part of an answer (Score:5, Insightful)
I wonder why so many people (in particular Americans for some reason) feel that such a complex issue as energy supply need a single source as an answer. Some even dismiss all discussion of conservation with the "argument" that you can't totally eliminate the need of energy that way. Even though just going to EU/Japan level of conservation would eliminate 50% of the energy consumption. Maybe it is because people have been brought up in a world where only answers that can be expressed as sound bites are considered relevant by the media.
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We'll get there in the end, but for the moment I think we need to accept that even though it's not perfect, it is a step in the right direction.
I reckon we should get Microsoft to design a solution though. Then it's guaranteed to work after the third attempt...
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You're right. Obviously we've been building windfarms on too small a scale up until this point. It's about time we fully embraced the technology and started building windfarms that can provide a comparable percentage of electricity needs. Let's get out of this "little windfarm" box and start making them the
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And lock all other exits. If the MPs want to leave, it's through the blades. Arrrrr, matey!
-b.
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Facts, anyone?
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